Patanjali's breath-control practices provide a direct, somatic tool for regulating the dysregulated nervous system at the heart of complex trauma.
Pranayama—systematic regulation of prana (life force) through breath—is central to Patanjali's path and directly addresses the autonomic dysregulation of C-PTSD. The nervous system of trauma survivors is locked in fight-flight-freeze patterns; the breath mirrors this dysregulation (shallow, rapid, held). Patanjali teaches that by consciously modulating breath through techniques like nadi shodhana (alternate nostril breathing), extended exhalation, or ujjayi breathing, one directly influences the nervous system's state. The vagus nerve responds to breathing patterns; extended exhales activate parasympathetic (rest) response. Unlike talk therapy alone, pranayama offers immediate, somatic relief and teaches survivors they possess a tool for self-regulation independent of external circumstances. Over time, systematic pranayama practice retrains the nervous system's baseline from hyperarousal toward equilibrium, reducing the physiological load of trauma and creating foundation for psychological healing.
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