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Meredith Dietz · 2026-07-09 · via Lifehacker

Meredith Dietz

Meredith Dietz Senior Staff Writer

Experience

Meredith is a marathon runner and stand-up comedian. As Lifehacker’s Senior Staff Writer, she covers personal fitness tech, home gym equipment, and more.

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Man with his spine visible being sold like a product.

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Table of Contents


Staying up to date on wellness trends on social media is necessary for my job, but the truth is, my algorithm does a scarily good job of keeping me scrolling all on my own. Unfortunately, all that wellness usually leaves me feeling burnt out. The latest irony here is that the moment I think about putting my phone down, I’ll get a video that claims it has a solution for the anxiety all the videos before have been giving me. Cold plunges, breathing exercises, humming, stretching your hips in the exact right way to magically release all your trauma—whatever the specific advice may be, I keep getting told by wellness influencers that I’ve been neglecting to “regulate my nervous system.”

Your nervous system is the network that runs your body's background operations—breathing, heart rate, digestion, hormone release, immune response—largely without your conscious input. It's split broadly into two systems that work in tension: the sympathetic nervous system, which mobilizes you for action ("fight or flight"), and the parasympathetic nervous system, which handles recovery and maintenance ("rest and digest"). But from what I’ve been seeing online, the idea of “regulation" reads more like a lifestyle brand than a biological process.

Some parts of this appeal to me. It seems like a lot of the solutions come from well-meaning yogis and therapists who aren’t trying to sell you any sort of product. Many of the practices in my feed are cheap or free, and I appreciate that. I welcome the idea of a wellness culture focused on doing less, as opposed to endless optimization.

At the same time, with a new wellness trend comes new ways to spend your money. There’s a growing category of consumer devices that promise to "hack" your vagus nerve into a state of calm. I’m currently testing some of these products, like this daytime wearable or this Vagus Nerve Stimulator. Before I issue my ruling on these devices, let’s separate fact from fiction here: Because the phrase at the center of it all, "nervous system regulation," has drifted so far from its clinical roots that it's worth asking what it actually means—and whether the products cashing in on it can deliver anything real for you.

What does it actually mean to "regulate" your nervous system?

It should be no surprise that the clinical definition is narrower and less mystical than the social media version suggests. Clinically speaking, nervous system regulation refers to “the nervous system's capacity to adapt to stress, maintain homeostasis, and return to baseline efficiently after a challenge,” neuroscientist Dr. Ramon Velazquez says. Being "regulated" isn't as simple as just feeling calm. Instead, “a well-regulated nervous system can appropriately shift between states of arousal, focus, recovery, and rest as circumstances demand,” Velazquez says. 

Most techniques marketed for nervous system regulation—including breathwork, cold exposure, mindfulness practices, HRV-guided training, and vagus nerve stimulation—are really attempts to shift the balance from your sympathetic to your parasympathetic system. However, “effective nervous system regulation is not about suppressing stress responses,” Velazquez says. “It’s about flexibility.” Regulation might sound like it means “control,” but it’s more accurate to think of healthy regulation as your ability to respond appropriately to a situation and then recover from that response, rather than staying stuck in either overdrive or shutdown.

“From a scientific perspective,” Velazquez says, “the strongest drivers of nervous system health remain the fundamentals: quality sleep, regular exercise, good nutrition, stress management, avoiding toxins, and social connection.” Consumer products may offer additional benefits, but they are unlikely to replace these foundational behaviors.

What's real, what's overhyped, and what to actually do

Individual responses to any nervous-system intervention vary widely, shaped by underlying health conditions, medications, stimulation intensity, and simple differences in sensitivity. But if you're healthily average, like myself, and you, too, are getting nervous system content online, here’s how you can sift through the noise.

What do you think so far?

What's real: Breathwork and mindfulness have solid research behind them for improving stress resilience and autonomic flexibility. These are low-risk, well-studied practices that can influence the sympathetic-parasympathetic balance Velazquez describes.

What's promising but up in the air: cold exposure and non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation. Both have some promising findings, but any sweeping claims might go beyond what the science shows.

What causes more harm than good: buying into the idea that a single device can do the work of foundational habits, or ignoring your body's signals because a product is marketed as safe and calming. If a "relaxation" device is producing pain, cramping, or muscle seizures, it's a sign to stop and, if needed, talk to a doctor.

Velazquez shares a few practical steps if you want to support your nervous system without chasing trends:

  • Prioritize sleep, movement, and nutrition first. 

  • Try breathwork or mindfulness before reaching for a gadget. Something as simple as slow, extended exhales has more research behind it than most consumer devices on the market.

  • Build in real recovery, not just stimulation. Regulation is about your ability to return to baseline—social connection, downtime, and stress management all help on this front. 

  • If you try a consumer device, treat it as a complement, not a fix. Start conservatively, pay attention to how your body responds, and stop if you experience pain, twitching, or discomfort rather than pushing through it.

The bottom line

None of this means nervous system regulation is a myth, or that the interest in recovery over optimization is misguided—if anything, I'd argue it's quite a healthy correction. But the version being sold on social media, distilled into a single gadget or a five-minute hack, doesn't reflect what the term actually describes in clinical practice. For most healthy individuals, your ability to regulate your nervous system is built primarily through sleep, movement, nutrition, and social connection. As with all health trends, there's rarely a magic device that can replace the fundamentals.