Pranayama Benefits, Types and How to Practice - Dr. Axe (original) (raw)

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4 Pranayama Benefits (Anxiety and More), Plus How to Practice It

May 13, 2019

Pranayama benefits - Dr. Axe

If you’ve ever taken a yoga or meditation class, you may have heard of the ancient technique called pranayama. What is pranayama breathing and its benefits?

In Sanskrit, an ancient Indian language in which many Hindu scriptures and classical Indian epic poems are written, prana means energy while, yama means control. In Ayurvedic medicine, a natural healing practice that has been in existence for at least 5,000 years, pranayama breathing is one tool for promoting physical and mental health — along with other practices like meditation, yoga, herbal treatments and repeating inspirational mantras.

In yoga and meditation, the breath is considered the major flow of life-force that both energizes and relaxes the body. According to the Yoga Sutras, a collection of Indian stories on the theory and practice of yoga that is thousands of years old, pranayama (breath work) is one way to advance towards spiritual enlightenment.

Much more recently, studies tell us that breath control has many of the same benefits that are associated with meditation, including relieving anxiety, increasing energy, improving focus and fighting insomnia, just to name a few.

What Is Pranayama?

Pranayama is the ancient Sanskrit term that describes the regulation of the breath through certain techniques and exercises. Other ways that people refer to pranayama are as “yoga breathing” or sometimes “meditation breathing.”

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What does pranayama mean? While most people relate pranayama with control of the breath, the word pranayama can also be divided into prana and _ayama, w_here yama means to ‘restrain’ or ‘control’, but ayama means the opposite: to not do that. In this way, pranayama can be thought of as both a controlling and freeing practice that helps improve one’s energy and well-being.

Breath control and awareness — including through pranayama, yoga and meditation— is said to positively affect energetic nerve channels that run along the spine.The idea behind pranayama is that by controlling the breath, we can move past emotional blocks that hinder the flow of our prana, or our life energy. According to the Ananda Yoga Encyclopedia, “through pranayama techniques a person can redirect energy through the deep spine … there are various ways of controlling breathing, with the goal being to withdraw one’s senses from the outside world. ”

Pranayama is a mind-body practice that is all about controlling the speed and depth of breath. Because breath control helps with both the rhythm/flow of performing yoga poses, and also relaxes the mind for meditation, pranayama is considered to be an integral part of yoga.

There are many different forms of pranayama breathing, some which focus more on inhalation, on exhalation, or on moments of stillness between breath. Depending on the type of pranayama you practice, you may focus your attention mostly on the body (such as the belly, chest or nostrils) as it breaths, on the timing of the inhalation and exhalation (for example, if you’re trying to breath rapidly or slowly), or on the number of counts in each inflow and outflow.

Pranayama consists of four stages:

What are the different types of pranayama? While there are dozen of different variations in existence, some of the main pranayama types include:

4 Pranayama Benefits

1. Serves As a Form of Meditation

Pranayama breathing can prepare the mind for deep meditation because it enhances physical awareness, calms the body, and enforces introspection. Steady, slow, focused breathing is said to help quiet a restless mind and to draw attention inwards, which prevents overstimulation.

2. Helps Relieve Anxiety Through Deep Breathing

Happy breathing is described as being rhythmic, while stressed breathing is irregular and interrupted. Pranayama techniques can help to strengthen the whole range of the respiratory organs and to deepen/lengthen the breath. Deep breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system which has natural calming effects. Slow, deep breathing is one way to counter overstimulation, turn off the “fight or flight response,” and handle stress more effectively.

Studies have found that breathing techniques (that can be considered pranayama) can help with the physical and mental symptoms of stress, including anxiety and depression. Breath control practices are now being included in “mindfulness-based psychotherapy” and yoga interventions — referred to as Integrative Breathwork Therapy (IBT) — that studies suggest offers support for those seeking treatment for anxiety and depression.

According to research published in the International Journal of Preventive Medicine, yoga and pranayama together are a proven and effective method for improving health, helping to prevent and manage disease, reducing stress and anxiety, and improving autonomic functions by triggering neurohormonal mechanisms by the suppression of sympathetic activity. Evidence also supports the belief that breathing and yoga techniques can improve health through down-regulation of the hypothalamo pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis and the sympathetic nervous system.

3. Improves Your Mood (Boosting Happiness, Excitement, etc.)

Certain pranayama techniques we can help to alter your physical and emotional state, for example by helping you calm down if you’re feeling angry or nervous, or by getting you more focused, present and excited. The emotions that different pranayama techniques amplify depends on how you change the depth, rate and pattern of your breathing.

Research shows that combining breathing techniques and yoga can help to reduce depressive symptoms in people with major depressive disorder (MDD). For example, a 2017 study published in the Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine found that three months of yoga and coherent breathing significantly reduced depressive symptoms in individuals who’d been diagnosed with MDD.

4. Supports Cardiovascular Health

Because pranayama is useful for dealing with the effects of stress, such as by normalizing blood pressure levels/reducing hypertension, studies have shown that slow pranayama practice is beneficial for cardiovascular functions. Both fast and slow pranayama practices have been found to produce different physiological responses; slow, deep breathing seems to be most beneficial for heart health and improving perceived stress.

One study carried out by the Departments of Physiology and Advanced Centre for Yoga Therapy Education and Research found that when participants underwent slow pranayama training for 30 min, three times a week for the duration of 12 weeks they experienced significant improvements in perceived stress, heart rate, respiratory rate, systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure.

Studies also show that yoga and pranayama together can decrease levels of salivary cortisol and blood glucose, offering protection against metabolic conditions including insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes.

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How to Practice Pranayama

What type of pranayama techniques are best for beginners? Practicing ujjayi pranayam and alternate nostril breathing is a great place to start. Before beginning these pranayamas, it helps to practice “Basic Abdominal Breathing.” This type of breathing moves the belly, but not the chest. If the chest is moving then this is a sign that you are taking shallow breaths, without using your diaphragm.

Place one hand on your belly and the other on your chest. Inhale deeply, using the diaphragm, which will mean that as you inhale your diaphragm will move downward, pushing your abdomen (belly) down and out. When you exhale your diaphragm will move upward and your abdomen/belly will deflate like a balloon.

Here’s how to do Ujjayi pranayama if you’re new to breath control:

Here’s how to do alternate nostril breathing (Nadi shodhana):

How long should you do pranayama breathing for?

Start with about three to five minutes and gradually build up to 10–20 minutes or more, ideally most days of the week to build a steady habit. If you take a yoga class, you may be practicing pranayama for upwards of 60 to 75 minutes, although you might find it difficult to stay concentrated on the breath this whole time.

Which is the best time to do pranayama?

There is no wrong time; any time that you find pranayama helpful, whether it’s to help you start your day with a clear head, to calm you down when you’re feeling stressed, or to help you fall asleep at night, is a good time.

Precautions

While pranayama is generally very safe, certain techniques might cause you to feel overheated or dizzy, such as those that require fast belly breaths and strong exhales, especially while doing yoga. If you begin to not feel well while practicing, lay down comfortably and return to your normal breath for several minutes.

Final Thoughts