That has shifted over the years. More and more, we come to yoga for the mind instead, hoping to think more clearly, sleep more deeply, and find some relief from a stress that never quite switches off on its own.
Terms like 'non-sleep deep rest' have travelled from quiet yoga halls into boardrooms and group chats, and the science has been catching up.
The effects of yoga on mental health are now among the most studied questions in integrative medicine, and while the evidence has limits, the direction is consistent and encouraging.
It also makes perfect sense because, at its core, the Sanskrit term Yoga means union or connection. Apart from etymology, the ancient practice and philosophy of yoga were rooted in physical, mental, and spiritual disciplines aimed at uniting the mind, body, and spirit, and merging the individual consciousness with universal consciousness.
At Ananda in the Himalayas, yoga and meditation sit at the centre of our approach to mental well-being. Our practice follows the Hatha tradition, which works through posture and breath, while our meditation draws on the classical Raja Yoga path.
At Ananda, yoga is never treated as a performance, and what matters is consistency and structure. It helps to understand the conditions that let a busy mind slow down. It tends to make your own practice more rewarding.
What the Research Says About the Effects of Yoga on Mental Health
Across dozens of randomised controlled trials, yoga has a measurable effect on the very symptoms that draw many of us to it. Reviews find moderate reductions in anxiety and depression (larger when yoga is compared against no treatment at all), along with real relief from everyday stress.
A large umbrella review of 51 systematic reviews, drawing on 579 trials and more than 28,000 participants, found the strongest evidence for yoga as a viable part of the treatment for depression, with a gentler effect on anxiety.1
One practice in particular has caught the spotlight. Yoga Nidra, the guided deep-relaxation method now understood as 'non-sleep deep rest', was the subject of a 2025 review covering 73 studies and more than 5,200 participants; it reported significant benefits for stress, anxiety and depression.2
Two honest caveats belong here. Many of these studies are small and sometimes uneven in quality, so the biggest numbers deserve caution, as the Yoga Nidra reviewers note.
The benefits also build slowly: a single session can lift you for an hour, but lasting change tends to take 6 to 12 weeks. That is not a weakness of yoga. It is simply how your nervous system learns and reorients.
How Yoga Helps Mental Health: What Changes Inside
To understand how yoga helps mental health, we must first look at how stress affects the body. Under constant pressure, the body's alarm system, the fight-or-flight response, stays switched on.
The body keeps producing the stress hormone cortisol, while the systems that should calm us down, including GABA, the brain's main 'off switch', stay quiet. The result is that all-too-familiar state of feeling both wired and worn out at once.
Yoga works on several of these at once. Slow breathing with a long exhale, gentle held postures, and the soft vibration of humming or chanting all stimulate the vagus nerve, our body's main calming circuit.
That tips us towards rest, easing heart rate, blood pressure and cortisol. One marker researchers watch is heart rate variability (HRV). It is how nimbly our heart adjusts from beat to beat, and steady, slow-breathing practice tends to improve it.
The most striking evidence is about GABA, which tends to run low in anxiety and depression. Using brain imaging, researchers at Boston University School of Medicine found that a single 60-minute yoga session raised GABA by 27%, while a comparison group who simply read quietly showed no change.3
A later trial from the same team pitted 12 weeks of yoga against the same amount of walking; the yoga group came away with bigger gains in mood and sharper drops in anxiety, and those gains tracked with rising GABA.4
So the benefit was not only from movement. Rather, something particular to the breath, attention and the posture of yoga was at work.
The Tools and What Each One Does
Yoga in daily practice can be a small toolkit, and a good practice involves using each tool on purpose.
Asana (Yoga Postures)
Asana, the postures, release stored tension, get the circulation moving and bring attention back into your body. Done with awareness, it is a doorway into a calmer state, not a goal in itself.
Pranayama (Breath Control)
Pranayama, or breath control, is the most direct handle you have on your nervous system. A slow exhale switches on the body's calming response; a soft humming breath, such as Bhramari, settles an agitated mind, while a brisk practice, such as Kapalbhati, clears mental fog.
Yoga Nidra
Yoga Nidra, the 'non-sleep deep rest', guides one into deep rest while the mind stays lightly awake. It is especially good for winding down, and for nights when sleep evades us.
Meditation
Meditation trains the attention span and the ability to watch a thought come and go without being dragged along. Focused methods such as Trataka, a steady gaze, and Antar Mouna, inner silence, build that skill. At Ananda, our Dhyana Meditation programme draws on this yogic lineage to develop steadiness and clarity.
The Benefits of Yoga for Mental Health, Beyond Symptom Relief
Less anxiety and better sleep matter in their own right. But the deeper benefits of yoga for mental health go beyond them.
With regular practice, you may find that you regulate your emotions more easily, meet difficulty with a steadier head, and can feel something strongly without getting carried away, which the yogic tradition calls witnessing consciousness.
One guest's story shows what this can look like. She came to us after a sudden personal loss and a long stretch of upheaval: anxious, sleeping badly, her breath shallow and ragged.
Over a structured programme that included yogic postures, breathwork and deep relaxation, her breathing settled, her sleep and energy returned, and her own sense of clarity and steadiness climbed.
What shifted was not only her symptoms but her relationship with her own mind, and she left with tools she could keep using on her own.
How to Begin and an Honest Caveat
If there is one takeaway, let it be that consistency beats intensity. A short practice at the same time each day has longer-lasting benefits than an occasional session to regulate yourself. When the aim is a calmer mind, slow, breath-led styles tend to work better than fast, strenuous ones.
One thing to consider: if you are managing a diagnosed mental health condition, treat yoga as a companion to professional care, not a replacement for it. These practices work best alongside professional help, rather than as a replacement.
Practice Over Performance
Yoga earns its reputation for the mind not through one dramatic moment, but through the patient build-up of small physical shifts: calmer breaths, a more adaptable nervous system, a brain a little richer in regulation and heightened function.
None of it depends on getting the practice right. The focus of yoga as a practice is to keep coming back, with patience and consistency that takes time to build.
At Ananda in the Himalayas, we help you find the cadence, while continuing it is the part that becomes your own.