Yoga for Your Eyes: Simple Asanas to Improve Your Vision
These basic “poses” can improve your vision (and help you concentrate and relax). Plus, learn how to train your third eye.
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Years ago, as a novice at the Sivananda Yoga Vedanta Center in New York City, I learned a series of simple eye exercises. But since I could scrutinize a fly from 100 yards, I didn’t need vision training—or so I thought. Two decades later, as I struggle to read freeway signs before missing my exit, the wisdom of those eye asanas is one of the things I can see more clearly as I grow older.
The Benefits of Eye Yoga
Many age-related vision problems stem from a loss of flexibility and tone in the eye muscles. The eyes lock into habitual patterns and lose their ability to focus at different distances. If you have good vision, and don’t want to lose it—or, like me, you hope to improve your fuzzy eyesight—evidence suggests that yoga may have a solution.
Any student of Sivananda would recognize the core exercises taught by the late ophthalmologist William H. Bates. Bates claimed he could improve visual perception with palming, eyeball rotations, and vision shifting—the same Sivananda exercises I once treated with indifference.
The late physician swami Sivananda considered sight the most abused of our five senses. The first chapter in his treatise, Yoga Asanas, describes an extensive series of eye exercises. As with any yogic practice, the purpose of these exercises isn’t just health. According to Swami Sitaramananda, director of the Sivananda Yoga Vedanta Center of San Francisco, “The fastest way to bring the mind into concentration is through the eyes.”
The Eye-Brain Connection
Though it may seem fanciful, the correlation between eyes and mind has a physiological basis. Vision occupies about 40 percent of the brain’s capacity; that’s why we close our eyes to relax and fall asleep. And four of our 12 cranial nerves are dedicated exclusively to vision; two other nerves are vision-related. Contrast this with the cardiac and digestive functions, which require just one cranial nerve to control both.
While insight may be the ultimate purpose of eye asanas, vision improvement is also an important benefit. Surprisingly, it’s not the muscle stretching and contracting that seems to have the greatest effect. Relaxation appears to be the single most important element of eye health. In an experiment applying the muscle relaxant curare to the eyes, patients experienced dramatic eyesight improvement.
See also Exercises for the Eyes
Basic Eye Asanas

When Swami Srinivasan, director of the Sivananda Ashram Yoga Ranch in the Catskills, teaches a beginners yoga class, he instructs the students to begin with a few minutes of relaxation in Savasana (Corpse Pose). Then he asks students to sit in a comfortable posture, such as Sukhasana (Easy Pose), as he guides them through Sivananda’s basic eye asanas.
“These exercises set the right tone for asana practice,” explains Srinivasan. “Our organs of sight are so sensitive and influential that the normal, competitive approach we bring to exercise can be softened through working with the eyes.”
- Begin with the eyelids open, the head and neck still, and the entire body relaxed. Picture a clock face in front of you, and raise your eyeballs up to 12 o’clock. Hold them there for a second, then lower the eyeballs to six o’clock. Hold them there again. Continue moving the eyeballs up and down 10 times, without blinking if possible. Your gaze should be steady and relaxed.
- Next, rub your palms together to generate heat and gently cup them over your eyes, without pressing. Allow the eyes to relax in complete darkness. Concentrate on your breathing, feel the warm prana emanating from your palms, and enjoy the momentary stillness.
- Then do horizontal eye movements with your eyes—from nine o’clock to three o’clock—ending again by “palming” (cupping your hands over your eyes).
- Then do diagonal movements—two o’clock to seven o’clock, and 11 o’clock to four o’clock—again followed by palming.
- Conclude the routine with 10 full circles in each direction, as though you are tracing the clock’s rim.
These eyeball movements provide balance for people who do work up close, like students who spend a lot of their time reading or working at computers. According to Robert Abel, author of The Eye Care Revolution, these brief exercises “compensate for overdevelopment of the muscles we use to look at near objects.”
Benefits of Darkness and Light
The palming exercise provides more than a pleasant respite. According to Abel, our photoreceptors break down and are reconstructed every minute.
