The yogic practice of alternate nostril breathing parallels EMDR's bilateral stimulation, both working to balance nervous system hemispheric processing for trauma integration.
Nadi shodhana, alternate nostril breathing, is a yogic technique that balances the ida (lunar, receptive) and pingala (solar, active) energy channels. While yogic anatomy differs from neuroscience, the effect parallels bilateral brain stimulation: creating balance between right and left hemispheric processing. EMDR's bilateral eye movements, tapping, or auditory stimulation similarly activate both brain hemispheres alternately, facilitating communication between them. Trauma typically creates hemisphere dysregulation: the right hemisphere encodes the traumatic sensation and emotion while the left struggles to make narrative sense. This dissociation maintains trauma's grip. Both nadi shodhana and EMDR's bilateral approach work toward hemispheric integration and balance. Clinicians can teach clients simple nadi shodhana practices between EMDR sessions to extend the bilateral stimulation's regulatory benefits. Combining ancient yogic nervous system practices with modern EMDR protocols creates a comprehensive approach: both recognize that healing requires bringing disparate neural systems into coordinated communication. This synthesis honors trauma-informed neuroscience while drawing on time-tested contemplative wisdom.
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