Amrutha Yoga (Aithal Yoga) as a New Yoga for Healthy Aging and Cognitive Wellness: A Conceptual and Exploratory Research Based Proposal

Authors

  • Aithal P. S. Professor, Poornaprajna Institute of Management, Udupi - 576101, India Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.64818/

Keywords:

Amrutha Yoga, Aithal Yoga, Longevity, Cognitive Enhancement, Exploratory Research, Mind–Body Wellness, Breath Meditation, Dynamic Yoga, Preventive Healthcare, Yogic Innovation

Abstract

Modern society is increasingly affected by lifestyle-related disorders such as obesity, stress, anxiety, cognitive fatigue, hypertension, poor respiratory health, and sedentary living patterns. The rising prevalence of these conditions has created a growing demand for low-cost, time-efficient, and easily accessible preventive wellness systems that can simultaneously support physical health, mental relaxation, and cognitive well-being. Within the broader framework of Indian Yogic Science and Indian Knowledge Systems (IKS), this paper introduces and explores a novel breath-synchronized yogic formulation termed Amrutha Yoga or Aithal Yoga, conceptualized as a compact movement–breathing meditation system intended to promote longevity, cognitive enhancement, and preventive mind–body wellness. The proposed practice integrates rhythmic forward bending, abdominal compression, synchronized deep exhalation and inhalation, mindful movement, and controlled breathing within a simplified daily protocol requiring minimal time, space, and physical resources.

The study addresses the research problem of increasing physical inactivity and stress-related health deterioration among modern populations, while also identifying the lack of scientifically interpreted compact yogic systems specifically designed for sustainable daily practice. The objectives of the study are to systematically interpret the structure and mechanism of Amrutha Yoga, evaluate its potential role in meditation, stress reduction, abdominal and visceral fat management, cognitive enhancement, and healthy aging, and examine its feasibility as a scalable preventive wellness innovation. The study adopts a qualitative exploratory research methodology using conceptual, descriptive, interpretative, and comparative approaches. Secondary data were collected from classical and contemporary yoga literature, Indian wellness philosophies, neuroscience-oriented breathing studies, preventive healthcare research, meditation literature, and the uploaded conceptual draft papers on Amrutha Yoga.

The analytical frameworks used include SWOC Analysis, ABCD Analysis from practitioners’ and trainers’ perspectives, comparative evaluation with conventional yogic systems, and multidimensional Impact Analysis. The exploratory findings indicate that the synchronized breathing and compression–expansion mechanism of Amrutha Yoga may contribute to parasympathetic nervous system activation, stress reduction, respiratory efficiency, improved circulation, mindful awareness, abdominal activation, and enhanced cognitive calmness. The study further interprets Amrutha Yoga as a form of dynamic breath-centered meditation and a low-cost public-health-oriented wellness model suitable for busy professionals, elderly populations, students, and sedentary individuals.

The originality of the paper lies in proposing a new integrated yogic formulation that combines movement, pranayama, mindfulness, abdominal compression, and rhythmic repetition into a concise wellness methodology. The paper also discusses the potential for intellectual-property protection through standardized instructional frameworks, training systems, wellness protocols, and scholarly documentation, while recognizing the challenges associated with patenting yoga-related innovations rooted in traditional knowledge systems. The study concludes that Amrutha Yoga represents a promising exploratory wellness innovation with potential applications in preventive healthcare, cognitive wellness, healthy aging, and public wellness promotion. However, future scientific validation through physiological, neurological, metabolic, and clinical studies—including EEG analysis, cortisol assessment, cognitive testing, and longitudinal health trials—is strongly recommended to establish empirical evidence regarding its effectiveness and broader therapeutic implications.

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Published

2026-05-31

How to Cite

Amrutha Yoga (Aithal Yoga) as a New Yoga for Healthy Aging and Cognitive Wellness: A Conceptual and Exploratory Research Based Proposal . (2026). Poornaprajna International Journal of Philosophy & Languages (PIJPL), 3(1), 473-528. https://doi.org/10.64818/

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