1 of 2

Hour 62 Yoga Therapy – Asthma and Respiratory Disorders

Yoga Therapy for Asthma and Respiratory Disorders

Ticket Hour 62 Online Yoga Life
Introduction: Breathing Beyond the Blockage

Asthma and other breathing ailments may feel like surviving on a narrow straw—air is valuable, anxiety creeps in, and breathing is hard work. Yoga Therapy provides not only breathing exercises, but an integrated lifestyle plan that restores balance between body, breath, and mind. This chapter discusses how particular yogic practices can help diminish the frequency, severity, and emotional effect of asthma and related respiratory illnesses.

I. Recognizing Asthma and Respiratory Ailments

Asthma is an asthma inflammatory disease of the aerways. Typical symptoms include:

  • Breathlessness
  • Wheezing
  • Tightness in chest
  • Coughing, especially at nighttime and early morning

Other respiratory diseases that have been ameliorated by yoga are:

  • Chronic Bronchitis
  • COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)
  • Sinusitis

Predominant Triggers:

  • Allergens and toxins
  • Emotional stress and anxiety
  • Cold air or exercise
  • Respiratory infections

Conventional treatment involves bronchodilators and steroids. However, Yoga Therapy seeks to empower self-regulation by dealing with breathing mechanics, postures, and emotion stability.

II. Case Study: Rahul’s New Breath of Life

Rahul, 28 years old and a software engineer by profession, had been suffering from asthma since his childhood. His inactive lifestyle and stress aggravated the attacks. Medicines controlled them but made him dependent and lethargic.

He joined a therapeutic yoga course. His improvement was as follows:

Week 1:

  • Gaze at the breath to develop awareness
  • Soft asanas such as Tadasana, Bhujangasana, and Setu Bandhasana
  • Dirgha Shwas (Yogic 3-Part Breathing) for short durations

Week 4:

  • Nadi Shodhana Pranayama was introduced
  • Practiced Bhramari to calm the vagus nerve
  • Experienced improved breath control, less nighttime symptoms

Week 8:

  • Rahul cut his inhaler usage by 40%
  • Became a member of guided Yoga Nidra for stress management
  • Began assisting others in breathing anxiety management

Yoga didn’t merely strengthen his lungs; it rewrote his lifestyle and thinking.

III. Yoga Therapy Protocol for Asthma & Respiratory Health
1. Asanas to Enhance Lung Capacity

Gentle positions that expand the chest, enhance diaphragm movement, and let go of tension:

  • Tadasana (Mountain Pose) – elongates spine, opens thorax
  • Bhujangasana (Cobra Pose) – strengthens intercostal muscles
  • Setu Bandhasana (Bridge Pose) – enhances lung perfusion
  • Sukhasana with arms lifted – stretches intercostals and frees tightness

Practice with sensitivity, don’t overdo.

2. Pranayama (Breathing Techniques)

Breath is both solution and problem for asthma. These practices retrain nervous system and breathing mechanics:

  • Dirgha Shwas (3-Part Breath) – instructs complete, gentle breathing
  • Nadi Shodhana (Alternate Nostril) – balances sympathetic/parasympathetic response
  • Bhramari (Humming Bee Breath) – calms mind, enhances nitric oxide levels
  • Ujjayi (Victorious Breath) – assists in maintaining calm beneath breath pressure

Do not use Kapalabhati or Bhastrika during active asthma exacerbation.

3. Meditation and Mindfulness

Asthma is exacerbated by fear and anxiety. Mindfulness decreases emotional reactivity:

  • Yoga Nidra to calm nervous system
  • Visualization techniques for relaxed breathing
  • Mantra meditation to transition from fear to faith
IV. Lifestyle and Diet Recommendations
  • Steer clear of mucus-producing foods (dairy, fried, sugar)
  • Do yoga in clean, well-ventilated areas
  • Rest sufficiently but not lying flat during attacks
  • Maintain an asthma journal to monitor triggers and breakthroughs
V. Do’s and Don’ts for Asthmatic Practitioners

Do:

  • Start with brief, gentle classes
  • Practice daily, even 10 minutes
  • Employ a prop (such as a bolster) under the back to expand the chest

Don’t:

  • Force the breath or retain it unnecessarily
  • Practice in dirty or contaminated environments
  • Disregard initial signs of a flare
Conclusion: Breath as a Bridge to Freedom

Yoga Therapy for asthma is not an isolated correction; it is the practice of returning to the breath—over and over—with empathy and valor. With time, the constriction relaxes, the terror abates, and a roomy new relationship to life starts.

“When you tame your breath, you command your mind. When you command your mind, even tight lungs can flower.”