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06/10/2017 A Beginner’s Guide to Mula Bandha (Root Lock)

A Beginner’s Guide to Mula Bandha (Root Lock)


Tone your pelvic floor and improve your meditation by practicing mula bandha (the root lock).
SEPTEMBER 26, 2013  BY ROLF SOVIK (HTTPS://YOGAINTERNATIONAL.COM/PROFILE/100)

Mula bandha, the root lock, is an important yoga practice, but one that is often tucked into the back pages of yoga
manuals. The Sanskrit word mula refers to the root of a plant or tree. As in English, root can also mean the foot or
base of an object, or the origin of a thing (the root of the problem). Here, mula indicates the base of the torso, the
perineum, and it is associated with the muladhara chakra, lowest of the energy centers along the spine.

The word bandha has many meanings, some contradictory. For example, the word has been translated as “fetter,
block, check, obstruct, restrain, lock.” In this sense bandha is described as the damming up of a river. But it also
translates as “bond, connect, put together, unite, combine, join.” In this sense bandha is described as bridging over a
river. How are these dissimilar meanings reconciled? If we examine the practice of mula bandha, perhaps the answer
will reveal itself.

Why Yogis Practice Mula Bandha


Mula bandha is stabilizing and calming. It also enhances the energy of
concentration.

Mula bandha accompanies both pranayama and meditation, and it provides continuity when breathing practices are
completed and meditation begins. Svatmarama, author of the authoritative Hatha Yoga Pradipika (Light on Hatha
Yoga), states: “There is no doubt that by practicing mula bandha . . . total perfection is attained.” This is an
impressive claim. But can it be taken seriously, or is it an exaggeration employed to encourage us to learn the
practice?

Let’s look at the system of energy that supports the body/mind, because this will give perspective to Svatmarama’s
assertion. The chief axis of prana is the spinal column, which rises from the perineum to the base of the skull. Within
this axis is said to be a central channel of energy (nadi) called sushumna. Two other passages of energy, known as
ida and pingala, are described as twining upward along the spine from its base, ending in the left and right nostrils
respectively. In ordinary life these two nadis dominate a complex, hierarchical network of energy pathways. When
one or the other is active, it influences and colors the functioning of the entire system.

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06/10/2017 A Beginner’s Guide to Mula Bandha (Root Lock)

The Upanishads liken prana to a bird tied to its perch, fettered by ida and pingala. It lives out its days going back and
forth from one to the other, never finding freedom. Yoga adepts state that it is possible to restrain the involuntary
alternations of ida and pingala and to unite these two separate streams of energy. This is the literal meaning of hatha
yoga—the yoga in which ha (the right breath) and tha (the left breath) are joined. When these streams are united,
prana is freed to ascend through the central channel of the spinal column to its ultimate goal at the crown of the
head, the sahasrara chakra. The initial stage of this process is called the awakening of sushumna. Practices for
attaining such an awakening are said to bring about perfection, and that is at least one source of Svatmarama’s
praise for mula bandha.

The 3 Bandhas
Yoga adepts describe three practices used to restrain the outward flow of energy and unite it with the upward flow
of sushumna. In uddiyana bandha, the stomach lock, the breath is exhaled and the abdomen is sucked in toward the
spine. This activates energy at the navel center. In jalandhara bandha, the chin lock, the chin is drawn down to the
base of the throat, forcefully blocking the normal passage of energy through ida and pingala there. The third
practice is mula bandha, in which muscles are tightly contracted at the center of the perineum. Contraction of these
muscles is said to affect the nervous, circulatory, respiratory, and endocrine systems, and most important, the system
of internal energy, or prana.

Svatmarama maintains a certain mystery about all three of these practices. He implies that in order to achieve their
full effects they must be completed in a precise yogic manner (taught through the grace of one’s teacher) and not
as mere physical manipulations. He states that the full sadhana, or practice routine, associated with these techniques
should be kept secret, “just like precious stones, and not be talked about to anyone, just as one does not tell others
about his intimate relations with his wife.” As with many such remonstrances, he cautions teachers and students alike
that advanced practices are meant for qualified aspirants who have completed preliminary stages of training and
maintain a direct relationship with their spiritual guide. Nonetheless, preliminary versions of mula bandha are
suitable for all students and have beneficial effects for health as well as self-awareness.

A Quick Anatomy Lesson


Formed like a bowl, the pelvic girdle consists of three fused bones—the ilium, the ischium, and the pubis. The pelvis
is open at the bottom (the pelvic outlet), and at the base of this opening is an area of the body called the perineum.
Viewed from above, the perineum is shaped like a diamond. The coccyx (the base of the spine) lies at the rear of the
diamond, while the front of the diamond is the pubic symphysis, the joint between the two pubic bones. The left and
right corners of the diamond are the two sit bones.

Mula bandha is associated with the center of the perineum. In men, mula bandha results from contractions of the
muscles surrounding the perineal body, which lies midway between the anus and the genitals. Some texts suggest
that by applying light pressure beneath this area (sitting on a soft, rolled sock or a specially designed cushion)
contraction can be stimulated. Postures in which pressure is applied by sitting on the heel of one foot have also been
described. For women, the contraction of mula bandha is said to be felt not at the perineal body, but at the area
surrounding the base of the cervix. As in men, a soft cushion at the center of the perineum is said to stimulate the
lock.

