TLDR: SOMA Breath is a 22-minute guided meditation that uses rhythmic breathing, breath retention, and pelvic floor engagement to activate gamma brainwave frequencies in the brain—the same state associated with peak creativity and flow states found in experienced meditators. A study by Dr. Jeff Tarrant at the NeuroMeditation Institute showed subjects experienced states of connection and oneness comparable to psychedelic medicine, with measurable improvements in mood, neural function, and physical health markers.
How Gamma Brainwaves Connect Meditation to Peak Performance
When Niraj Naik describes SOMA Breath as designed to "unlock the creative potential of your mind to think beyond its own limits," he is referencing a specific neurological state: gamma brainwave dominance. Gamma waves—oscillations at 40 Hz and above—are the fastest brainwaves and correlate with moments of insight, deep learning, and what researchers call "peak flow." These states are typically observed in experienced Tibetan monks during deep meditation and in the brains of people under the influence of classical psychedelics like psilocybin.
The breakthrough finding in Dr. Tarrant's peer-reviewed research is that a single 22-minute SOMA Breath session produces brainwave patterns in the default mode network (DMN) and broader cortical regions that match the neural signature of these expanded states. The study used the standard Altered States of Consciousness Questionnaire—the same tool deployed in clinical psychedelic trials—and found that meditators reported feelings of "connection, oneness and reduced depression" in effect sizes comparable to traditional psychedelic compounds. This is not metaphorical: the neurological and subjective markers align.
What Is the Default Mode Network and Why Does Reducing Its Activity Matter?
The DMN is a large-scale brain network that activates when your mind wanders or focuses inward—it underpins self-referential thinking, rumination, and ego identification. Overactivity in the DMN is associated with depression, anxiety, and repetitive negative thought patterns. Both psychedelic medicines and deep meditative states "attenuate" (reduce) DMN connectivity, opening the mind to new possibilities and dissolving the ego's grip on perception.
SOMA Breath achieves this through a precise sequence of breathing manipulations. The initial phase pairs rhythmic inhalation (4 beats) with extended exhalation (8 beats), a ratio that activates the parasympathetic nervous system and signals safety to the body. This grounds you in the present moment and primes the nervous system for the deeper work ahead. As Naik explains, you place one hand on your belly and one on your chest to ensure you are breathing diaphragmatically—filling the belly first, then the chest—rather than the shallow chest breathing that signals stress to your nervous system.
The Role of Hypoxia and Pelvic Floor Engagement in Activating Gamma
After several minutes of rhythmic breathing, the protocol enters its core mechanism: voluntary breath-holding (apnea). You exhale fully, then hold the breath with no air in your lungs for as long as you comfortably can—a practice that induces mild hypoxia (oxygen deprivation). Naik instructs: "Hold your breath with no air in the lungs for as long as you can. When you get bigger to breathe, you can take a sip in and breathe the air back out and hold it more and go deeper." This repeated pattern of breath retention and partial inhalation intensifies the hypoxic state, which triggers a cascade of neurochemical and physiological changes.
Crucially, during this breath-hold phase, you engage the pelvic floor muscles—contracting the sphincter muscles (as if stopping urination mid-stream) and drawing them upward. Naik describes this as a means to "move this creative life force energy up" through the spine. While the language is metaphorical, the physiology is real: pelvic floor contraction stimulates the vagus nerve and modulates intracranial pressure, both of which support the neural coherence required for gamma activation. The combination of hypoxia and pelvic floor engagement creates a potent somatic trigger for the brain's shift into these high-frequency states.
Visualization, Tone-Making, and Directing Energy Through the Central Channel
As you hold your breath after the hypoxic phase, Naik guides visualization: "Imagine like a light energy is going up through your spine into your third eye into your midbrain and you're going to imagine sending this energy out out through your third eye." This visualization serves two functions. Neurologically, internally directed attention and imagery activate the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and prime the visual and sensory integration hubs that later support creative downloads. Phenomenologically, it anchors your awareness to the midline and the brain's central organizing structures—the seat of what neuroscience calls the default mode network's core.
