1
The positive dynamic effects of deep breathing are
well known. This is because with the indrawing breath, the deep inhalation, the
mind is set positively and affirmatively; it is then taking advantage of the
natural fact that the person's life-force is being drawn upon. If, however, we
consider what happens when breath is exhaled, we see the process is reversed.
During the interval between the exhalation and the next inhalation it is the
universal life-force which then flows into the man because he is then passive,
whereas when inhaling he was active. Now this universal life-force, when it
expresses itself in man, acts as a link with the universal spirit and demands
physical existence. In other words, when the breath is let out and briefly held
before it is indrawn again, there is a bridge to the higher consciousness of
man. The bridge is there, but he must take advantage of it and usually he does
not. If, during those few moments of pause, he turned his mind into meditation
upon his true being, he would find it easier then than at other times; or if he
did the same thing after having had an unexpected glimpse, he could retain the
uplift of the glimpse for a longer period.
2
The practice of breathing, when done as an exercise -
whether sitting or walking - can be harmonized with a cosmic breath; that is,
breathe out slowly, prolonging the outgoing breaths, so that the intake will
come of itself naturally. While breathing out, mentally direct the air downwards
towards the diaphragm. While breathing in, mentally connect with the cosmic
life-force. Remember that the purpose of this lengthened outbreath is not only
to empty the lungs of the stale air, but also to empty the mind of negative
thoughts.
3
It will help to empty the mind of its tumult and the
nerves of their agitation if he will breathe out as fully as possible, inhaling
only when the first feeling of discomfort starts. He should then rest and
breathe normally for several seconds. Next, he should breathe in as deeply as
possible. The air is to be kept in the lungs until it is uncomfortable to do so.
This alternation completes one cycle of breathing. It may be repeated a number
of times, if necessary, but never for a longer period than ten minutes.(P)
4
The other breathing exercise which is dangerous - not
physically so much as mentally - is that which prescribes breathing through
alternate nostrils so that one nostril is closed by a finger and only the other
is used until the changeover is made to the other nostril. This exercise is the
one that threatens sanity. I would enforce as a rule that everyone who sets up
to teach hatha yoga to others should be compelled to go through a course of at
least one year in the anatomy of the body and then in the physiology of the
body. The work must have a scientific basis because it encroaches on the medical
domain.(P)
5
Revitalizing Breath Exercise: (1) Stand at an
open window, spine erect, body straight, hands tightly holding hips. (2) Expel
all stale air through the mouth. (3) Take three short, sharp sniffs of air and
expel the total quantity in one long-drawn exhalation. Pause and breathe
normally. Repeat three times. (4) Breathe in deeply through the nose, starting
as low in the abdomen as possible, rising upward in the lungs until the upper
part is filled. (5) The mind should concentrate on the solar plexus behind the
navel. Imagine a stream of golden-white energy being drawn from there and
radiated throughout the body. (6) Pucker up the lips and let all the air out as
vigorously as possible. Tighten the diaphragm muscle while doing so, and move it
upwards. Pause and breathe normally. Repeat three times.(P)
6
Breathing Exercise: A useful exercise which I
have mentioned in one of the earlier books is to breathe out slowly and then let
the inbreath come of itself, naturally. While breathing out, hold the thought of
throwing out all negative thoughts and undesirable emotions. I ought to add now
to the description of that exercise that this exhalation should last as long as
possible without undue discomfort and that it should be originated in the region
of the diaphragm - the abdomen or behind the navel. Keep the spine upright, with
the head and neck in line with it. This enables you to better receive cosmic
currents of life-force. It also strengthens the power of self-control, of
disciplining the body.
7
The Death-Gasp Breathing Exercise: Lie flat on
your back. Take a deep, quick inhalation through the open mouth, accompanied by
the gasping half-loud shriek which such an act involuntarily produces. Then
gradually and slowly exhale again. This breathing exercise tries to imitate the
death cry of dying creatures, the vocal expression of their fear of death. Such
an imitation of the physical side of dying should bring with it, momentarily,
the associated death fear whose gravity and importance naturally swallow up all
lesser fears. If this exercise is done twice daily, these lesser fears gradually
become weaker, while the fear of death is itself overcome.
