Healnest Yoga · Signature Breath Practice

Anulom Vilom

A quiet Indian breathing ritual for the person who has carried too much noise. Through one nostril, the breath enters. Through the other, the day softens. This is not performance. This is a return to balance.

The Meaning

The breath that travels between two shores

Anulom Vilom is often known as alternate nostril breathing. In Healnest, we present it as a calm, refined ritual: one side receives, the other releases. The visitor is guided slowly, respectfully, without pressure.

1

Balance

Alternating the breath invites a feeling of symmetry — left and right, effort and ease, thought and silence.

2

Presence

The hand position gently anchors attention, helping the visitor stay inside the present moment.

3

Soft reset

A few rounds can become a beautiful pause before sleep, after work, or before meditation.

Calm person practicing alternate nostril breathing
Step by Step

How to practice, softly

Sit as if the spine is being lifted by a quiet thread. No drama. No force. The breath should feel like silk moving through the body.

1

Sit with dignity

Sit on a chair or cushion. Keep the spine tall, shoulders loose, jaw relaxed.

2

Prepare the hand

Use the right thumb to close the right nostril. Use the ring finger to close the left nostril.

3

Begin from the left

Close the right nostril. Inhale gently through the left nostril.

4

Release through the right

Close the left nostril. Exhale through the right nostril. Then inhale through the right.

5

Return through the left

Close the right nostril. Exhale through the left. This completes one full round.

Interactive Guide

The Two-Nostril Breath Companion

Instead of one general breathing circle, this guide shows the left and right nostrils separately. The glowing circle tells the visitor where the breath is moving. The softer circle shows which side is gently closed.

1 Left Inhale
2 Right Exhale
3 Right Inhale
4 Left Exhale
Left Nostril
Left
Right Nostril
Right
Inhale
4
Close the right nostril. Inhale softly through the left.
Beginner version: no breath-holding. Breathe gently. Stop if dizzy, strained, or uncomfortable.

A gentle word before practice

  • Do not force the breath. The face, throat, and shoulders should remain soft.
  • Skip breath-holding if you are a beginner, pregnant, or have blood-pressure or heart concerns.
  • If the nose is blocked, breathe normally and return another day.
  • This page is for wellbeing education, not medical treatment.
  • For health conditions, learn from a qualified yoga teacher or medical professional.
Daily Ritual

When to use this breath

Let this practice become a small private room inside the day. It is beautiful before meditation, after a difficult meeting, before sleep, or whenever the mind feels scattered.

Morning

Three gentle rounds before opening messages. Begin the day without letting the world enter too quickly.

Afternoon

Use it after work stress or screen fatigue. Let the breath clean the edges of the mind.

Night

Practice softly before sleep. No achievement. No counting perfection. Only return.

The breath does not ask you to become someone else.

It simply invites you back to the person who was waiting beneath the noise. Begin with one round. Let it be enough.

Practice again