Breathing is essential to life and the more we practice it, the better we feel. Yoga and Behavioral Medicine for trauma therapy use breathing exercises to address anxiety, hyperventilation, depression and inability to focus (including ADHD). Yogic breathing methods in particular have developed complex methods to alter consciousness and improve health.
According to yoga scholars from the 2nd century BCE “If you control the breath, you control the mind.” Gaining control of the breath via specific exercises is central to regulating the autonomic nervous system. Pranayama and other breathing exercises provide a foundation for self-care and restoration of rhythm. Even when breathing is not the focus of restoring the ultradian rhythm, a simple 20-40 minute rest period 1-2 times during the day is restorative. The afternoon nap or siesta, which is fast disappearing across all cultures, may be the link of our ancestors who knew well the restorative power of rest to reset the rhythms of the brain during the middle of each day.
The psychobiological link lies in the ultradian rhythm, the natural rhythmic healing response of the mind/body. This is the 90-to-120-minute cycle of rest and activity of the hemispheres of the brain that occurs within the larger 24-hour circadian rhythm.
This rhythm corresponds to the shifts that occur every 90-120 minutes in natural brain hemispheric dominance, and these shifts interact with changes in nasal dominance. During a 90-minute (ultradian) cycle, one hemisphere of the brain is more active and the opposite nostril is more “open” (less congested) than the other. Werntz (1981) demonstrated that the “open” nostril correlated to the opposite side of the brain during its dominance phase and thus were “windows” that revealed the phase of rest/activity, or parasympathetic/sympathetic oscillations of the brain hemispheres (Rossi, 1986) at any point in time.
This observation provided an important physiological link to the ancient science of yoga pranayama, which is based on nostril-specific breathing methods to alter consciousness, mediated in part via the activation of either the right or left hemisphere. This discovery also provides insight into the healing mechanisms of trance, hypnosis, and meditative states. The word pranayama comes from the root word prana, which refers to life force. More than just oxygen, it is considered the force of Spirit: the breath of the gods and goddesses.
Apparently, Anaximenes, the 6th century BCE Greek philosopher, held a similar view, suggesting: As our souls being air hold us together, so breath and air embrace the entire universe. In Spanish, the words espiritu and respirar mean spirit and to breathe, respectively, and are linked to “inspiration.” The Hebrew mystics call it ruach, the Chinese call it chi, and the Greeks call it pneuma (pneumon meaning lungs). Prana is said to flow through the body in channels called nadis that correspond to acupuncture meridians. The main nadis are the ida, the pingala, and the shushumna, mentioned earlier in relation to the caduceus. In Yoga, the ida (yin) corresponds to the left nostril and the right hemisphere of the brain. Pingala (yang) corresponds to the right nostril and the left hemisphere.
Next time you feel agitated, do some yogic breathing exercises!
If you want to learn more, I provide a comprehensive approach to circadian and ultradian rhythms and to yogic breathing for mental health in my 19-hour Certification on Nutritional and Integrative Medicine for Mental Health Professionals.
Werntz, D. (1981). Cerebral hemispheric activity and autonomic nervous function. (Doctoral thesis). San Diego, CA: University of California.
Rossi, E. L. (1986). The psychobiology of mind-body healing: New concepts of therapeutic hypnosis. New York: Norton.
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