8
If the hatha yogis are right, if the way to the
kingdom of heaven is nasal and atmospheric, then why should we trouble to become
unselfish, disciplined, and intelligent? Why bother to improve our characters at
all? No! the wise student does not need breathing exercises although he may use
them.
9
The power of the inheld breath to augment the body's
energy is striking. A heavy weight which one could hardly lift ordinarily can be
lifted much more easily if a deep, long breath is first taken and the air is
retained in the lungs while attempting the feat. A long forward leap or a high
jump can be more successfully achieved by following the same method.
10
Health and strength are to a limited extent in
ratio to lung power. It is needful to practise deep breathing and take long
breaths.
11
Breathing Exercise to Improve, Control, and
Prevent Colds: Take in a series of six short breaths through the mouth very
quickly, hold the air in the lungs for about two or three seconds, then let it
out in a single, easy exhalation.
12
When deep breath is united to keen thought, and
when the fused result is driven upwards physically to the brain and mentally in
lofty aspiration to the Soul, the visitant will know by a beautiful change of
consciousness that it is welcome.
13
Chuang Tzu also said that the pure men of old drew
breath from their innermost depths, whereas the vulgar, only from their throats.
We might say, this is equivalent to breathing from the point of the hara:
a slow, deep breathing from behind the diaphragm.
14
The importance of diaphragmatic breathing is not
only a physical one, because full breathing enables us to get the full
manifestation of the life-force in the body, but also because it allows for a
fuller and freer manifestation of the mind.
15
The danger of taking to these breathing exercises
for the sake of developing personal powers is that if the powers are finally
gained, the spiritual path is often lost.
16
Deep breathing practised in the shade of fir trees
is not only invigorating, but beneficial to the lungs.
17
Breathing exercise to pacify mind and body:
(1) lie flat on back with closed eyes; (2) breathe in fully, then hold breath
for three seconds; (3) exhale, and restore normal breathing to get comfortable.
This completes one cycle. Repeat it for a complete cycle of seven repetitions.
Further instruction for use and development of this exercise must be obtained
from a qualified teacher.
18
Those who wish to invigorate themselves quickly
should practise for two or three minutes what has been variously called deep
breathing, diaphragmatic breathing, and abdominal breathing. Expel the breath
vigorously, then with palms resting on the lower ribs take in very slowly a deep
breath, stretching out the diaphragm muscle while doing so, then exhale somewhat
less slowly. Repeat this exercise until feeling freshly renewed. A variant of
this is practised in hatha yoga, but it is not recommended to those working
without a competent hatha yoga teacher, because it has its own dangers. This
variant consists in holding the breath before exhaling it and the exhalation
itself is done with a hissing noise. All breath holdings can be dangerous. If
the breath is held for too long, consciousness is lost, and what is too long for
one person may not be for another.
19
The practice of breath control (pranayama)
may be viewed in terms of its goals, the means to attain them, and possible
misuses of the practice.
Goals of breath control include: to reduce the number of wandering thoughts; to stop wandering thoughts completely; potential production of a glimpse; lengthening of a glimpse, if obtained; and bringing about a glimpse if lost.
The most common means of achieving these goals through breath practices are dual, and include the holding of the breath for short, safe periods, and the equalizing of the in and out breaths.
Dangers of breath control, if improperly practised, include: holding the breath for too long a period, causing a feeling of suffocation; the arisal of noticeable pressure on the heart; and a feeling that the lungs are about to burst. These warnings do not imply waiting to suspend practice until the problem occurs. It is more prudent to stop before the danger line is reached.
20
An aspirant came to Swami Ramdas and complained
that, practising the instruction given him by a guru, he had done breathing
exercises. These had ruined his health to the degree of forcing him to resign
from a high government post. Ramdas often warned his disciples and visitors that
these hatha yoga breath exercises were not meant for those living in the world,
but for yogis who had withdrawn from it, and especially for those who were
totally celibate.
