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Pranayama is the art of breathing according to yoga principles and
techniques. It is the beginning of the more inward journey on the
path of yoga, and a more subtle and refined form of self-awareness
and exploration is both developed, and required, for its practice.
Often ignored
by those western adaptations of yoga which only emphasise asana
(posture)
practice, pranayama is one of yogas most ancient
arts, probably dating back more than four thousand years to yogas
very origins. Yogas most important historical text, Patanjalis
Yoga Sutras written two thousand years ago, describes the practice
of asana in such a manner as to suggest that at that time asanas
were seen as a necessary preparation for pranayama, but not widely
practised for their own sake.
Pranayama is both outwardly quiet and abstract and inwardly precise
and powerful. It is a long and challenging voyage which involves
a different approach from asana (posture) practice. Whereas the postures
can initially make use of willpower and determination, pranayama
cannot be done with strength or force.
It is a practice even more subjective and personal than that of
asana. In some ways, no one can really teach pranayama; as teachers
we serve as guides, giving reference points and techniques for the
pupil to use as they experience the breath and its effects when channeled
according to yogic techniques.
If this sounds a little daunting, and perhaps excessively mystifying,
remember that most classical yoga texts suggest that the practice
of pranayama is only to be undertaken when the yoga postures have
been mastered, and under the guidance of an experienced teacher.
In turn, sustained practice of pranayama over many years is an element
of, and a preparation for, the art of dhyana or yogic meditation.
This runs somewhat contrary to the modern Western concept that everything
should be available to everybody at all times. Most yoga schools
receive frequent phone calls from people with no previous yoga experience
asking if we offer lessons in pranayama and meditation, and if not,
why not.
THE PATH TO PRANAYAMA
The Iyengar tradition
takes a classical view of yoga breathing and meditation. According
to Patanjalis Yoga Sutras, these aspects
of yoga come as later stages in the eight steps, or limbs, of yoga.
First an understanding of the yoga postures must be achieved through
keen and conscious practice in order to refine the senses and hone
the body and mind to become more perceptive instruments of self-observation.
Asanas help explore concepts of stillness and inner action, focus
and reflection, firmness of body and alertness and steadiness of
mind, essential prerequisites for the practice of pranayama. If we
were learning to play a musical instrument, we would start with the
foundational skills and progressively learn more difficult techniques;
some more complex pieces would be unavailable to us until we had
reached a degree of accomplishment in the basic forms. Some music
teachers will not allow their students, however gifted, to play certain
passages until they are mature in age and/or mental and emotional
development. A good yoga teacher will exercise similar restraint
with their pupils and teach first a foundation of posture, body awareness
and stability before introducing work with the breath.
In earlier, more rigorous times in India, aspiring yoga practitioners
had first to demonstrate their worthiness as a pupil before being
taken into apprenticeship with a teacher. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika
(1.16) discusses certain habits that undermine yoga practice: over-eating,
over-exertion, useless talk, undisciplined conduct, bad company and
restless inconstancy. The Yoga Upanisads mention other obstacles
such as bad physical posture and self-destroying emotions such as
lust and anger, fear, greed, hatred and jealousy.
How then does one begin to overcome these most common of habits
to make our way along the path of yoga?
Today, many yoga
schools, and certainly those teaching the Iyengar tradition, understand
that mindful practice of asana becomes a major
factor in creating the discipline, personal ethics, energy and firmness
of intention required to move further along the path of pranayama
to inner awareness. In Light on Pranayama, BKS Iyengar writes that as
an earthen pot is baked in a furnace, so should the body be baked
by the fire of asanas to experience the true effulgence (efficacy)
of pranayama.
To begin pranayama, he says, we must first learn how to move the
intercostal muscles (rib-cage muscles) correctly, and also the pelvic
and thoracic diaphragm, by practising the relevant asanas that bring
elasticity to the lungs. Consistent performance of the asanas in
all their variations and for extended lengths of time keeps the nervous
system clean and clear, thus aiding an uninterrupted flow of energy
(prana) while doing pranayama. If health is a balance between mind,
body and spirit, then the practice of yoga postures can help to eradicate
physical ailments and mental distractions, thus clearing the way
for the spirit.
THE CHALLENGE OF PRANAYAMA
Yoga as a system is perhaps unusual, if not unique, in that its
practice both highlights the problems, mental and physical, that
are hindrances to our progress, at the same time as providing us
with the very tools we need to overcome them. The second chapter
of the Yoga Sutras is a practical outline of how, with all of our
human frailties and imbalances, we can use yoga to refine our intelligence
and move beyond the self-limiting, habitual illusions and tendencies
of everyday life to embrace a more unified understanding of ourselves
and our relationship to the world around us.
But do we actually need to add such a subtle and complex subject
as pranayama to our daily routine? Is asana perhaps enough?
