When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
Pranayama is the fourth limb of Patanjali's
eight-fold path of yoga, or ashtanga
yoga. You must not attempt it till you have gained some mastery over the
third limb of ashtanga yogasana. This is because asana helps
develop stability in the body, elasticity in the lung fibers and in other
parts of the respiratory systemall essential for proper practice
of pranayama. Some notes of caution must also be kept in mind before
attempting pranayama:
Children who are below the age of 16 should not be taught pranayama.
Do not practice asanas immediately after pranayama. However,
you can practice pranayama after asanas. Do not practice
pranayama in a hurry or when the chest is congested. Do not
practice pranayama for the day if the chest feels heavy and tense or if
the sound of the breath becomes harsh and rough. Do not perform pranayama
immediately after a meal or when you are hungry. Do not practice pranayama
when you are depressed.
Faulty practice, instead of benefiting, is more
likely to invite disease. Irritability, restlessness and heaviness indicate incorrect
practice and, if these happen, stop and seek the guidance of an experienced teacher.
Just
as there are several types of asanas, there are different types of pranayama.
While Ujjayi and VilomaPranayama are performed with open
nostrils, in anuloma, Pratiloma and Nadi Shodhana Pranayama
you use your fingers to regulate breath. Each of these pranayama has a
different effect on your physiology and the state of your mind. A certain amount
of maturity is, therefore, necessary to properly practice these pranayama.
In inhalation (puraka), the outer skin of the back moves down and
towards the front while the inner frontal skin expands and opens up, without disturbing
the outer frontal skin of the chest. In exhalation (rechaka), the skin
of the inner back and the inner front of the trunk is lifted up and alerted to
keep it steady. Then the breath is released in the form of rechaka through the
outer skin of the front chest.
When passivity is felt evenly in the inner
and outer skin of the front and back trunk, without shrinking or stooping of the
spine and caving in of the chest, rechaka is complete.
Art
of Sitting Sit in such a way that the center of your tail bone's bottom
is perpendicular to the floor. If we call the tail bone's center the south pole,
then the center of the spine's head is the north pole. Without disturbing either
of these points, adjust the rest of the spine in a line, as if placing one vertebra
over the other. This subtle adjustment will help you understand the movement of
the body's five elements while doing pranayama.
Any kind of forward
or backward movement means a certain disturbance or imbalance in the elements
in your body. Spread the bottom of your buttock bones as if they were mounds.
Relax the groin. Position the center of the buttocks and the middle portion of
the ankles so that they touch the ground accurately. In this manner, the water
element of the body finds its level in the seat, groin and feet. Keep the front
and back of your floating ribs parallel to each other. Jalandhara Bandha (chin-lock)
When you practice pranayama with open nostrils, construct the dikes in
the body with the help of prajna (conscious awareness) at the various entry
gates for inhalation, which are at the bottom of the cheekbones, the upper palate
and at the top of the windpipe.
In order to build natural dikes for pranayama,
the yogis of yore introduced Jalandhara Bandha or the chin-lock. This helps
the prajna to judiciously control the incoming prana, let it flow
rhythmically and later on distribute it uniformly. Dikes for outgoing energy are
built at the diaphragm, the chest's external intercostal muscles, the windpipe
and the top rings of the cheek bones.
When the breath is deviated from
the conditioned path, it enters and exits the body forcibly. These types of deep
breaths, however, cannot be termed true pranayama. In pranayama,
instead of letting the breath force its way in, the sadhak (seeker) must
see that, while inhaling, the energy of the breath gets completely soaked into
the body and, while exhaling, prana is released like water flowing through
the sluice-gates of a reservoir so that the lungs get the time to absorb and store
the energy in the system.
Only after understanding and learning the basics
of breathing, sitting and the principles of Jalandhara Bandha should you
attempt any specific type of pranayama.