What makes your heart sing?
Beyond postural yoga
What Makes Your Heart Sing?
Many of us have experienced the heart-opening effect of Yoga āsana, the powerful effect of postures that open the chest region. They are known for their uplifting effect of opening the major prāṇa area of the chest. Prāṇa Vayu is responsible for our emotions, our cardiovascular system, and respiratory system. We know, according to Yoga’s understanding of the inseparable relationship between bodymind, that one will have a direct effect on the other.
We can also affect the heartmind through mantra. I remember the first experience I had of chanting in 2006. I travelled to India with a couple of dear friends. We had a two-week Yoga vacation at the Śivānanda Ashram in Kerala. Each morning we were woken up at about 4:30am to go into the main hall to welcome the day with Mantra. It was really uplifting, with a hundred or so people all chanting together.
As I got more and more familiar with the chants, I’d often find them repeating in my mind throughout the day. Since then, I became more and more curious about this mystical music and its uplifting effect
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On my return from India in 2007, I enrolled in my first Yoga teacher training. I was lucky to fall into the arms of Katie Rose and her team at what was known then as Samadhi Yoga in Newtown. It was there I really fell in love with Kīrtan (call and response chanting), chanting of the Sūtras and Bhagavad Gītā. I was hooked, however I had lingering childhood doubts, such as ‘I can’t sing’ and ‘You aren’t musical’, so I was happy to have my voice blending in as part of the crowd.
After some time, I started to share Mantra and chanting in class, but was told by the studio I was teaching in that it was too ‘out there’, and that I had to tone it down. I bought my first harmonium in 2008. It’s a keyboard instrument that sits on the ground and has a bellows on the back that needs to be pumped as you play the keyboard. I was determined to learn and challenged my self-limiting beliefs around my lack of musical ability! I found a local Kīrtan group, and a friend of a friend taught me some tunes which I’d share with the group each month. I started teaching in my own space and loved to share new chants as I learned them.
“Repeating the Name plants seeds of real goodness — seeds that can only grow into the sweet fruit of love, love for ourselves and love for others.” — Krishna Das
For the last two decades I’ve kept chanting as a major part of my personal practice. I’ve attended various trainings and workshops, and I have regular Vedic chanting lessons with my teacher to continue my personal practice. Something special happens – I fall in love as I chant the divine names. Through studying the Yoga Sūtras and Vedic chanting, my Sanskrit pronunciation and understanding of the grammatical rules has improved, and I truly see the benefit of the specificity of the language of the gods.
Understanding the alphabet, how to read and pronounce the different sounds and where they are experienced in the mouth is of importance to me, and I hold the practice in deep reverence. It’s important to find correctly transliterated text, so you can start to see the dashes and lines that indicate the different letters. How can we learn to make the sound properly if it’s not even noted in transliteration? We need to be able to differentiate between “a” and “ā” in order to achieve correct pronunciation.
Many of the Sanskrit sounds simply aren’t used when speaking English, so there’s a whole new kinesthetic experience of feeling the five different mouth positions used in this ancient language. During my learning, I had the realization that without proper pronunciation, I’m not really saying what I think I’m saying. With each letter and sound we are tuning our energetic body. Each of the fifty two Sanskrit alphabet sounds is connected to a part of the body, giving us a full body workout which affects us on all layers (physical, mental and spiritual). Improving pronunciation and specificity is my life’s work. I am committed, and welcome the discipline in my practice.
Learning new chants requires dedication and is improving my memory and concentration levels. Sometimes during a chanting lesson I have to repeat back what my teacher has said many times, thinking I am making the correct note or sound, but I’m actually experiencing a real blind spot. I have developed an increased awareness of what were previously unconscious patterns (saṃskāra).
“Chanting is a significant and mysterious practice. It is the highest nectar; a tonic that fully nourishes our inner being. Chanting opens the heart and makes love flow within us. It releases such intoxicating inner bliss and enthusiastic splendor, that simply through the nectar it generates, we can enter the abode of the Self.” — Swami Muktananda
We can understand the effect of chanting through various lenses. Scientific research findings on the Vagus nerve and the effect that chanting has on improving vagal tone showed that significant deactivation was observed in the amygdala, parahippocampal and hippocampal brain regions.
This suggests that neurophysiological effects of ‘OM’ chanting may be mediated through the auricular branches of the vagal nerves. The findings show that ‘OM’ chanting indicates limbic deactivation. Similar observations have been recorded with vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) treatment used in depression and epilepsy (Kalyani et al., 2011).
Current studies on the effect of out-loud and silent chanting by Dr. Gemma Perry have noted that chanting has positive effects on anxiety and depression as well as increasing altruism, empathy and social connectedness.
Whether you are into science or just into Yoga, and you want to find a way to connect with your heart and devotion, chanting in its many forms is truly transformational. If you are keen to get started, I have listed some simple ideas that you can begin to integrate into your personal practice. Finding an experienced teacher is highly recommended however.
Here are some simple practices that you can integrate into your daily practice to start you off.
There are three different ways you can use sound depending on where you are, and how focused you are feeling at that time. When the mind is less focused, it’s best to chant out loud (vācā). You can lip (upāṃśu) the words – this is helpful if you are more focused. They can be repeated mentally (mānasika) if the mind is very focused.
“To create personal rituals, we must find the symbols that resonate most deeply in us, objects that have the most meaning to us, and the language that speaks most directly to our hearts. Then we can integrate these elements with the dimensions of personal practice — āsana, prāṇāyāma, chanting, study and meditation — to create a truly multidimensional practice that is adapted to our unique needs and interests.” — Gary Kraftsow
Some practice ideas – creating a multi-dimensional practice:
Add sweet sounds into your āsana
Invocation at the beginning of your practice – tune into the vibration of the universe and three chants of Om before you begin your practice.
Make the exhalation audible by chanting – have you noticed you can only make sound on exhale? Choose a sound depending on its quality – sounds like Om tend to be calming (laṅghana), and sounds like Eee tend to be more uplifting (bṛṃhaṇa).
Sound in Prāṇāyāma practice
Use a mantra instead of counting in your prāṇāyāma practice, chanting out loud for the exhalation. Use mental repetition for the inhalation and retentions. Choose a sound that fits with the time of day and the quality (bhāvanā) you are cultivating – this will move you more smoothly into a meditation (dhāraṇā) practice. [CLICK HERE]
Meditative gestures with sound
Mindfully place the hands on each Cakra and chant the Bīja Mantras with each hand placement. In each of the seed sounds, the “a” is pronounced “u”:
Mūlādhāra – lam – located in the perineal floor – place hands on lower abdomen
Svādhiṣṭhāna – vam – two inches above – place hands a little higher on lower abdomen
Maṇipūraka – ram – place hands below the navel
Anāhata – yam – place hands on the center of the upper abdomen
Viśuddhi – ham – place hands on the throat
Ājñā – Om – place hands on the brow center
Nyāsam is a gesture where you mindfully trace the fingers:
On the inhalation the index finger traces from the base of the thumb up to the thumb tip. On exhalation it traces downwards back to the starting point.
Then use the thumb to trace all the other fingers.
This is done with full attention and in time with your breath.
I hope you find some practices that uplift you and your sādhana, and I hope that you connect in your own unique way to the source. I have attempted to use correct transliteration of Sanskrit in this article — it is a work in progress and I apologize for any mistakes in advance. I’m so grateful to all the teachers who have shared these ancient practices with me over the years – my humble praṇāms to you.