Following the breath-hold, you make vocalized tones (humming or toning sounds) for several seconds. Naik explains that "toning actually helps you draw in all this oxygen that you've brought in through the oxygen and get all this oxygen into your cells. You actually feel this amazing sensation of being energized with positive energy when you make this toning effect." Vocalization stimulates the vagus nerve further, increases cerebral blood flow, and synchronizes neural oscillations across distributed brain regions—all mechanisms that support gamma coherence and the felt sense of energized euphoria.
Returning to Rhythm: The 4:4 Breathing Protocol and Nervous System Coherence
After the first hypoxic round and toning phase, the breathing rhythm shifts to 4:4—four counts in, four counts out—a pattern that induces "heart rate variability coherence," a measurable state in which the heart and nervous system synchronize. As Naik notes, "the four four brings you into balance into rhythm." This coherent state is calming yet alert, preparing the nervous system for the repetition of the entire cycle. The second and subsequent rounds amplify the gamma activation and extend the duration of the heightened state.
Throughout the meditation, affirmations and guided visualization suggestions weave through the breathing instruction: "Imagine right now you are doorway to infinite possibilities… the boundaries are clearly go as far as your mind will stretch… whatever your mind can conceive you're now in limitless world and imagination." These verbal cues redirect attention away from the analytical, self-critical default mode toward open, associative cognition—the mental state in which novel ideas and creative breakthroughs emerge.
Why Gamma Activation Leads to Creativity and Abundance Mindset
The stated goal of SOMA Breath is to help you "download your next big game changing idea or creation." This is grounded in neuroscience. Gamma brainwaves correlate with heightened inspiration, problem-solving, and what researchers term "insight." The medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate—regions implicated in self-referential thinking—quiet down, while associative networks (lateral parietal and temporal cortices) become more active. This shift allows semantic boundaries to soften; remote associations become accessible; novel combinations of ideas become visible. Artists, scientists, and entrepreneurs often report that their breakthroughs arrive in exactly this state.
Naik emphasizes: "Pay attention to any new thoughts ideas inspirations come because you're in this gamma wave frequency many downloads may appear into your mind at this moment." This is a practical instruction, not mysticism. After 20+ minutes in gamma-dominant states, the brain is primed for insight. The attentional shift from "doing" to "receiving" creates a window in which creative solutions and abundance-oriented thoughts naturally arise.
Physical and Mental Health Benefits Backed by Research
Beyond the neurological effects, SOMA Breath documentation lists multiple evidence-based benefits corroborated by meditation and breathwork research:
- Brain function and memory: Meditation increases gray matter density in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex.
- Inflammation and metabolic health: Controlled breathing and parasympathetic activation reduce systemic inflammation, lower cholesterol, stabilize blood sugar, and reduce blood pressure.
- Bone mineral density and immune function: Parasympathetic activation and reduced stress hormones support both skeletal health and immune resilience.
- Mood and depression: Gamma activation and DMN attenuation are directly associated with reduced depression and anxiety symptoms, as confirmed by the Altered States Questionnaire scores in the study.
- Cardiovascular fitness: Breath-work increases aerobic capacity and strengthens the heart through vagal tone optimization.
Contraindications and Safety Considerations
Naik and the SOMA Breath protocol explicitly advise against this practice for certain populations. Do not practice SOMA Breath if you:
- Have a history of epileptic seizures (hyperventilation and breath-holding can trigger seizure activity)
- Have cardiac arrhythmia or a pacemaker (the breathing and vagal stimulation can disrupt heart rhythm)
- Are pregnant (altered oxygenation states may affect fetal physiology)
- Have severe COPD (the breath-hold phase may cause distress and oxygen desaturation)
Beyond these exclusions, the practice is designed for general well-being and should be approached with patience, especially on the first few sessions. The hypoxic state can feel intense; this is normal and expected.
