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Glossary›Chandra Bhedana

Glossary

Chandra Bhedana

Chandra Bhedana is a yogic breathing technique in which inhalation occurs through the left nostril and exhalation through the right, activating the body's cooling, lunar energy channel.

What is Chandra Bhedana?

Chandra Bhedana (sometimes spelled Chandra Bheda) is a pranayama technique from the Hatha Yoga tradition in which the practitioner inhales exclusively through the left nostril and exhales through the right. The name derives from Sanskrit: chandra meaning “moon” and bhedana meaning “piercing” or “penetrating,” thus “moon-piercing breath.” This practice is designed to activate the ida nadi—the subtle energy channel associated with cooling, lunar, receptive, and parasympathetic qualities—while bypassing the pingala nadi, the solar channel linked to heat and sympathetic arousal.

Unlike alternate nostril breathing (Nadi Shodhana), which balances both channels, Chandra Bhedana deliberately emphasizes the lunar pathway to cultivate calmness, reduce excess heat, and prepare the nervous system for meditation or sleep. Classical texts describe it as a practice for pacifying mental agitation, lowering body temperature, and countering conditions of excess pitta (the Ayurvedic fire element).

Origins & Lineage

Chandra Bhedana appears in several medieval Hatha Yoga texts, most notably the Hatha Yoga Pradipika (15th century CE) by Svatmarama, where it is described in Chapter 2, verses 48-50. Svatmarama writes that the practice should be performed by drawing in air through the left nostril, retaining it according to capacity, and expelling it through the right nostril. The text claims that this technique “purifies the nadis” and is particularly effective for those suffering from excess heat or inflammation.

The Gheranda Samhita (late 17th century), another foundational Hatha Yoga manual, also references the practice, emphasizing its cooling properties and its role in balancing the subtle body before advanced meditation techniques. The practice is rooted in the broader tantric physiology that maps 72,000 nadis (energy channels) throughout the body, with ida, pingala, and sushumna as the three primary pathways.

Historically, Chandra Bhedana was taught within guru-disciple lineages as part of a graduated pranayama curriculum. It was not considered a beginner practice; students typically learned foundational breath control and nostril breathing hygiene before advancing to asymmetric techniques like Chandra Bhedana or its counterpart, Surya Bhedana (sun-piercing breath, which reverses the nostrils).

How It’s Practiced

Chandra Bhedana is performed seated in a stable meditation posture—commonly Padmasana (lotus), Siddhasana (accomplished pose), or Sukhasana (easy pose)—with the spine erect and the body relaxed. The practitioner uses Vishnu Mudra (a hand gesture in which the index and middle fingers fold toward the palm) to control airflow through the nostrils.

The technique unfolds as follows:

  1. Close the right nostril with the thumb.
  2. Inhale slowly and steadily through the left nostril, drawing breath deep into the lungs.
  3. At the peak of inhalation, close both nostrils and retain the breath (kumbhaka) for a comfortable duration—often to a mental count of four or eight.
  4. Release the left nostril closure and exhale fully through the right nostril.
  5. Repeat the cycle for 5 to 15 minutes.

Some traditions omit breath retention for beginners or those with respiratory conditions. The breath should be smooth, silent, and controlled, without strain or gasping. Practitioners often report a subjective sensation of coolness along the left side of the body and a gradual quieting of mental activity.

Chandra Bhedana Today

Contemporary yogis encounter Chandra Bhedana in intermediate pranayama workshops, teacher training programs, and retreat settings focused on Hatha or classical yoga. It is less commonly taught in vinyasa or fitness-oriented yoga studios, where breath practices tend to emphasize energization rather than cooling.

The technique has gained renewed attention in contexts addressing anxiety, insomnia, and nervous system regulation, as modern research into polyvagal theory and vagal tone has lent scientific language to the traditional claims about ida nadi activation. Some integrative wellness practitioners incorporate Chandra Bhedana into protocols for managing stress-related hyperthermia, menopausal hot flashes, or overactive sympathetic states.

Online platforms and yoga apps occasionally feature guided Chandra Bhedana recordings, though these vary widely in adherence to classical instruction. Teachers in the Satyananda, Iyengar, and Sivananda lineages tend to preserve the technique’s traditional structure, often pairing it with visualization of lunar light or cooling imagery.

Common Misconceptions

Chandra Bhedana is not simply “left nostril breathing.” The defining feature is the asymmetric pattern: left inhalation, right exhalation. Breathing in and out through the left nostril alone is a different practice with distinct effects.

It is also not a cure-all for anxiety or insomnia. While the practice can support parasympathetic activation, individual responses vary, and those with respiratory conditions, significant nasal obstruction, or certain psychiatric diagnoses should consult a qualified teacher or healthcare provider before beginning.

Some popular sources conflate Chandra Bhedana with Chandra Anuloma Viloma (a variant of alternate nostril breathing) or present it as interchangeable with Nadi Shodhana. These are related but distinct practices; Chandra Bhedana does not alternate nostrils within a single cycle.

Finally, the practice does not require belief in subtle anatomy to be effective. Whether one interprets the effects through the lens of nadis and prana or through neurophysiology and autonomic tone, the technique’s observable impact on breathing rate, heart rate variability, and subjective relaxation remains consistent.

How to Begin

Those new to Chandra Bhedana should first establish comfort with basic breath awareness and simple alternate nostril breathing (Nadi Shodhana) to develop familiarity with nostril control and the Vishnu Mudra hand position. A foundation in seated meditation posture is also essential, as improper alignment can restrict diaphragmatic movement and compromise breath quality.

Begin with short sessions—five minutes or fewer—without breath retention. Gradually extend the duration as capacity and comfort increase. Practice in the late afternoon or evening, when the cooling effect is most beneficial, and avoid Chandra Bhedana in cold environments or if you already feel lethargic.

Light on Pranayama by B.K.S. Iyengar offers detailed technical instruction with anatomical photographs. Asana Pranayama Mudra Bandha by Swami Satyananda Saraswati provides the classical framework within a systematic pranayama curriculum. In-person instruction from a qualified teacher—particularly one trained in Hatha or classical yoga lineages—remains the gold standard for learning breath retention and troubleshooting individual challenges.

Related terms

pranayamaidapingalachakrasnadihatha yoga
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