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Pranayama: Regulating the Vital Life Force

Patanjali's pranayama practices regulate prana (vital energy), stabilizing the nervous system dysregulation that characterizes addiction and craving states.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pranayama, breath regulation and vital force expansion, is Patanjali's direct tool for nervous system transformation. Addiction involves dysregulation: the addict's nervous system cycles between hyperarousal (craving, anxiety) and hypoarousal (numbing, depression). Pranayama techniques like nadi shodhana (alternate nostril breathing), ujjayi (ocean breath), and extended exhale breathing directly calm the amygdala and activate the parasympathetic nervous system. The practices are not merely relaxation; they are precise technologies for resetting the vagal tone and stress response. When craving arises—which is fundamentally a dysregulated nervous system state—pranayama interrupts the cascade. A person practicing 4-7-8 breathing (inhale 4 counts, hold 7, exhale 8) during an urge literally shifts their physiology toward calm and clarity. Patanjali recognized that the mind and prana are intimately linked; controlling the breath controls the mind. For addiction recovery, pranayama provides immediate tools for grounding and nervous system regulation in moments of intensity.

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Mental Health
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