56 practices · 8 families · 39 traditions
Atlas of Breath
Choose a state or explore a tradition – and begin to practice.
What do you need right now?
Or walk a route with Prana
A chain of practices – Prana leads by voice from station to station.
Or explore a tradition
tap a tradition above or choose a state
Hello. I'm Prana.
I'll help you breathe. It takes a couple of minutes.
Breathing practices are not a substitute for medical care. If you are pregnant or have hypertension, epilepsy, heart conditions or recent surgery – consult a doctor. Don't practice while driving or in water.
Good breathing.
Kapalabhati – tradition: Pranayama (Hatha Yoga), India.
Pattern
inhale 0.3s – exhale 0.5s. Sixty cycles, about three minutes.
What it does
energy, lung cleansing, warming, sympathetic activation, improved digestion
Posture: seated with a straight spine.
Caution
pregnancy, hypertension, glaucoma, hernia.
Bhramari – tradition: Pranayama (Hatha Yoga), India.
Pattern
inhale four sec – exhale eight sec. Seven cycles, about five min.
What it does
calming the mind, easing anxiety, lowering blood pressure, activating the pineal gland
Posture: seated.
Caution
ear infections.
If you can’t fall asleep – here is a technique that works faster than a sleeping pill.
What it is
Four breath cycles with a long hold and an even longer exhale. Dr. Andrew Weil (Harvard MD, integrative medicine) adapted it from Pranayama and called it “a natural tranquilizer for the nervous system.” He has done it himself every day for thirty-plus years.
The magic is in the ratio of four to seven to eight. The long hold after the inhale saturates the blood with CO₂ – and high CO₂ flips the brain into “everything’s fine, relax” mode. The long exhale finishes the job: the vagus nerve lowers the pulse, the shoulder muscles drop on their own.
Pattern
Inhale through the nose four seconds – hold seven seconds – exhale through the mouth eight seconds (with a “whoosh” sound, lips pursed). Four cycles, about three minutes.
The tip of the tongue rests against the palate behind the upper teeth – Weil insists on this detail; it helps hold the structure of the exhale.
What it does
- Sleep onset in two to five minutes with regular practice
- Anxiety reduction (short cycles for acute moments, regular practice for the background level)
- Deep parasympathetic activation
- Slowing of thoughts before sleep
When and why
Lying in bed when sleep won’t come. During a panic attack (a short version – two cycles). After a nightmare. On a plane, if you fear flying. Before the dentist.
The morning is not the best idea – it can pull you into drowsiness.
Caution
The first few times you may feel dizzy – this is normal, the body isn’t used to the CO₂ yet. Start with two cycles, build up. No more than four cycles in a row in the first month – Weil stresses this.
Where it comes from
Dr. Andrew Weil (drweil.com), adapted from yogic Pranayama. The specific rhythm of four to seven to eight is his own formula, refined through clinical practice with anxious patients and insomniacs.
If breath had a single “stop-stress” button, it would be the double sigh.
What it is
You don’t need to know anything about the nervous system. Just two short inhales through the nose – and one long exhale through the mouth. Repeat for five minutes. Stanford tested this in 2023 in a randomized controlled trial and found that this technique works better than meditation at reducing anxiety.
Why? The double inhale reinflates the tiniest sacs in the lungs (the alveoli), which collapse during shallow breathing. And the long exhale is a direct button on the vagus nerve: it tells the heart “we’re safe, slow down.”
Pattern
Inhale – inhale – exhaaaaale.
The first inhale is deep, through the nose (∼2 seconds). The second is a short, sharp “top-up” through the nose (half a second). The exhale is slow, full, through the mouth, to complete emptying (∼8 seconds). And so thirty times, about five minutes.
What it does
- Lowers cortisol within one to three sighs (literally – not a metaphor)
- Activates the parasympathetic system through the baroreflex
- Improves mood through the day with daily practice
- Normalizes resting breath (the rate drops within a week)
When and why
In the morning – as a daily practice (five minutes, ideally before coffee). Before a hard conversation. After bad news. In traffic. Before sleep, if your head is buzzing. It works in any posture – sitting, standing, even lying down.
Caution
Practically safe. If you feel dizzy – soften the second inhale. Don’t do it while driving (it relaxes you).
Where it comes from
Stanford RCT 2023 (the Yackle and Huberman labs). Published in Cell Reports Medicine. The physiological sigh is a reflex the body uses on its own (in sleep, while crying). Stanford simply made it conscious and measured it.