Pranayama practices regulate nervous system activity, offering ADHD individuals somatic tools for managing emotional dysregulation and impulsivity without medication side effects.
Pranayama—regulation of prana (life force) through breath—is Patanjali's direct intervention in the nervous system. ADHD often involves dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system: hyper-arousal (racing thoughts, restlessness) or hypo-arousal (fatigue, dissociation). Specific pranayama practices target each state. Nadi Shodhana (alternate nostril breathing) balances the nervous system's two hemispheres, calming hyperarousal. Ujjayi (victorious breath) provides grounding during overwhelm. Extended exhales activate the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing fight-or-flight activation. Unlike medication, pranayama offers immediate, bodily agency: you control your nervous system state through breathing. For ADHD, this is transformative. Before important meetings, transitions, or high-stress moments, 2-3 minutes of deliberate pranayama reduces impulsivity, anxiety, and emotional reactivity. The practice is portable, free, and cumulative: regular pranayama rewires your baseline arousal level. Patanjali places pranayama early in yoga's path because regulation of breath precedes regulation of mind. For ADHD emotional dysregulation, pranayama offers a somatic foundation for all other therapeutic and learning efforts.
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