Physical yoga postures that release stored emotional tension and integrate body-mind regulation for stable emotions.
While often reduced to flexibility exercises, asana (physical postures) in Patanjali's system serves crucial psychological functions. The body stores emotional memory—trauma, shame, and chronic stress manifest as physical tension, restricted breathing, and postural collapse. Asana deliberately engages the body to release these holdings. A person with chronic anxiety often maintains defended posture; opening the chest through backbends can literally expand emotional capacity. Forward folds activate parasympathetic response and reduce emotional reactivity. Twists massage organs and stimulate vagal tone. Patanjali understood that emotions aren't purely mental phenomena but embodied states. You cannot think your way out of body-held tension; you must move it consciously. Asana practice develops body awareness—the ability to notice "my shoulders are raised" or "my jaw is clenched"—which enables real-time emotional regulation. Someone noticing jaw tension can consciously soften it, immediately affecting emotional state. This creates a feedback loop: asana practice teaches body awareness, body awareness enables emotional self-regulation, consistent emotional regulation deepens asana practice. Treating the body as a site of emotional transformation aligns physical and psychological development, creating integrated human functioning.
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