Visualise yourself walking through the bitter, noxious vapours of a Delhi winter morning, where the air quality index sits firmly in the “severe” range and every breath feels like a struggle. It is a familiar
sight across many Indian cities, where fine particulate pollutants are pulled deep into the lungs and quietly stir up distress. Yet, within this bleak landscape, a quiet resistance is growing, a movement powered by something as simple as the act of breathing.
Regular breathing exercises are not just a yogic relic; they are a practical bridge from this smog-choked reality to a deeper, more resilient sense of happiness.
The Happiness Paradox We Live In
In a country where family feasts and festival lights help 88% of us describe ourselves as content, the highest rate in a 30-country Ipsos survey, why does that joy so often feel surface-level?
According to the 2025 Ipsos World Happiness Survey, India has improved its overall happiness score from 78% in 2017 to 90% after recovering from a low of 66%, largely due to strong family ties (from large Sunday meals in Mumbai to late-night celebrations at rural weddings in Rajasthan).
These are our emotional anchors. Yet they can also mask deep-rooted challenges: unspoken difficulties within relationships, lower levels of genuine intimacy, and spiritual practices that do not always translate into daily contentment. Adding to this is the chaos of social media and the uncertainty of the political climate, creating a steady background hum of stress.
The World Happiness Report 2025 ranks India 118th out of 147 nations (score: 4.389/10). We excel in generosity and social support, but environmental quality, perceived freedom and equity pull our overall happiness down.
How Pollution Steals More Than Just Clean Air
Air pollution is not only a lung problem. It is a happiness thief. Hazardous AQI levels are linked to respiratory issues, oxidative stress, anxiety and chronic fatigue. The WHO attributes around 4.2 million premature deaths each year to ambient air pollution, mostly from cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. In India’s polluted cities, even routine activities can reduce lung function, reflected in lower FVC and FEV1 readings.
This daily environmental assault slowly erodes the energy we rely on for family joy, mental clarity and inner peace.
Breath as Both Shield and Healer
This is where science-backed breathing exercises become powerful. Gentle, controlled breathwork can strengthen airway defences, reduce inflammation and improve oxygen efficiency, even when external conditions are less than ideal.
Research shows that mindful, breath-focused exercise can improve peak expiratory flow (PEF) during periods of pollutant exposure. The European Lung Foundation notes that, for most people, the many benefits of breath-centred exercise far outweigh any potential drawbacks.
More importantly, techniques such as diaphragmatic breathing or cyclic sighing activate the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing stress hormones and lifting mood, in some studies even faster than meditation alone (Cell Reports Medicine, 2023).
Four-week mindfulness breathing programmes have been shown to lower depression and anxiety while increasing overall well-being scores. Longer 14-week protocols can enhance subjective happiness, sleep quality and emotional balance, directly addressing India’s “missing” deeper joy.
One Breath at a Time
From smog to serenity is not a distant fantasy. It begins with a simple daily pause: inhale for four counts, hold for four, exhale slowly for six.
The vision behind the initiative “India Breathe Again” by Akshar Yoga Kendraa, under the guidance of Himalayan Siddhaa Akshar, is to turn this idea into a lived reality through collective practice. Akshar Yoga Kendraa launched a 7-Day National Conscious Breathing Challenge in November 2025, inviting students, professionals, families and creators to learn seven powerful breathwork techniques taught by Himalayan Siddhaa Akshar and to practise each technique for seven minutes a day, focusing on conscious breathing to support lung capacity and overall well-being.
“Through this initiative, we are merging the ancient yogic teachings of breath with the all-inclusive nature of today’s society; thus, helping to transform one’s inner tranquillity into a collective effort. In addition, we are demonstrating how even in a world filled with polluted air, everyone has access to use their breath as a healing tool,” noted Himalayan Siddhaa Akshar, Yoga Master, Spiritual Guru, Author, Columnist, and Founder of Akshar Yoga Kendraa.
When thousands quietly adopt short, intentional breath practices together, even virtually, personal calm becomes collective renewal. India already shines with 88% surface happiness. Imagine what happens when we turn that warmth inward, breath by conscious breath. The clearest air we will ever breathe is the one we create inside.









