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Understanding Yoga through Knowledge and Practice


WHAT IS YOGA NIDRA?

Yoga Nidra is a systematic method of guided relaxation that has a profound effect on the body, mind and emotions. During the practice, you lie down in a comfortable position and are asked to remain awake and relaxed. The instructor will guide you through various stages of deeper relaxation where you turn your awareness to the inner landscape, away from external experiences.

During Yoga Nidra, you will enter the hypnagogic state between wakefulness and dreaming which we usually only spend a few minutes in daily as we are drift off to sleep at night.  Here, he effect on the mind can be very powerful because as the mind becomes more relaxed, it also becomes more receptive. The practice can help us to increase our creativity, aid in   memory retention, reduce stress, overcome past traumas, release our samskaras (mental impressions), and more fully embody our true nature.

Yoga Nidra Sessions for People Living with Cancer:

Click the links below to listen to or download the sessions:

 

Yoga Nidra Explained:

  1. Preparation - Yoga Nidra is done while lying in Savasana. It is important that your head if necessary, and a rolled blanket under your knees. If the heels touch the floor, it can create a sore place on the heel and therefore a smaller ankle roll is helpful to keep the feet from touching the floor. Please be sure that you are warm and that the room is neither bright or dark. Do not cover your eyes with an eye bag as this can cause discomfort after the practice.
  2. Relaxation - You will be asked to consciously relax the muscles of your body. Sometimes you will be asked to begin listening to sounds outside of the body in order to place the mind in an attitude of observation.
  3. Sankalpa or Resolve - Please choose your sankalpa very carefully. It should be a short, positive statement that you will repeat to yourself three times. You will use the same sankalpa until it comes to fruition. Some examples are as follows:
    • "I am present"
    • "I am healthy"     
    • "I am successful"
  4. Rotation of Consciousness - During this portion of the practice, you will be asked to rotate both your conscious mind and physical feeling throughout the entire body in a very specific way. You will listen to the instructor say the body part, repeat the name of the part to yourself, and feel the body part at the same time. Within the motor cortex of our brain there is a neuronal map of the parts of the body called the motor homunculus or "little man". As you go through the rotation of consciousness, you are activating parts of your brain associated with parts of your body which in effect, relaxes the mind by relaxing the body.
  5. Awareness of the Body - You will be asked to concentrate on specific parts of the body. Sometimes this is done in relation to the floor, or certain body parts in relation to each other.
  6. Awareness of the Breath - You will be asked to observe the breath in different parts of the torso, including the belly, the chest, the throat, and the nostrils. This is unlike pranayama where we attempt to change the breath. Here we are only asked to observe the natural breath without effort.
  7. Feelings & Sensations - You will be asked to recall intense physical or emotional experiences such as heat and cold, anxiety and calm, heaviness and lightness. You are usually asked to recall a sensation clearly for a short period of time, then asked to recall the opposite sensation which enables you to experience an intense feeling without reacting emotionally. It also makes us aware of the duality of our experiences.
  8. Visualization - Here, you will be asked to visualize a list of images that are named by the instructor. Sometimes these are pleasant images, and sometimes they are not. Again, it is your aim to visualize these images as clearly as possible while the mind and body are relaxed and often you will make connections between what the instructor says and things that you have experienced in your life.
  9. Repeat Sankalpa - You will repeat the same sankalpa that you created at the beginning of the practice three times to yourself.
  10. Coming Back - You will be brought back into a waking state very slowly so that you feel calm and comfortable after the practice.