21
Whether or not breathing exercises should be
practised depends upon what feelings they arouse in the individual. If there are
indications that they are leading to undesirable physical or psychical results,
one should remember that progress can be made equally well without them if
greater emphasis is placed on prayer.
22
Aspirational thought should not be suspended during
breathing exercises, but should, on the contrary, be combined with them. Breath
control is primarily intended to help still the mind, but it is not enough by
itself to bring results.
23
The only safe breathing exercises to follow are
given in the books. There are many other breathing exercises, but they are
useless for the Western seeker and will positively NOT give him the higher
consciousness he seeks. They will certainly produce queer effects, beautiful
reveries, or refreshing deep sleep, but one can get the same results by using
hashish or opium, and with less trouble. Neither Truth nor Peace can be got via
the nose. There is only one way to arrive at the goal he seeks and that is by
disciplining thought in meditation and concentration, and then using it for all
it is worth in enquiry into the meaning of life.
24
There are great dangers in the indiscriminate
practice of yoga breathing exercises. Even the one given in Vivekananda's books
causes much havoc among Western students and in his later years Vivekananda
himself greatly regretted having published it. Breath control is a sharp-edged
instrument which can be very serviceable and yet at the same time very
dangerous. A safe exercise which may be practised without a teacher is that
given in Dr. Brunton's books. An abnormal nervous condition and ganglion trouble
may well result from the ill-informed experiment of holding the breath.
25
The forceful retention of breath used in the yoga
of body control was found by Buddha to be most painful as well as exciting to
the nervous system, and it was only when he sat under the tree where he attained
Nirvana that he found and practised the superior method which harmonized well
with his lofty aim. An exercise which is largely identical with the one
practised by the Buddha has been given in The Secret Path and The
Quest of the Overself. The essence of it consists in breathing as gently and
slowly as possible as is consistent with comfort for a few minutes prior to the
actual practice of meditation. Thus the taking in and giving out of the breath
is brought under temporary control. During the operation, attention should be
wholly directed towards it, so that the student is fully conscious of the entire
breath movement and of nothing else. This exercise is particularly recommended
to remove thoughts of depression, bitterness, and unhappiness. Its chief aim,
however, is to help bring down the upspringing thought waves to a calm surface
and thus merge the numerous separate thoughts in undifferentiated Thought.
Students of the ultimate path can just as usefully practise it as a preliminary
to their mental exercise and it will be just as valuable to them. Two points
ought, however, to be added to the description given in those books: the first
being the necessity of keeping the torso erect so as to help and not hinder the
respiratory process, and the second being that the breathing is not to be done
by raising and lowering the shoulders but by raising and lowering the diaphragm
so that the muscular region affected lies between the stomach and the chest.
26
The exercises in breath control are intended to
affect the nervous system, or the psychic centres, or the bodily muscles, or
certain organs according to which exercise is practised.
27
The first movement after waking up in the morning
is intended to drive off drowsiness. It is practised by completely exhaling all
stale air from the lungs and then deeply inhaling pure fresh air.
28
By watching the incoming and outgoing breath, its
rhythm naturally slows down, thus calming the violent action of heart, lungs,
and diaphragm. The heart pumps about seventeen tons of blood a day, and gets no
rest at night, hence is the most overworked organ in the body. The ancients knew
this method of resting the heart, thus increasing the span of life and also
liberating a tremendous amount of life power, which revitalizes the cells of the
body.
29
The highest achievement of the yoga of body control
which is effected through certain breathing exercises is the state of utter
unconsciousness of the physical body and of the physical world. Although this
also effectively stops the process of generating thoughts, its result must not
be confused with that stoppage which is attained in the intermediate or advanced
mystic exercises. It is quite true to say that before or during the deep-trance
state to which these breathing exercises eventually lead, the yogi's body can
show remarkable powers; it may be buried under ground for hours or even days and
emerge unharmed; it may be stabbed with knives but suffer hardly any loss of
blood; its heart and lung action may cease entirely so far as finger and
stethoscope tests may be able to ascertain; and corrosive poisonous acids may be
poured into its stomach without hurting its membranous lining.
