Chakras in Yoga

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Saurabh Bothra

14+ Years Of Experience

What Are Chakras in Yoga?

Chakras (Sanskrit: चक्र, meaning "wheel" or "vortex") are the seven primary energy centres described in the yogic and tantric traditions — located along the central axis of the body from the base of the spine to the crown of the head. Each chakra corresponds to a specific region of the spine, a major nerve plexus, an endocrine gland, a set of psychological qualities, and a colour in the traditional system. The chakra yoga asanas and practices associated with each chakra directly engage the corresponding anatomical structures through which the chakra's energy flows. The chakra system originates in the Tantric texts of medieval India — particularly the Sat-Chakra-Nirupana (16th century CE) — and was developed in parallel with the Hatha yoga tradition as a map of the subtle energy body (Pranamaya Kosha) that the physical body (Annamaya Kosha) inhabits. In the chakra framework, the life force (Prana) flows through energy channels (Nadis) and accumulates and distributes through the seven chakras. When chakra energy flows freely, physical, emotional, and mental health align. When chakras are blocked or overactive, characteristic patterns of dysfunction appear in the corresponding physical and psychological domains. Modern neuroscience and endocrinology have begun to identify the physiological correlates of the chakra system: each chakra's location corresponds precisely to a major nerve plexus (the Root chakra to the sacral plexus, the Solar Plexus chakra to the coeliac plexus, the Heart chakra to the cardiac plexus), and the endocrine glands associated with each chakra (adrenals for Root, gonads for Sacral, pancreas for Solar Plexus) produce exactly the hormones that the traditional system attributes to that chakra's domain. The 7 chakras in the body are not merely symbolic — they map a coherent physiological system.

7 Chakras in Yoga — Benefits of Balanced Chakra Energy

Root Chakra (Muladhara) — Grounding, Safety, Physical Vitality
Located at the base of the spine. Associated with the adrenal glands. When balanced: physical vitality, sense of safety and stability, financial confidence, healthy relationship with the body. When blocked: chronic fear, physical exhaustion, financial insecurity, disconnection from the body.

Sacral Chakra (Svadhisthana) — Creativity, Pleasure, Emotional Fluidity
Located at the sacrum. Associated with the reproductive organs. When balanced: creative vitality, emotional fluidity, healthy pleasure and sexuality, adaptability. When blocked: creative blocks, emotional numbness, reproductive difficulties, rigidity.

Solar Plexus Chakra (Manipura) — Personal Power, Confidence, Will
Located at the navel centre. Associated with the pancreas and adrenals. When balanced: confidence, decisiveness, healthy personal power, digestive health. When blocked: anxiety, indecision, digestive problems, low self-esteem.

Heart Chakra (Anahata) — Love, Compassion, Emotional Openness
Located at the heart centre. Associated with the thymus gland. When balanced: genuine love, compassion, emotional openness, healthy relationships. When blocked: emotional armour, difficulty in relationships, chest tension, immune dysfunction.

Throat, Third Eye, and Crown Chakras — Expression, Clarity, and Transcendence
Throat (Vishuddha): authentic expression, communication, thyroid function. Third Eye (Ajna): intuition, mental clarity, pituitary function. Crown (Sahasrara): spiritual connection, transcendence, pineal function. Each represents the progressive refinement of consciousness from physical to transcendent dimensions.

Chakra Yoga Asanas — Step-by-Step Practice for Each of the 7 Chakras

Key Principles: Intention, Breath, and Anatomical Correspondence
Chakra yoga is most effective when practised with three simultaneous awarenesses: the physical sensation in the chakra's body region, the specific breath direction toward that region, and the psychological intention corresponding to that chakra's quality. Physical practice alone activates the anatomical structures; breath and intention activate the energy and psychological dimensions simultaneously.

Root Chakra Yoga (Muladhara) — Grounding Practices
Asanas: Tadasana (Mountain Pose), Malasana (Garland Pose), Virabhadrasana I (Warrior I). All standing, grounded poses that emphasise the connection between the feet and the earth. Pranayama: Belly breathing — directing the breath to the lower abdomen and perineum. Intention: "I am safe. I am grounded. I am supported."

Sacral Chakra Yoga (Svadhisthana) — Hip Opening Practices
Asanas: Eka Pada Rajakapotasana (Pigeon Pose), Baddha Konasana (Bound Angle), Virabhadrasana II (Warrior II). Hip-opening poses that release the sacral region. Pranayama: Breath directed to the lower abdomen and sacrum. Intention: "I feel. I create. I flow."

Solar Plexus Chakra Yoga (Manipura) — Core Power Practices
Asanas: Navasana (Boat Pose), Ardha Matsyendrasana (Spinal Twist), Kapalbhati Pranayama. Core-activating poses that engage the navel centre. Pranayama: Kapalbhati — forceful abdominal exhalation. Intention: "I act. I decide. I am powerful."

