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The 5 pranas that decide how long and how well will a person live

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 23, 2025, 14:54 IST
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The 5 pranas that decide how long and how well will a person live

Ancient Indian wisdom never measured life only in years. It measured it in vital flow. How energy moves, circulates, gets blocked, or leaks away inside the body. The yogic texts describe this life force as prana, not breath, not oxygen, but the intelligence that keeps the body alive and the mind awake. According to the Upanishads, human life is governed by five primary pranas. When they work in harmony, life feels steady, resilient, and clear. When they weaken or fall out of balance, disease, fatigue, anxiety, and early ageing quietly begin. Scroll down to read more...

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Prana Vayu - The breath of life

Prana Vayu governs breathing, heart rhythm, sensory awareness, and the intake of life-air, food, impressions, and even emotions. It moves inward and upward. A strong Prana Vayu means good lung capacity, stable circulation, sharp senses, and mental alertness. When weakened, breath becomes shallow, immunity dips, and anxiety rises. Chronic stress is one of its biggest enemies. Slow breathing, mindful eating, and reducing constant sensory overload protect this prana. The quality of life begins here because how you breathe is how you live.

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Apana Vayu - The force of elimination and renewal

Apana Vayu flows downward. It governs digestion, elimination, menstruation, reproduction, and detoxification. In simple terms, it decides how well the body lets go, physically and emotionally. Constipation, hormonal imbalance, bloating, urinary issues, and even fear-based anxiety often signal disturbed Apana. When Apana is strong, the body clears waste efficiently and feels grounded. Ignoring natural urges, sitting for long hours, irregular meals, and suppressing emotions slowly weaken it. Longevity depends not just on what enters the body but on what exits smoothly.

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Samana Vayu – The fire of digestion and balance

Samana Vayu sits at the navel centre and governs digestion, absorption, metabolism, and internal balance. It is the meeting point of Prana and Apana. Strong Samana means efficient digestion, steady energy, and emotional stability. Weak Samana creates sluggish metabolism, nutrient deficiencies, brain fog, and mood swings. Overeating, eating in a rush, constant snacking, and emotional eating disturb this prana. When digestion is calm and rhythmic, ageing slows. In yogic thought, poor digestion is not just a gut issue, it shortens life force.

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Udana Vayu - The energy of growth and expression

Udana Vayu moves upward. It governs speech, memory, confidence, willpower, and growth, from childhood development to how gracefully one ages. It also plays a role at the time of death, guiding consciousness. A balanced Udana shows up as clear communication, strong posture, mental sharpness, and purpose. When disturbed, people feel lost, indecisive, fearful of change, or mentally dull. Chronic self-doubt, suppressed expression, and lack of purpose weaken Udana. This prana decides not just how long you live, but whether life feels meaningful.

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Vyana Vayu – The force of circulation and connection

Vyana Vayu spreads energy throughout the body. It governs blood circulation, nerve impulses, movement, and coordination between systems. Think of it as the integrator. When Vyana is strong, the body heals faster, stamina improves, and systems work together smoothly. Poor circulation, cold extremities, fatigue, joint stiffness, and restlessness often reflect Vyana imbalance. Sedentary habits and lack of movement weaken it. Gentle daily movement, walking, stretching, and yoga keep this prana alive and flowing.


Modern science talks about systems, respiratory, digestive, nervous, circulatory. Yogic wisdom spoke of pranas. Different language, same truth. Life ends not because one organ fails suddenly, but because balance quietly collapses over time. When pranas weaken, resilience drops. Healing slows. Age accelerates. The goal was never to control prana aggressively but to support it gently, through breath, routine, moderation, emotional honesty, and awareness. According to yogic thought, a long life without vitality is incomplete. And intense vitality without balance burns out quickly. Longevity, the texts suggest, is not a genetic lottery. It is a daily conversation with your pranas. How you breathe. How you digest. How you move. How you express. And how well you allow life to flow, without force, without neglect. That balance, more than anything, decides how long and how well you live.

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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 05.59PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service