A healthy heart doesn't tick like a metronome — it speeds and slows with every breath. That variability is the best non-invasive readout you have of your nervous system's flexibility. Here's what the numbers mean, and why the trend over weeks tells you far more than any single morning reading.
By Jared Ohman6 min readLast updated June 2026Source: Self-Care, Ch. 2
Post-heart-attack patients with SDNN above 100 ms had 5.3 times lower mortality risk than those below 50 ms. HRV is the best available measure of autonomic flexibility.
— The Self-Care You Were Never Taught, Ch. 2
SHORT ANSWER
Heart rate variability (HRV) is the beat-to-beat variation in time between heartbeats — the primary non-invasive marker of vagal tone and autonomic flexibility. Higher variability signals a nervous system that can flexibly shift gears; lower variability signals rigidity, a system stuck in chronic activation or shutdown. The main metrics: RMSSD (best short-term parasympathetic marker, what most wearables report, typically 19–107 ms in healthy adults) and SDNN (total variability over longer windows, ~141 ms over 24 hours; what Apple Watch reports). The single most important rule: track your trend over weeks, not individual readings, which vary wildly with sleep, hydration, and alcohol.
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The problem
Your watch shows you a number every morning, and you have no idea what to do with it. One day it's high and you feel terrible; one day it's low and you feel fine. So you either obsess over each reading or ignore the whole thing. Both are the wrong response to genuinely useful data.
HRV is the closest thing you have to a dashboard for your nervous system — a real, physiological readout of whether your system can flex or is stuck in one gear. But only if you read it right: as a trend, not a verdict.
The mechanism
A healthy heart isn't a metronome. It speeds slightly on each inhale (sympathetic) and slows on each exhale (parasympathetic), and the size of that beat-to-beat variation is HRV — the primary non-invasive marker of vagal tone. Greater variability means a nervous system that can respond flexibly to changing demands. Lower variability means rigidity: a system stuck in chronic activation or chronic shutdown.
The metrics that matter: RMSSD is the best short-term parasympathetic marker (typically 19–107 ms in healthy adults), reported by most wearables — Oura, Garmin, Polar. SDNN captures total variability over longer windows (~141 ± 39 ms over 24 hours) and is what Apple Watch reports; its clinical weight is real — post-heart-attack patients above 100 ms had 5.3× lower mortality than those below 50 ms. HF-HRV is the research gold standard but rarely on consumer devices.
The non-negotiable interpretive rule: track the trend, not the reading. Single measurements swing with hydration, alcohol, sleep position, and time of day. The weeks-long trajectory is the signal — a rising trend means growing vagal tone and resilience.
The operating system
STEP 01
Know which metric your device reports
Check whether your wearable reports RMSSD (Oura, Garmin, Polar) or SDNN (Apple Watch). You can't compare across metrics, and you shouldn't compare your number to anyone else's — HRV is deeply individual.
Pick one device and stick with it. Switching devices resets your baseline.
STEP 02
Measure at a consistent time
The most reliable reading is first thing in the morning, before caffeine, ideally lying down. Consistency of conditions is what makes the trend meaningful — a reading after coffee and a reading before it aren't measuring the same thing.
Most wearables auto-measure overnight, which controls conditions for you. Use the sleep number.
STEP 03
Watch the trend over weeks
Ignore individual days. Look at the multi-week direction. A steady rise signals improving resilience; a steady decline signals accumulating load — that's your early-warning light, well before you consciously feel burned out.
A 7-day rolling average smooths out the daily noise and shows the real direction.
STEP 04
Connect dips to causes
When the trend drops, look at the inputs — alcohol, poor sleep, illness, sustained stress all suppress HRV. Used this way, HRV becomes a feedback loop: it tells you when your recovery isn't keeping up with your demands.
Alcohol is the single most reliable HRV suppressor. If you want to see the metric move, that's the first lever.
STEP 05
Don't turn it into a competition
HRV is information, not a grade. Obsessively optimizing it is its own kind of stress (and counterproductive). Use it to notice your trajectory and adjust your recovery — then go live your life.
If checking your HRV makes you anxious, you've turned a dashboard into a judge. Check it weekly, not hourly.
It's highly individual, so your own trend matters more than any benchmark. For context, RMSSD in healthy adults typically ranges 19–107 ms (27–72 ms is common), and 24-hour SDNN averages around 141 ms. A rising trend over weeks generally indicates increasing vagal tone and resilience; comparing your number to someone else's is mostly noise.
What's the difference between RMSSD and SDNN?
RMSSD (root mean square of successive differences) is the best short-term marker of parasympathetic (vagal) activity and is what most consumer wearables like Oura, Garmin, and Polar report. SDNN reflects total autonomic variability over longer periods and is what Apple Watch reports. They're related but not interchangeable, so compare like with like.
Why shouldn't I worry about a single low HRV reading?
Because individual readings vary wildly based on hydration, alcohol, sleep, body position, and time of day. One low morning is meaningless. The trend over weeks is what reveals your nervous system's actual trajectory — a steady rise means growing resilience, a steady fall is the signal worth paying attention to.
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