How to Practice SOMA Breath: Step-by-Step Instructions
Setup: Sit upright with your back straight (or lie on your back if that feels safer) in a quiet space where you will not be disturbed. Ensure proper body alignment so you will not fall over if you enter a deep state.
Step 1 – Correct Your Breathing: Place your left hand on your belly, right hand on your chest. Observe which hand rises when you inhale. If your right hand (chest) rises first, you are breathing shallowly. Instead, imagine your nostrils are at your belly button and breathe in through your nose so your belly expands first, then your chest fills. Breathe out through your mouth slowly with no pause between inhale and exhale.
Step 2 – Add Pelvic Floor Engagement (Optional but Recommended): As you inhale into your belly and chest, contract your pelvic floor muscles (the muscles you would use to stop urination mid-stream). Draw them upward, then relax as you exhale gently.
Step 3 – Follow the 4:8 Rhythm: Breathe in for four counts, breathe out for eight counts, syncing to the music cues provided in the guided meditation. Continue this rhythm for several minutes.
Step 4 – Enter the Breath-Hold Phase: After a few minutes of rhythmic breathing, breathe in fully, then exhale completely and hold your breath with no air in your lungs. Drop your chin toward your chest (creating an "energy lock") and hold as long as is comfortable. When the urge to breathe becomes strong, take a small sip of air and exhale, then hold again. Repeat this several times, going deeper each round.
Step 5 – Visualization and Energy Movement: During the deeper breath-holds, visualize light energy rising up your spine, through your heart, into your third eye and midbrain. Imagine this energy as a beam of light moving upward with each sustained hold.
Step 6 – Tone-Making: When you finally release the breath-hold and inhale fully, make vocalized tones (humming sounds) for 10–20 seconds. This helps integrate the oxygen-rich state and amplify the sense of energization.
Step 7 – Return to 4:4 Rhythm: After the toning, return to rhythmic breathing at a 4:4 ratio (in for four, out for four). This brings your nervous system into coherence and balance.
Step 8 – Repeat the Cycle: Repeat Steps 4–7 two or more times, following the guided instructions in the full 22-minute meditation.
Step 9 – Receive Downloads: In the final phases, remain alert and receptive. Pay attention to any thoughts, ideas, or inspirations that arise. You are in a gamma-dominant state; insights and creative solutions often surface naturally.
The Science Behind Why This Works Once Daily
Naik recommends practicing SOMA Breath once per day to experience "amazing benefits." Daily practice builds neuroplasticity—the brain's capacity to form new neural pathways. With repeated exposure, the shifts in brainwave state, vagal tone, and default mode connectivity become more stable and accessible even outside of meditation. Over weeks and months, practitioners report sustained improvements in mood, creativity, problem-solving, and their subjective sense of abundance and possibility. This is not a one-off experience; it is a rewiring of baseline brain function.
Scaling Your Practice: From Daily Meditation to Teaching Others
For those who wish to deepen their engagement with SOMA Breath, Naik mentions two pathways. The first is the 21-Day Awakening Journey, described as "a deep dive meditation journey and experience which is changing so many lives around the world." This extended program amplifies and consolidates the neurological shifts initiated by single sessions. The second is instructor training: you can learn to teach SOMA Breath to groups and "actually teach other people and help people start the day the best possible way." This positions the technique not as a solo wellness tool but as a social and communal practice with ripple effects.
Where to Go From Here
If you are interested in exploring gamma-state activation and breath-based neurotechnology, begin with a single guided 22-minute SOMA Breath session. Ensure you meet none of the contraindications listed above, and approach the experience with an open mind and body awareness. Notice any shifts in mood, clarity, or creative insight in the hours following the meditation. If the practice resonates, commit to daily sessions for at least 21 days to allow neuroplasticity to consolidate. Consider supplementing with the detailed technical video linked in Naik's description to refine your breathing technique. Finally, explore whether teaching or deeper group practice (the 21-Day Awakening Journey) aligns with your path. The bridge between neuroscience and expanded consciousness is increasingly well-mapped; SOMA Breath is a practical vehicle for crossing it.



