Fire Horse 2026: One Year of 12-Minute Kirtan Kriya

Tuesday the 17th of February, 2026 marked the beginning of the Year of the Fire Horse in the lunar calendar — a year traditionally associated with vitality, courage, momentum and bold forward movement.

Fire Horse energy can be dynamic and expansive. It carries heat, drive and passion. And yet, as we know from both Eastern philosophy and nervous system science, true vitality is not built from intensity alone. It is built from rhythm. From repetition. From returning.

This year at Kundalini House, a group of us are committing to 12 minutes of Kirtan Kriya meditation each day for the entire lunar year.

You are warmly invited to practice alongside us.

Not because you should.
Not because you need another self-improvement plan.
But because small, repeated actions build resilience — in the nervous system, in the mind, and in the heart.


Why Kirtan Kriya?

Kirtan Kriya is a simple meditation from the tradition of Kundalini Yoga. It uses the mantra Sa Ta Na Ma with coordinated finger movements (mudra) and visualisation. Practiced for 12 minutes daily, it is accessible, structured and profoundly regulating.

For over 15 years, research led by Dharma Singh Khalsa has explored its impact on brain health and emotional wellbeing. Studies have examined its effects on:

  • Stress reduction

  • Memory and cognitive function

  • Mood and sleep

  • Inflammation

  • Telomere length and gene expression

While meditation does not replace medical care, what is compelling is the simplicity of the protocol:

Twelve minutes.
Repeatable.
Sustainable.

From a physiological perspective, mantra combined with mudra and focused attention engages multiple brain regions simultaneously. It supports parasympathetic activation, improves attentional control, and provides rhythmic sensory input — all of which can contribute to nervous system regulation.

From a yogic perspective, sound current (Naad) reorganises the psyche. Repetition stabilises the mind. The mantra moves awareness through cycles of birth, life, death and renewal — mirroring the natural rhythms of existence.


Why Practice Through the Fire Horse Year?

At Kundalini House, we are deeply engaged in trauma-informed teaching and research into Kundalini Yoga and meditation. This year-long commitment reflects both ancient wisdom and contemporary science.

This practice is about:

  • Building resilience in uncertain times

  • Strengthening discipline gently and sustainably

  • Raising awareness of meditation as accessible medicine

  • Standing in solidarity with ongoing research

  • Living our vision: Together We Are Stronger

From a nervous system perspective:

Repetition creates predictability.
Predictability builds safety.
Safety allows regulation.

In a world that often feels fast and fragmented, 12 minutes of daily rhythm can become an anchor.

The Fire Horse brings momentum.
This practice brings steadiness.

Together, they create sustainable strength.


How Long Should You Practice?

The beauty of this lunar year commitment is that it holds both structure and choice.

You might choose:

  • The full Fire Horse year

  • 120 days

  • 90 days

  • 40 days

  • Or simply begin today and see what unfolds

There is no perfection required.

Miss a day? Begin again.
Feel resistance? Notice it kindly.
Feel strength? Let it grow.

This is not about intensity.
It is about steadiness.


How to Practice

Sit comfortably with your spine aligned. Rest your hands on your knees, palms facing up.

Close your eyes.

Chant, speak or tune in to the Adi Mantra: Ong Namo Guru Dev Namo (3 times). Connect to your inner wisdom and the golden chain of teachings.

Eye Position

Gently focus at the brow point.

The Mantra — Panj Shabd

Chant the five primal sounds:

  • SAA – Infinity, cosmos, beginning
  • TAA – Life, existence
  • NAA – Death, change, transformation
  • MAA – Rebirth

Three Languages of Consciousness

The mantra is expressed in three ways:

  • Human – Out loud (the world)
  • Lovers – Whisper (longing to belong)
  • Divine – Silent, mental vibration (Infinity)

With each sound, press the fingertip firmly to the thumb:

  • On SAA – Index (Jupiter) finger
  • On TAA – Middle (Saturn) finger
  • On NAA – Ring (Sun) finger
  • On MAA – Little (Mercury) finger

The 12-Minute Cycle

Maintain this rhythm:

  • 2 minutes – Out loud
  • 2 minutes – Whisper
  • 4 minutes – Silent
  • 2 minutes – Whisper
  • 2 minutes – Out loud

Visualise the energy of each sound entering through the Crown and projecting through the Third Eye to Infinity.

To Complete

Stretch your arms overhead for 1 minute. Spread the fingers wide and gently shake them out.

Inhale and exhale deeply 3 times. Relax & meditate.

We recommend using the track:

Kirtan Kriya (12 Minute Version) by Dev Suroop Kaur

The music provides structure and makes it easy to follow the mantra and timing. You can find it on Spotify or your preferred streaming service.

If you would like a deeper exploration of the research and lived experience behind this meditation, we have also shared a thoughtful blog written by Kundalini Yoga teacher Karen Hewitt, exploring the intersection of science, practice and reflection on brain health and long-term resilience.


Be led to start with

Billie explained and taught Kirtan Kriya in her Tuesday 17th class – you can access the 25 minute introduction to Kirtan Kriya here: TBC

Throughout the Fire Horse year, we will share reflections every couple of months — exploring research, trauma-informed perspectives, aging, mood, memory and inflammation — so that this practice becomes not only devotional, but informed and embodied.

Twelve minutes.
One breath at a time.
One lunar year of quiet strength.


Practice With Us at Kundalini House

Kundalini House is a trauma-informed yoga studio and complementary medicine clinic offering:

We offer in-studio and online classes, so you can practice in community or from the comfort of your home.

Whether you are beginning meditation for the first time or deepening an established path, you are welcome here.

This Fire Horse year, may we cultivate courage — not through force, but through rhythm.
May we build momentum — not through urgency, but through devotion.
And may we remember that together, steady practice becomes collective strength.