|
|
Yoga Nidra: True RelaxationChronically Tired? Guided Meditation Refreshes Body and MindSometimes, no matter how much sleep, rest, and "me" time you give yourself, you still feel run down. By relaxing your entire being, you can energize your life.
Yoga Nidra is one of the best practices for newcomers to meditation and yoga. Developed in the 1940s by Swami Satyananda Saraswati in Rishikesh, India, Yoga Nidra (translated as "yogic sleep") is the practice of conscious relaxation. The practitioner's inner awareness remains alert, but the body, mind, and psyche are calmed through a guided sequence that includes setting an intention, systematically relaxing the body, using visualization to relax the mind, and evoking positive emotions in the unconscious mind to open it to greater receptivity. Restful and liberating, Yoga Nidra is an ideal practice for those of us who feel pushed to our limits or stuck in an undesirable place in our lives. The ProcessA variety of CDs and books are available to guide you through Yoga Nidra. Physically, all that is demanded of the practitioner is that they remain still and comfortable in Savasana (corpse pose) for about 30 minutes and remain awake and aware (i.e. don't drift off into sleep.) The rest of the journey is created by your guide, which may be a recorded voice or a live person if you are attending a yoga nidra session at a studio or retreat. There is an endless variety of visualizations created for Yoga Nidra that include beautiful imagery and metaphors. As you learn about the practice of Yoga Nidra, you may even begin to create your own visualizations. There are Eight Essential Steps in the Process:
TheorySleep is only restful for our sensate beings, our conscious minds, and our bodies. Sleep does not rejuvenate our inner selves, the subconscious and psychic, or spiritual, aspects of our beings; these are left to wander wild in the process of sleep, which our awareness interprets as dreaming. In Yoga Nidra, we remain alert in a kind of "psychic sleep," guiding our beings to a state of genuine relaxation that can take us to a higher level of self-realization. Benefits may include the following:
The copyright of the article Yoga Nidra: True Relaxation in Meditation & Relaxation is owned by Laura Susan Henry. Permission to republish Yoga Nidra: True Relaxation in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|