Patanjali's breath regulation practices directly regulate the vagus nerve and autonomic nervous system, providing trauma survivors with a somatic tool to shift from fight-flight-freeze into safety.
Pranayama—conscious breath regulation—is Patanjali's primary bridge between mind and nervous system. Trauma dysregulates breathing: survivors may hold breath chronically, breathe shallowly, or alternate between hyperventilation and apnea. Specific pranayama practices like extended exhale breathing (Nadi Shodhana, Sama Vritti) directly activate the parasympathetic nervous system and calm the amygdala's threat detection. Unlike talk therapy alone, pranayama provides immediate, embodied relief from hyperarousal. Patanjali positions breath as the vehicle through which consciousness meets physiology, understanding that trauma lives in both body and mind. Regular pranayama practice teaches the nervous system that it can shift states, building evidence of resilience and safety that trauma had erased.
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