Practically speaking, attention might be focused on the back, the front, or the middle of the perineum—or on more
than one area at a time. To practice mula bandha you must learn to activate the perineum at its center.

Once you can comfortably hold mula bandha, you can employ it during pranayama
exercises and meditation.

How to Practice Mula Bandha


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Since it is often difficult to isolate the contractions in this area, developing awareness of mula bandha is a matter of
daily practice. It should not be rushed, because working slowly and gradually allows muscles to strengthen at the
same time that mental discrimination is developing. An obstacle to practice is that the muscles of the perineum tend
to work together, and frequently when one contracts they all contract. In addition, it is quite easy to inadvertently
tense respiratory muscles along with the perineal muscles, and unnecessary sympathetic tension may occur in other
areas of the body as well. It takes careful attention and regular practice to sort this out.

Step 1
The first task is to develop the simple ability to contract and relax the perineal muscles. To begin, sit in any erect,
meditative posture—preferably a cross-legged seated pose. Close your eyes; rest your body; and relax your breath,
feeling the sides of the rib cage expand and contract while releasing tension from the upper abdomen.

Breathing freely, and without coordinating the breath with your muscle contractions, squeeze the entire perineal
region—front, middle, and back—inward and upward. Keep the breath as steady and smooth as possible, without
pausing. Press in slowly, and when the contraction is complete, release it slowly. In this exercise you are not trying to
discriminate between individual areas, but to strengthen all the muscles of the perineal region while increasing
awareness of them. Repeat this exercise 25 times.

Step 2
Next, contract all the muscles of the perineum and hold to your comfortable capacity. While the tension is being
maintained, continue to breathe slowly and smoothly. Sense the area around the anus, then move to the central
contraction at the perineal body or cervix, and finally examine the contraction in the urogenital area. Tighten each
area as you focus on it, feeling the sensations there. Then release the entire contraction slowly, and relax.

Step 3
Now coordinate contractions of the entire perineum with the breath. Inhaling, contract the perineum, and exhaling
slowly release the tension. Time the contractions so that they coincide with the breath. Jerkiness or loss of control
can be gradually reduced over time. During this practice, begin to focus on the central region of the perineum,
giving special attention to sensations that will be associated with mula bandha. Repeat this exercise 25 times.

Step 4
Finally, when you are ready, center your attention on the center of the perineum, and contract the muscles there
tightly with minimal involvement of the anal and urogenital areas. This is the initial version of mula bandha, and it will
take some time to accomplish it. There is no hurry, and it is better to prolong the practice rather than rush it.

Step 5
Once the contraction can be held without affecting the breath, other sympathetic muscle tensions are relaxed, and
you will be able to comfortably hold mula bandha for some time. Then it can be employed during pranayama
exercises (https://yogainternational.com/topic/pranayama) and meditation.

The Benefits of Mula Bandha


At the beginning of this article we puzzled over two meanings for the word bandha. One translation characterized
bandha as a lock to dam the flow of energy, and another depicted it as a bridge to unite energies. As you do the
practices described here you may find that these seemingly contradictory meanings now make internal sense. Mula
bandha has the effect of restraining energy at the perineum; in this sense it is stabilizing and calming. It also has the
effect of gently enhancing the energy of concentration. It is as if a radio dial has been adjusted properly so that the
voice of consciousness can speak more clearly.

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It's often difficult to isolate the contractions in the perineal muscles. That's why
developing awareness of mula bandha is a matter of daily practice.

A variety of physical benefits have been attributed to mula bandha. It has been suggested that through this practice
unstable menstrual periods can be regulated, respiration rate lowered, heart rate and blood pressure reduced,
sympathetic arousal calmed, digestion improved, and urogenital functioning harmonized. These effects are noted by
adepts in yoga, but there seems as yet to have been little scientific research to investigate them. More important for
yogis, through the practice of mula bandha the direction of the downward-moving energies located in the root
chakra and the upward-moving energies located at the heart chakra are said to be reversed and the energies united.
This internal union leads to the expansion of awareness.

At the least, with regular practice of mula bandha you will become more certain of the place where muscle
contractions converge. This is the location of the muladhara chakra, the root from which energy is said to permeate
the human body and mind. When this energy is calm and secure, life itself is more relaxed.

#support your practice (https://yogainternational.com/article/tag/support-your-practice)


Photograph by Schill (http://www.flickr.com/photos/schill//)

ROLF SOVIK

(https://yogainternational.com/profile/100)

(HTTPS://YOGAINTERNATIONAL.COM/PROFILE/100) 
President and Spiritual Director of the Himalayan Institute and a clinical psychologist in private practice, Rolf Sovik has studied yoga in the
United States, India, and Nepal. He holds degrees in philosophy, music, Eastern studies, and clinical psychology. Former Co-Director of the
Himalayan Institute of Buffalo, NY he began his practice of yoga in 1972, and was initiated as a pandit in the Himalayan tradition in 1987. He is
the author of Moving Inward, co-author of the award-winning Yoga: (https://shop.himalayaninstitute.org/products/yoga-mastering-the-basics)...
Read more>> (https://yogainternational.com/profile/100)

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