Patanjali's asana (physical postures) grounds anxiety in the body through intentional movement, creating stability and safety within the nervous system.
Asana, often misunderstood as merely physical exercise, is Patanjali's gateway to embodied stability. Anxiety often manifests as disembodiment—living in anxious thoughts while disconnected from physical sensations. Asana practices like mountain pose, child's pose, or supported forward folds ground consciousness in the body's solidity. Standing poses activate grounding reflexes; forward folds activate parasympathetic response; backbends can mobilize stuck emotions. Each pose is a meditation on stability and presence. Patanjali emphasized that asana should be "sthira sukham"—simultaneously stable and easeful. This principle directly counters anxiety's tension-contraction pattern. Regular asana practice improves proprioception (body awareness), increases vagal tone, and teaches the nervous system that it's safe to relax. The body becomes a reliable resource rather than a source of threat. For anxiety sufferers, asana reclaims physical life as a sanctuary of presence and safety rather than a site of panic and dissociation.
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