Benefits of Yoga - Holistic Connection to the Body, Self and Community (Part 2)
In the last blog on
#benefits of yoga, I outlined some of the numerous physical #benefits of #yoga practice.
This one deals with #Pranayama or the #breath awareness or #breath #control.
Although I have been practicing yoga for over 20 years, it’s only in the
last three that I really found my #breath. Which is weird – because if I wasn’t
#breathing, I would have been dead. Well, there’s breathing and there’s
breathing properly.
Prana in Sanskrit means ‘vital energy’ or ‘life force’. Prana is the force
that exist in all things. It is more than air that we breath. Pranayama is
therefore explained as breathing exercises aimed at introducing extra oxygen
into the lungs – which in everyday western terms means breathing properly and
deeper. ‘yana’ means control. But in #pranayama
the word ‘#ayama’ is used which means ‘extension’ or ‘#expansion’. Therefore, the
yogic breathing techniques or pranayama are used to extend the life force and
go: ‘beyond one’s normal boundaries or limitations and attain a higher state of
vibratory energy and awareness’ (#Asana Pranayama Mudra Bandha; Swami Satyananda
Saraswati, #Bihar School of Yoga)
Yoga helps with accessing your breath – with pranayama the lung function
will be improved. A 1998 study published in The Lancet taught a #yogic
technique known as "complete breathing" to people with #lung #problems
due to #congestive #heart #failure. After one month, their average respiratory
rate decreased from 13.4 breaths per minute to 7.6. Meanwhile, their exercise
capacity increased significantly, as did the oxygen saturation of their blood.
Human beings breathe about 15 times per minute. Most people breath
incorrectly, using only a small part of their lung capacity which makes the
breathing shallow and deprives the body of oxygen. Anxiety and stress make this
worse. It even makes it shallower thus resulting in #panic attacks. In children
(and adults) on autistic spectrum, the breathing is #reversed which in theory
is a very shallow breathing. I speak about pranayama in most of my classes and I
can guarantee there will be at least one person that will be amazed by the way
they are breathing. Because breathing is an involuntary and unconscious action (most
of the time), people normally pay very little attention to their breath. Conscious control of your breath may be taken
at any time. Rhythmic, deep and slow breathing stimulates calm and content
mind. Irregular breathing disrupts the rhythms of the brain and leads to
physical and emotional blockages. This then manifests in an unbalanced
personality, a disordered lifestyle and various illnesses. Pranayama establishes
regular breathing patterns and breaks this negative cycle – the awareness of
the breath when practiced will eventually reverse the shallow breathing and
establish natural and relaxed rhythms or the body and mind.
With #asthma sufferers, encouraging breathing through the nose can be
immensely helpful. Yoga promotes breathing through the nose, which filters the
air, warms it (cold, dry air is more likely to trigger an asthma attack), and
humidifies it, removing pollen and dirt.
Pranayama practices like #Bramari or the #Bee breath as well as chanting OM
open the sinuses and facilitate drainage - a study from Sweden's #Karolinska
Institute found.
Any physical exercise can help
with lowering the risk of heart attack and help relieving depression. With Yoga
practice, even a non-aerobic practice can improve the cardiovascular system.
Studies have found that Yoga practice lowers the resting heart rate, increases
endurance and can improve the maximum intake of oxygen. #Pranayama is extremely
useful in this regard. Two studies published in the #British #medical #journal
The #Lancet compared the effects of Savasana with simply lying on a couch and
showed that practicing Savasana (in which a student focuses on the mind and
their breath – #abdominal breathing) for three months led to a 26 point drop in
#systolic blood pressure and 15-point drop in #diastolic blood #pressure.
I find that Pranayama practice is
an extremely important part of a Yoga class and should be practiced more
generally and not just in a therapeutic sense. The techniques of Pranayama
energise and rebalance the body and may help in the healing process. I hope
that every Yoga teacher believes the same and encourages their students to
breath properly!
Next yoga and focus …
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