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BREATHING · INHALE NASAL · EXHALE HUMMING

Bhramari (Humming Bee Breath)

Bhramari ('bee breath') is a prāṇāyāma technique where you inhale normally and exhale with a steady low hum. The extended, vibratory exhale tones the vagus nerve more strongly than silent slow breathing. Often used for headaches, insomnia onset, and settling before sleep.

Updated April 2026·5 min read

How to do it

  1. Find a quiet seat. Sit upright with your mouth gently closed. Eyes closed if comfortable.
  2. Inhale through the nose. Take a comfortable inhale through the nose — around 4 seconds.
  3. Hum on the exhale. Exhale through the nose with a steady low hum, like a soft bee sound. Keep the hum continuous for the full exhale — around 6 to 8 seconds.
  4. Repeat. Continue for 8 to 12 rounds. The hum should feel vibratory in the chest and face.

Why humming amplifies the exhale effect

Every slow-breathing technique's calming effect is driven by the exhale. Humming extends the exhale without effort and, because the vocal folds are engaged, it adds vagal stimulation above what silent paced breathing provides. Research on slow humming specifically is limited, but the broader polyvagal literature (Porges) supports the mechanism.

Practitioners often notice that Bhramari clears sinus pressure and calms tension-type headaches more reliably than silent breathing. The sound is also a useful anchor for attention — harder to ruminate while humming.

What the research says

The evidence base for Bhramari (Humming Bee Breath) rests on:

When to use it

  • At the start of a meditation
  • For tension headache
  • When falling asleep is slow

When not to use it

  • Recent ear infection
  • Severe congestion

Try it in the Loam app

Bhramari (Humming Bee Breath) is included in Loam's breathing library with an animated breath visualizer, optional haptic cues at every phase transition, and configurable durations. Download Loam to practice it.

Related techniques

Back to the full breathing library, or try: cyclic-sighing, 4-7-8, Ujjayi (Ocean Breath).

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