“The eye desperately needs darkness to recover from the constant stress of light,” he says. “And the simplest way to break eye stress is to take a deep breath, cover your eyes, and relax.”
Along with palming, yoga in general benefits the eyes by relieving tension. While researchers haven’t measured the effect of yoga on the eyes, studies have shown that a simple exercise like walking can lower pressure in the eyeball by 20 percent.
Vasanthi Bhat, a yoga teacher in the Sivananda tradition, includes asanas like Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing Dog), in her video, Yoga for Eyes.
“These asanas bring circulation to the face, neck, and shoulders, which need to be energized and relaxed for improved vision,” Bhat explains. So even if you have not been doing asanas specifically for your eyes, your overall yoga practice is helping your vision.
Training the Third Eye
Once students have mastered the basic eyeball exercise, Srinivasan introduces an intermediate series of eye exercises: “shifting focus.”
While sitting relaxed and still, pick a point in the distance and focus on it. Extend your arm and put your thumb right underneath the point of concentration. Now begin shifting your focus between the tip of your thumb and the faraway point, alternating rhythmically between near and distance vision. Repeat the exercise 10 times, then relax your eyes with palming and deep breathing.
This exercise trains the an organ called the ciliary body, which adjusts the lens of the eye. Habitual focus patterns degrade the ciliary body’s natural flexibility. Shifting focal points exercises the organ, much as we work complementary muscle groups in asana practice.
The final eye asana taught in the Sivananda series stresses close-range focus. Again gaze at your thumb with your arm extended. This time move the thumb slowly toward the tip of your nose. Pause there for one second. Then reverse the sequence, following the thumb with your eyes as you extend your arm again. As before, repeat the sequence 10 times, then relax with palming.
By training the eyes to focus on the ajna chakra (the “third eye,” located between and just above the eyebrows) a yogi trains his mind to turn inward. On a more prosaic level, close-range focus exercises can forestall the need for reading glasses.
An Eye-Cleansing Trataka Practice
Perhaps you’ve seen a picture of a yogi staring at a candle flame. If so, you’ve seen trataka, an eye-cleansing exercise described in the Upanishads and other yogic texts, including the Hatha Yoga Pradipika.
Trataka can also be found in Ayurvedic texts. Ancient Indian medicine traditions recommended it to stimulate the alochaka pitta, the energy center related to sight. But as always with yoga, there’s a connection between physiology and the more subtle aspects of spiritual practice. According to Dr. Marc Halpern, founder and director of the California College of Ayurveda, the practice of trataka decreases mental lethargy and increases buddhi (intellect).
Trataka is traditionally performed with a candle, but your can use almost any point of focus, like a dot on the wall. Concentrate your gaze on one object, without blinking, until your eyes begin to tear. Then close your eyes and try to maintain a vivid image of that object for as long as possible. Each time you practice trataka, extend the time you maintain the after-image.
Eye Yoga for Healing
This exercise is traditionally believed to remove any disease from the eyes. It is also to induce clairvoyance and to develops the skill of internal visualization. Yogis develop this skill to keep their minds fixed in meditation on a sacred image—and, by extension, on the divine experience associated with that image.
The intricate spiritual mandalas in Indian and Tibetan holy books are also designed for this purpose. Highly skilled meditators can visualize the most minute details of these elaborate cosmic representations. By perfectly aligning inner and outer focus, these yogis seek a realization like that of Meister Eckhart, a thirteenth-century Christian mystic. He once declared, “The eye with which I see God is the same eye with which God sees me.”
With benefits ranging from better vision to increased concentration and spiritual insight, these eye asanas will enhance your yoga practice. With a healthy diet and regular exercise, they will help protect your vision from the stresses of light, tension, and environmental toxins. So as you grow older, and hopefully wiser, you can direct a soft, insightful gaze at the world, learning to see self and other as one.
See also 4 Ways to Improve Your Drishti (Gaze) and Deepen Your Practice