Forget brain games — yoga’s ancient moves may be the real mental upgrade

Forget brain games — yoga’s ancient moves may be the real mental upgrade

Scientists now say yoga may be the brain’s best workout — from breath and balance to candle focus, ancient poses are proving to boost memory, focus, and mental agility.

Business Today Desk
  • Oct 13, 2025,
  • Updated Oct 13, 2025 1:47 PM IST
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Forget dumbbells — scientists now say your brain needs reps too. New research from Stanford shows yoga-based “neural workouts” can sculpt attention and memory just like resistance training does for muscle tone.

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We once memorized 10-digit numbers; now we can’t recall a 6-digit OTP. Neuroscientists blame “outsourced cognition” — the silent erosion of memory as our devices think for us. Can yoga reverse the slide?

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A single breath could change your IQ — or so claim pranayama experts tracking brain oxygenation spikes during alternate-nostril breathing. Early EEG data hints the left and right hemispheres finally shake hands.

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That ear-tugging “punishment” from school? Turns out it’s neurology, not nostalgia. Studies in Chennai found the squat-earloop combo boosts prefrontal blood flow and cross-hemispheric coordination. Grandma was right all along.

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A flickering flame may train your mind better than any app. In Jyoti Tratak, monks stare at a candle until the world blurs — neuroscientists say this visual discipline rewires the brain’s focus circuitry.

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Inhale through the moon, exhale through the sun — yogic codes for neural symmetry. A Japanese neuroimaging study found just 15 minutes of this “balance breathing” boosts gamma waves tied to creativity.

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One pose, multiple miracles: Paschimottanasana has been linked to lower blood pressure, deeper sleep, and sharper recall. Doctors call it “a neurological spa day” in asana form.

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New hobbies don’t just kill boredom — they grow your brain. MRI scans from MIT show that learning music or languages at any age thickens grey matter in memory zones within weeks.

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Try brushing your teeth with the other hand — it’s neuroscience, not novelty. Psychologists call it “neural cross-training,” a hack that keeps dormant synapses sparking long after youth fades.

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