Heart Chakra Yoga (Anahata) — Chest Opening Practices
Asanas: Ustrasana (Camel Pose), Bhujangasana (Cobra Pose), Matsyasana (Fish Pose). Backbends that open the anterior thoracic region. Pranayama: Breath directed into the chest — expanding in all directions. Intention: "I love. I am open. I give and receive freely."

Throat, Third Eye, and Crown Chakra Practices
Throat: Matsyasana (Fish), Sarvangasana (Shoulderstand), lion's breath. Third Eye: Balasana (Child's Pose with forehead to mat), Anulom Vilom, Trataka (focused gazing). Crown: Headstand (Sirsasana), Meditation in Padmasana or Sukhasana, Shavasana. All practices that direct attention upward through the spinal axis toward the crown.

Breathing in Chakra Yoga
The direction of the breath (Pranavayu direction) is the primary energetic tool in chakra yoga. Apana vayu (downward breath) activates the lower chakras; Prana vayu (upward breath) activates the higher chakras; Samana vayu (equalising breath) activates the heart chakra. Consciously directing the breath to the anatomical region of each chakra during its corresponding asana significantly amplifies the practice's effect.

The 7 Chakras in the Body — Preparatory Practices

Surya Namaskar: Activates all chakras sequentially through the spine — the complete chakra warm-up.
Nadi Shodhana (Alternate Nostril Breathing): Balances Ida (lunar/left) and Pingala (solar/right) Nadis — the primary energy channels that feed all chakras.
Spinal Awareness Meditation: 5 minutes bringing awareness to each chakra location sequentially from base to crown — the simplest and most accessible chakra activation practice.

Common Mistakes in Chakra Yoga

Treating Chakras as Abstract Concepts Rather Than Anatomical Realities
Dismissing chakras as purely symbolic prevents access to their physiological correlates — the nerve plexuses, endocrine glands, and spinal regions whose activation produces the documented benefits of chakra yoga.
Fix: Approach each chakra practice with attention to both the symbolic intention and the specific anatomical region. Feel the physical sensations in the body region while holding the psychological intention — this dual awareness is what makes chakra yoga distinctively effective.

Focusing Only on Upper Chakras
Many practitioners are drawn to Third Eye and Crown work while neglecting the foundation of the Root and Sacral chakras. This produces spiritual aspiration without the grounded stability that makes higher practices safe and sustainable.
Fix: Always begin chakra practice from the Root upward. The Muladhara foundation supports everything above it — unresolved Root chakra material will resurface in all higher practices until it is addressed.

Who Should Practise Chakra Yoga?

Those with Specific Emotional or Physical Patterns
Chronic anxiety (Root), creative blocks (Sacral), digestive issues (Solar Plexus), relationship difficulties (Heart), communication blocks (Throat), mental fog (Third Eye) — all correspond to specific chakra imbalances that targeted practice addresses directly.

Is Chakra Yoga Good for Beginners?
Yes — the foundational practices (standing poses for Root, hip openers for Sacral, core work for Solar Plexus) are all beginner-accessible. The chakra framework provides a meaningful context for yoga practice from the very beginning.
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Saurabh Bothra

Make Chakra Yoga a Part of Your Life

The chakra system provides one of the most comprehensive maps of human physiology and psychology available — grounding ancient wisdom in modern anatomical understanding. Chakra yoga asanas, pranayama, and meditation practices activate, balance, and integrate all seven energy centres through a systematic, daily practice.
Every level of practitioner benefits from chakra awareness — from beginners who use it as a framework for their physical practice to advanced practitioners exploring the deepest dimensions of consciousness. Habuild's sessions integrate chakra awareness into every practice.

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FAQs

What are chakras in yoga?

Chakras are the seven primary energy centres described in yoga and Tantric traditions — located along the spine from base to crown. Each corresponds to a nerve plexus, endocrine gland, and set of physical and psychological qualities. Chakra yoga uses specific asanas, pranayama, and meditation to activate and balance each centre.

Root (Muladhara, base of spine), Sacral (Svadhisthana, sacrum), Solar Plexus (Manipura, navel), Heart (Anahata, chest), Throat (Vishuddha, throat), Third Eye (Ajna, forehead), Crown (Sahasrara, top of head).

Specific asanas are associated with each chakra: standing poses (Root), hip openers (Sacral), core poses (Solar Plexus), backbends (Heart), throat openers (Throat), forward folds with forehead to mat (Third Eye), inversions and meditation (Crown).

Daily practice — integrating chakra awareness into your regular yoga session — produces the most consistent benefits. A systematic weekly approach (different chakra focus each day of the week) is effective for comprehensive practice.

Yes — the foundational asanas for Root, Sacral, and Solar Plexus chakras are all beginner-accessible. The chakra framework provides meaningful context that enhances the experience of yoga from the very first practice.