After being diagnosed with breast cancer, 47-year-old Anupama’s world was turned upside down. The therapies—surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy—took a toll on her physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Fatigue, worry, insomnia, and disconnection were some of the issues that plagued her. At the urging of her oncologist, she enrolled in a hospital-based integrative yoga therapy program. Over time, she not only experienced better sleep and less pain but also a renewed sense of direction and peace—a change not that medication alone could provide.
Her case is not unusual. Globally, yoga is increasingly being accepted as an adjunct to cancer therapy, addressing the inner layers of pain and supporting healing from the inside out.
Cancer is not only a disease of wayward cells—it impacts the whole being:
Physical: Pain, fatigue, nausea, neuropathy, immune suppression
Emotional: Fear, anxiety, depression, mood swings
Mental: Loss of identity, existential concern
Spiritual: Disconnection, loss of meaning or faith
Yoga therapy provides a holistic model to facilitate these aspects of recovery.
Traditional cancer therapies—surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy—typically induce side effects that linger long after remission.
Common Long-Term Effects:
Chronic fatigue
Immune dysfunction
Anxiety and depression
Sleep disturbances
“Chemo brain” (cognitive fog)
Research at MD Anderson Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School, and AIIMS Delhi now confirms that yoga therapy decreases symptom burden, enhances quality of life, and even modulates immune markers and gene expression.
Chronic stress suppresses immunity and slows healing.
Yoga lowers cortisol, increases vagal tone, and induces calmness.
Yoga increases immune resilience by enhancing:
Natural killer cell function
Lymphatic flow
Inflammatory cytokine homeostasis
Yoga Nidra and restorative yoga resynchronize sleep patterns and mitigate cancer fatigue.
Using breath, calm, and meditation, yoga enables survivors to work through grief, fear, and trauma in a gentle and safe manner.
Yoga therapy needs to be tailored, gentle, and supportive, taking into consideration the patient’s recovery stage, treatment plan, and energy level.
Gentle, restorative, and supportive postures are best.
Supta Baddha Konasana (Reclining Bound Angle) – Opens the chest and soothes the mind
Viparita Karani (Legs-Up-the-Wall) – Relieves tiredness and promotes circulation
Setu Bandhasana (Bridge Pose) – Stimulates thymus, aids immunity
Marjariasana-Bitilasana (Cat-Cow) – Mobilizes spine and breath gently
Balasana (Child’s Pose) – Deeper rest and reflection
Utilize props such as bolsters, blankets, and chairs for safety and comfort.
Breath connects body and mind, and in cancer treatment, gentle awareness of breath becomes medicine.
Dirgha Shwas (Three-Part Breath) – Enlarges lung capacity and causes relaxation
Nadi Shodhana – Harmonizes brain and body, calms fear
Bhramari – Enhances nitric oxide, decreases stress hormones
Refrain from rapid or aggressive pranayama in active treatment or during periods of exhaustion.
Yoga Nidra: Guided body-mind scan inducing profound physiological relaxation
Mindfulness Meditation: Enhances here-and-now awareness and lessens fear
Loving-Kindness Meditation: Assists in forgiving the body and restoring self-esteem
Chakra Visualization: For balance in energies and hope
Ravi, a 38-year-old IT professional, was in remission from leukemia but had insomnia, joint pain, and emotional numbness. He joined a 12-week yoga therapy program that consisted of:
Restorative yoga 3 times a week
Daily pranayama and Yoga Nidra
Reflective journaling and chakra meditation
Within 2 months, his pain decreased, and at the end of the program, he reported deeper sleep, emotional openness, and clarity about his life purpose.
MD Anderson (USA): Yoga enhanced sleep quality and lowered cortisol levels in breast cancer survivors.
AIIMS Delhi: Yoga lowered pro-inflammatory cytokines and improved quality of life among survivors.
Harvard School of Public Health: Yoga and meditation decelerated cellular aging among cancer patients.
Healing from cancer is not simply about survival—it’s about reclaiming meaning.
Yoga becomes a guide along the journey of transformation, allowing one to:
Accept their changed body
Release fear and trauma
Practice gratitude
Live life with new intention
“Yoga doesn’t just help people recover from cancer; it helps them awaken to life.”
Steer clear of forceful practices, intense twists, or excessive heat
Adapt in accordance with stage (pre-treatment, during, post-treatment)
Sensitize to emotional vulnerability and possible trauma provokers
Always refer to oncologists and work in collaboration with medical teams
Cancer is confronting every aspect of human life—but also the doorway to profound inner healing. Yoga therapy provides a blueprint to not just endure but transform the cancer process into a journey of wisdom, peace, and wholeness.
Yoga hints in the hospital room, the studio, or the stillness of one’s breath:
“You are not broken. You are healing. Let the breath guide you home.”