30
Chinese yoga: Breathe in very gently and hold the
breath for the longest possible time. Breathe out just as gently. This gives
mental abstraction.
31
The exercise requires him to empty the lungs
thoroughly of all air, to wait two or three seconds, and to fill the lungs again
slowly and deeply. At the same time, by using his creative imagination and his
concentrated will, he commands the lower energy and consecrates it to lofty
aspiration.
32
Transmutation exercise: Breathe in deeply and
repeatedly. At the same time, definitely direct the energy to achieve magically
and to create mentally whatever specific physical or mental objective is aspired
to. It becomes a vehicle of sacred consecration, born from the transmutation of
sex fluid into spiritual force. Thus a white magic ritual is performed, not for
emotive relief but to start a new current of creative power. It may be done
along with prayers and declarations.
33
If the retention of breath, which is the praised
aim of hatha yogis, were enough by itself to confer spiritual benefits, then the
pearl fishers who dive far below the surface of the waters of the Arabian Sea
and Indian Ocean holding their breath for several minutes should feel and show
these benefits too. But no report of such a result has ever been made.
34
Inhaling deeply is a health-giving exercise which
revives spirits and cures depression. But this is so only provided the air is
sent to the bottom of the lungs and thus expands the diaphragm. Expanding the
lungs sideways is not enough. They must also be expanded in a downward
direction.
35
Breathing exercises are best done in the morning.
This is because the air is then purest, the body most in need of stimulation and
awakening, the mind most ready to join with the breath in influencing the whole
person.
36
A yogic breathing exercise which is really useful
and danger-free combines constructive thinking with deep breathing. On the
inhalation, the student is to imagine he is strengthening his will by
transmuting his lower forces; on the exhalation he is to imagine that he is
casting out emotional weakness and rubbish. The breaths should be deeper than
usual, forceful "like a pair of bellows powerfully manipulated by a smith," as
an ancient Hindu text says.
37
These breathing exercises are safe only if certain
abstentions are practised. The chief of them are chastity, teetotalism, and
non-smoking.
38
What does he seek to do by practising a process of
breath control? First, the freeing of his mind from distractions and wanderings;
second, the awakening of the "spirit-heat." The deeper the breathing, the
greater the power awakened.
39
There is another reason besides Nature's stillness
or environmental quietness for choosing dusk, dawn, or midnight, and that is the
balanced breathing which temporarily follows. This in turn steadies the mind. At
other times the breath passes more through the left or through the right nostril
- disequilibrium which affects the mind.
40
The Hebrew Bible allots seventy years as the human
life-span but the Hindu Vedic scripture which is far older, allots a hundred
years. It is a curious fact that the ancient Svarodaya Manual of Yoga
reported man as breathing three times less each minute than he generally does
today. This means that each breath was longer in those early days when he lived
out a century of years.
41
When the breath is deliberately inhaled or exhaled
gently and evenly as an initial period of the meditation practice, the mind is
slowly forced into a calm and concentrated mood.
42
The outgoing breath is not less important in its
influence on the mind. If it is to contribute to the attainment of tranquillity,
it should be so gentle that powder in a hand held to the nose would not be blown
away. A forcible or violent exhalation obstructs the rising of the desired
mental state.
43
Since the primary purpose of these exercises is to
contribute toward the general attempt to gain control of the mind, to lessen and
quieten the activity of thinking, to bring a settled calm into the entire
consciousness, and to soothe and pacify the emotions, the primary means used is
to establish a rhythm by breathing at a measured rate.
44
All breathing exercises should be done with the
head, neck, and spine erect, hence done standing or sitting upright. This is
partly because the spinal cord is ultimately affected by them, and should be
kept free for the passage through it of nerve currents, and partly because the
cerebellum at the nape of the neck is likewise ultimately affected by the
passage of nerve currents through it.
