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Prescriptions for Pranayama

YJ profiles the pranayama practices of six yoga traditions and finds differences ranging from the subtle to the profound.

By Claudia Cummins

The elegant shapes and impressive contortions of the asanas may be the most eye-catching element of hatha yoga, but yoga masters will tell you they're hardly the point of practice. According to yoga philosophy, the postures are merely preludes to deeper states of meditation that lead us toward enlightenment, where our minds grow perfectly still and our lives grow infinitely big. But just how do we make the leap from Downward Dog to samadhi? Ancient yoga texts give us a clear answer: Breathe like a yogi.

Pranayama, the formal practice of controlling the breath, lies at the heart of yoga. It has a mysterious power to soothe and revitalize a tired body, a flagging spirit, or a wild mind. The ancient sages taught that prana, the vital force circulating through us, can be cultivated and channeled through a panoply of breathing exercises. In the process, the mind is calmed, rejuvenated, and uplifted. Pranayama serves as an important bridge between the outward, active practices of yoga--like asana--and the internal, surrendering practices that lead us into deeper states of meditation.

"My first American yoga teacher, a guy named Brad Ramsey, used to say that doing an asana practice without a pranayama practice developed what he called the Baby Huey syndrome," says Ashtanga teacher Tim Miller. "Baby Huey was this big cartoon duck who was very strong but kind of stupid. He wore a diaper. Basically what Brad was trying to say was that asana will develop your body but pranayama will develop your mind."

Like Miller, many accomplished yogis will tell you that minding the breath is central to the practice of yoga. But take a tour of a dozen yoga classes in the West and you're likely to discover just as many approaches to pranayama. You may be taught complex techniques with daunting names like Kapalabhati (Skull Shining) and Deergha Swasam (Three-Part Deep Breathing) before you even strike your first pose. You may find breathing practices intermingled with the practice of the postures. Or you may be told that pranayama is so advanced and subtle that you shouldn't bother with it until you're well versed in the intricacies of inversions and forward bends.

So what's a yogi to do? Breathe deep into the belly or high up into the chest? Make a sound so loud the walls shake or keep the breath as quiet as a whisper? Practice breathing techniques on your own or weave them throughout your existing asana practice? Dive into pranayama from the get-go or wait until you can touch your toes? To help answer these questions and sample the range of yogic breathing, we asked experts from six yoga traditions to share their approaches to pranayama.

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Reader Comments

Veena Grover RYT

The above article is educational about Hatha Yoga.Practice of deep breathing opens the heart & calms the mind.Negative thoughts disappear & it becomes easy to stay in the asana.Soft deep breathing through nose calms the mind & every move is done like a wave,move from one asana to other like moving meditation.Combine breathing with move,Let the breath lead you & don't force yourself.Injuies happen, when students try to move fast & don't incorporate the breath with move.Enjoy the breath & God will take you in His Hands.Yoga practice is not a physical practice,incorporate spituality & peace. Blessings.

shreekant Godkhindi

Can yoga and other exercises affect smooth muscles directly?

andy

Good article, thank you. Having started doing daily Pranayama practise a couple of months ago, I had been wondering how the different yoga traditions approach it, and you have articulated this clearly for me.

I think Will is factually correct, in that the pranayama equivalent of reaching samadhi is when mind, body, and the higher soul become one, and at that point breathing may stop. If this happens, it happens, but suggesting this as a goal (or a "cornerstone of a higher practise"?!) in an introductory article was unnecessary in my opinion: thinking about it will only distract from a pranayama practise.

Pranayama has many physical benefits but, personally, the biggest benefit is quietening the mind and making it ready for meditation which ideally follows immediately after the pranayama.

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If I like Yoga Journal and decide to continue, I'll pay just $16.95, and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 62% savings off the newsstand price! If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing.