15 Mins Pranayama Practice | 5 Deep Breathing Exercises you should do Daily

Bharti Yoga2 minutes read

Pranayama should be practiced for 15 minutes on an empty stomach to activate energy, boost immunity, and induce calmness through specific breathing techniques like thoracic and clavicular breathing, Kapalbhati, bhastrika, alternate nostril, and humming sounds.

Insights

  • Pranayama should be practiced for 15 minutes before or after yoga, preferably on an empty stomach, to tap into inner energy, enhance immunity, and promote serenity.
  • The step-by-step process of pranayama includes specific breathing techniques like thoracic and clavicular breathing, Kapalbhati, bhastrika, and alternate nostril breathing, culminating in primary pranayama with humming sounds, all contributing to holistic well-being.

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Recent questions

  • How long should Pranayama practice ideally last?

    15 minutes

  • What are the benefits of Pranayama practice?

    Activate inner energy, boost immunity, induce calmness

  • What is the recommended posture for Pranayama practice?

    Cross-legged position, hands in chin mudra on knees

  • How should one perform thoracic breathing during Pranayama?

    Expand belly and chest on inhale

  • What is the sequence of Pranayama techniques to follow?

    Kapalbhati, bhastrika, alternate nostril breathing, primary pranayama

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Summary

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"Pranayama: Energize, Boost Immunity, Induce Calm"

  • Pranayama practice should ideally be done for 15 minutes, either at the beginning or end of an asana practice, on an empty stomach, waiting 3-4 hours after eating.
  • The practice helps activate inner energy, boost immunity, and induce calmness.
  • Start in a cross-legged position, hands in chin mudra on knees, eyes closed, spine straight, taking deep yogic breaths.
  • Perform thoracic breathing by expanding belly and chest on inhale, and clavicular breathing by adding shoulder movement on inhale.
  • Kapalbhati pranayama involves 50 active exhalations with passive inhalations, followed by bhastrika pranayama and alternate nostril breathing for 12 rounds each, ending with primary pranayama involving humming sounds.
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