45
Because I gave out an exercise (in The Quest of
the Overself) in gentle, shallow breathing to be done for not more than five
or six minutes when preparing for meditation in order to help induce the proper
condition of calmness, some wrongly understood this to be a recommendation to be
practised constantly throughout the day, and for a special purpose. To do it as
a settled way of breathing was never advised and ought never to have been
misread into the published instructions. On the contrary, for habitual day-long
use I advise always and prescribe with conviction the method of deep
diaphragmatic breathing as one to be adopted as customary.
46
Draw the Force into every pore of your skin until
it pervades your whole body.
47
Breathing exercises should never be pushed to
excess, for then they may become very dangerous. It is safer to underpractise
them than to overdo them.
48
Why do people sigh agitatedly or catch their breath
when hearing unexpected news about a relative's death? Is this not a sign that
breath is the brother of thought?
49
The breath-watching exercise is a useful one. Keep
the current of attention firmly fixed on the current of breath itself for a few
minutes. Thus breathing becomes converted temporarily from an unconscious into a
conscious process.
50
With every inhaled breath, draw in mentally also
the calm strength, the renewal of poise which you need most at the time.
51
The combination of deep abdominal breathing with
high spiritual aspiration forms an excellent exercise which is simple, easy, and
effective. It gives a momentum to the positive and ennobling forces of the whole
being.
52
The practice of equalizing the time periods of the
incoming and outgoing breaths makes for a balanced flow of the nervous currents.
This leads in turn to better control of the nerves and feelings. It is therefore
a desirable exercise for those emotional types of persons who need it.
53
It is not only during set periods that he is to
practise these slow, deep, and long breaths, but as frequently throughout the
day as possible. In this way, it will become his habitual pattern of normal
breathing.
54
The state of his breathing shows also the state of
his feelings, his mind, and even his will.
55
Since the breath and the seed are man's most vital
and valuable energies, they must be rightly used; they cannot be left out of
such a scheme of purification and transformation.
56
A warning must be given that the regular occurrence
of pain or of acute discomfort during the practice of any of these exercises
ought to be taken as a red signal to abandon it. Otherwise an injury may result.
57
Clare Booth Luce, formerly an ambassador to Italy,
once told how when she practised breathing exercises her body became cataleptic,
as though dead, while she saw it lying inert from above. That stopped her
exercising!
58
Deeper and fewer breaths will be needed by a vital,
healthy man than by a weakly, sicker one.
59
The relaxed tension-free life brings with it a loss
of nervousness, and this in turn a loss of the desire to smoke tobacco. The
practice for a few minutes daily of slowing down breathing to half the usual
rate is an exercise which affects blood circulation and slows it down, too. This
indirectly helps to reduce the desire to smoke.
60
All breathing exercises should begin by cleansing
the lungs with a thorough exhalation.
61
The man who is being treated in the Indian jungle
for a snakebite, and whose wound must be cut out with a knife, is told to hold
his breath during the cutting operation. Why?
62
In the Japanese art of karate, which can disable a
man immediately by a blow with the side of the hand upon sensitive areas of the
neck or throat, it should be noted that the art is performed on the outgoing
breath.
63
The breathing exercises of yoga have results beyond
the physical. They cleanse the emotional nature and purify the nervous system.
64
When the breathing is reduced to a few counts per
minute, the production of poisonous carbon dioxide is reduced, too; the
operation of the heart becomes calmer as the flow of blood slows down, the
oxidation in the brain gets less, and the head feels markedly lighter. The rest
of the body seems vaporous as if half-anesthetized. Thoughts are fewer and less
insistent, the mind tending towards inactivity.
65
Inattention during this practice will produce
sleep, whilst concentrated attention will bring a tingling sensation of Divine
Life to every cell in the body. By faithful concentration we eventually learn to
focus the mind and its power on any desired line of thought and hold it there,
free of distinction. This enables us to rightfully seek a solution for every
problem, and bit by bit opens up for us a greater and more fascinating spiritual
horizon.