Bhagavad Gītā Pranayama is mentioned in verse 4.29 of the
Bhagavad Gītā, which states "Still others, who are inclined to the process of breath restraint to remain in trance, practice by offering the movement of the outgoing breath into the incoming, and the incoming breath into the outgoing, and thus at last remain in trance, stopping all breathing. Others, curtailing the eating process, offer the outgoing breath into itself as a sacrifice."
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali Pranayama is the fourth "limb" of the
eight limbs of Ashtanga Yoga, as mentioned in verse 2.29 of the
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
Patanjali, a
Rishi, discusses his specific approach to pranayama in verses 2.49 through 2.51, and devotes verses 2.52 and 2.53 to explaining the benefits of the practice. Patanjali does not fully elucidate the nature of prana, and the theory and practice of pranayama seem to have undergone significant development after him. In verse 1.34, pranayama is introduced as a method aimed at stabilizing the mind. The practice involves two primary techniques: exhalation, known as
pracchardana, which entails expelling air from the stomach through the nostrils, and retention,
known as vidharana, which focuses on the controlled restraint of breath. Pranayama supports advanced practitioners in gaining control over the mind and complements meditation, aiding in achieving a light body and steady mind by regulating breath. Yoga teachers including
B. K. S. Iyengar have advised that pranayama should be part of an overall practice that includes the other limbs of Patanjali's Raja Yoga teachings, especially
Yama,
Niyama, and
Asana.
Hatha yoga The Indian tradition of
Hatha yoga makes use of various pranayama techniques. The 15th century
Hatha Yoga Pradipika is a key text of this tradition and includes various forms of pranayama such as
Kumbhaka breath retention and various body locks (
Bandhas). Other forms of pranayama breathing include: •
Nadi Shodhana (alternate nostril breathing), also called Anuloma Viloma •
Ujjayi ("Victorious Breath"), a modern technique used in
Ashtanga (vinyasa) yoga • Sitali (breathing through the rolled tongue), •
Bhastrika ("Bellows Breath"), •
Kapalabhati ("Skull-shining Breath", a
Shatkarma purification), • Surya Bhedana ("Sun-piercing Breath"), • Bhramari (buzzing like a bee), a soothing technique.
B. K. S. Iyengar cautions that pranayama should only be undertaken when one has a firmly established yoga practice and then only under the guidance of an experienced Guru.
Paramahansa Yogananda concurs, writing, "The real meaning of Pranayama, according to Patanjali, the founder of Yoga philosophy, is the gradual cessation of breathing, the discontinuance of inhalation and exhalation".
Yoga as exercise The yoga scholar
Andrea Jain states that pranayama was "marginal to the most widely cited sources" before the 20th century, and that the breathing practices were "dramatically" unlike the modern ones. She writes that while pranayama in modern
yoga as exercise consists of synchronising the breath with movements (between
asanas), in texts like the
Bhagavad Gita and the
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, pranayama meant "complete cessation of breathing", for which she cites Bronkhorst 2007. The yoga guru
Swami Kuvalayananda began the
experimental study of pranayama in 1924. The anthropologist
Joseph Alter describes the attempt to apply science to the practices of yoga as an "accidental confusion in meaning" of domains (yoga and medicine) that explore different "ways of knowing". Given Kuvalayananda's interest in prana, from 1929 he experimented on the effect of pranayama on the
respiratory system. He sought to show that pranayama developed the
nadi channels of the
subtle body, rather than simply exchanging the gases
oxygen and
carbon dioxide, but the way he did this was to measure the rate of removal of carbon dioxide and later of oxygen consumption. Many further studies, by Kuvalayananda and many others, followed. Among the examples given by Alter was the 1979 study by Kesari, Vaishawanar, and Deshkar, which sought to discover the effect of asana and pranayama practice on the clearance of the waste products
urea and
creatinine from the body. Alter writes that the many experiments almost all studied "anatomical, physiological, or biochemical variables" and gathered
empirical data. For instance, a 1956 study by Kuvalayananda and Karambelkar sought to find out what happened to the acidity of the urine following prolonged
bhastrika pranayama. Alter adds that although the work had "empirical form", it was driven by "an
ontological question about the nature of nature", as Kuvalayananda and his colleagues at
Kaivalyadhama saw the biological variables as
epiphenomena to the "meta-material power inherent in Yoga." Physiological studies of pranayama have continued into the 21st century. For example, a 2018
systematic review by Andrea Zaccaro and colleagues examined 2,461 research articles on the effects of pranayama and breath control more generally on the cardio-
respiratory system and the
central nervous system. Only 15 articles met their eligibility criteria, that included voluntary control of breathing and specific focus on pranayama. They found "interesting albeit limited evidence of a relationship between physiological parameters and psychological/behavioral outcomes in healthy subjects undergoing slow breathing techniques." == Buddhism ==