The postures in yoga are indeed a means of using our body to discover
our inner self. They provide us with the outer frame, the tangible
and visible form, a structure to work with. The mind is more elusive
and harder to know. It can deceive us so that we believe what we
want to believe, such as convincing ourselves that this is the best
we can or should do.
The body, on the other hand, is like a canvas on which we can express
ourselves as we are right now, and on which we can see the results
of our actions. A leg is straight or bent, no question of confusion
there; we are balancing or not; we are on our mats or off having
coffee. Asana practice is relatively straight forward and an uncomplicated
method for helping us to see who and how we are. Only then is change
possible.
Pranayama is harder to grasp and requires another approach. By using
the skills of focus, reflection, stillness and refinement that we
have begun to acquire through posture work, pranayama begins the
journey inwards, when our minds and emotions can be seen more clearly.
It can never be approached with force or with physical strength.
If we use hardness, it slips further away.
It is like a story I once heard of a method used by a teacher of
bioenergetics many years ago. He organised a sort of competition
between two business men by connecting them with wires to two model
electric trains. The trains were set up in such a way that the more
relaxed their drivers became, the faster their alpha waves would
make the carriages go. The more they tried to win in the traditional
way, the more the trains slowed down. The breath is very similar.
FOUNDATIONS OF PRANAYAMA PRACTICE
The simple essence of pranayama is described in the Yoga Sutras
(2.49) as the controlled intake and outflow of breath in a firmly
established posture. Breath regulation is important because when
the breath is irregular the mind wavers; when the breath is steady
so is the mind. But the practice of pranayama must be undertaken
with caution and respect. The classical text, Hatha Yoga Pradipika
says that as the lion, the elephant and the tiger are tamed gradually,
so also the breath has to be tamed, otherwise it can be harmful to
the sadhaka (practitioner).
Normal breathing in our everyday activities is irregular, sometimes
described by BKS Iyengar as a zig-zag breath. It moves in different
parts of the lungs at various rhythms according to what we are doing,
what position we are in, our mental state, the condition of our lungs
and diaphragm and so on.
But pranayama is more than just deep breathing; a pranayama breath
must be regulated, steady, evenly prolonged, channelled and conscious.
Pranayama consists of an intentional, long, sustained and guided
inhalation, exhalation and retention (holding of the breath). It
not only enables the body to receive an abundant supply of oxygen,
but prolongs and channels this air and energy throughout, so that
the body may savour and fully benefit from the breath in every possible
cell. The conscious regulation and expansion of the breath brings
discipline and focus to the mind.
To even begin to observe and know our own normal breath and its
patterns takes time and continued practice. Our breathing patterns
are deeply habitual and strongly connected to our emotions. To be
able to adjust that breath and transform its rhythm, length and path
at will without tension or struggle and with our bodies tuned and
open to cooperate and synchronise with it is an intricate, delicate
and challenging task. BKS Iyengar once said that anyone with less
than 12 years of regular pranayama practice was still at the raw
beginner stage.
BENEFITS OF PRANAYAMA
I used the word daunting at the beginning of this article. Yet the
rewards are great and changes do occur, a long time before the 12-year
mark. Like pranayama itself, the results are subtle, not as obvious
as the transformations that can be observed in our bodies through
the postures. It is something that occurs on an almost organic level,
outside of our desire for instant gratification.
When I first
started pranayama, I just did a very simple form based on becoming
aware of the breath
and trying to coax the inhalation
and exhalation to be more even in length and quality. I perhaps did
15 minutes a day for about a year. I was not aware of any great difference,
but I practised because the people I was living with all did. At
the end of that year I traveled for a few days and didnt do
any pranayama for that time. Only then did I notice how different
I felt without it. It was its absence after a longish period of consistent
basic practice that made me aware of many of its benefits; so simple
and quiet were the changes that I had at first not noticed them,
yet these initial small modifications also laid the foundation for
other, deeper transformations in the way I felt and thought. In my
experience the most profound benefits of yoga take us by surprise,
with time. They are often not the ones we set out to achieve.
The breath connects our inner world with the outer, it brings our
core in contact with the universe outside. It is an inbuilt form
of giving and receiving which has an ancient, primordial quality,
like the rhythm of the sea. Something always there, something rarely
felt or noticed. It is worth spending some time with, and it is worth
preparing ourselves for.
If you are beginning to practise in the Iyengar tradition, expect
to spend some many months on foundational asanas for the body before
you hear your teacher mention pranayama. However in each class and
in every practice you will be learning something useful to prepare
for it.
In a subsequent article I will describe some of the more specific
postures and techniques we use in our classes for students with a
minimum of one years yoga experience to prepare for pranayama proper.
Pixie Lillas is the Director of the Balmain Yoga Studio in Sydney.
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