Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Pranayama: Breath as Bridge Between Worlds

Patanjali's breath work becomes a practical tool for African healers to help distressed people regulate nervous systems and reconnect with ancestral and spiritual presence.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pranayama, the regulation of life force through breath, is central to Patanjali's system. African healing traditions recognize breath as the living connection between the visible and invisible worlds, between individual and ancestor, between trauma-frozen body and restored aliveness. For someone experiencing acute anxiety, depression, or the dissociation common in trauma survivors, conscious breathing practices offer immediate agency and physiological reset. Traditional healers use breathwork—sometimes synchronized with drumming, singing, or specific rhythms tied to cultural protocols—to guide the nervous system from dysregulation to presence. Patanjali's detailed pranayama techniques (retention, alternate nostril breathing, extended exhalation) provide a scientific framework for what African healers have long understood: that breath is the meeting place of mind and body, spirit and matter. When someone has been fragmented by colonialism, displacement, or violence, restoring conscious breathing restores the felt sense of being alive, of inhabiting one's body, of agency. Pranayama in African healing context is not just physical regulation but spiritual reconnection—breathing as conversation with one's own life force and with ancestral presence.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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