Movement is important. Almost daily, we hear statistics about the impact of exercise on lowering stress and disease rates. But both emerging and ancient science support the idea that the practice of cultivating stillness so that the body can regenerate may be just as important for our physiology. Enter restorative yoga, a practice of deep relaxation, supported, gentle stretching and guided meditation designed to combat stress through receptivity instead of activity.
We live in a society that values upward mobility, action and results and is based around the projection of scarcity to create demand. Rest and receptivity are neither held in high regard nor commonly practiced.Today’s yoga practitioners may seek out fast-paced, sweaty styles of yoga, in part to balance a day that was otherwise spent sitting in an office chair or behind the steering wheel of a car. I am not arguing that movement isn’t important for our health, to release endorphins, move lymph and cultivate strength and mobility. To this end, active or flow styles of yoga have clear health benefits. Unfortunately, more and more often, the period of rest at the end of a yoga practice is getting lost.
A yoga class like this could actually increase your mental agitation after a white-knuckle day at the office. Imagine, instead, entering a softly lit room with quiet, harmonious music playing. On the yoga mats lay soft blankets, bolsters and eye pillows. You are invited to lie down, supported from beneath in such a way that your body can finally relax.
You exhale.
You feel a deep, inner stillness; a pause between breaths where you feel at once steady and free, supported by the earth and yet liberated from the confines of worry. After 60 to 90 minutes that fly by with only a handful of supine, supported poses, you emerge renewed. That night, you sleep deeply, and in the morning, you rise feeling perhaps just a little less ruffled by the emails, the traffic, the demands.
This is the true power of yoga that sometimes gets lost in the modern obsession with aesthetically pleasing gymnastics and fancy catchphrases.
Restorative yoga is a powerful antidote to stress because it down-regulates the sympathetic nervous system and up-regulates the parasympathetic nervous system, which is responsible for rest, digestion, energy conservation and slowing the heart rate. Different from sleep, which involves REM brain states during which dreams can trigger stress, conscious rest is designed to activate the alpha and theta wave states, which are associated with deep relaxation and meditation.
~ by Julia Clarke, Co-founder of Mountain Soul Yoga
Julia Clarke will be teaching a series of workshops including a Restorative Yoga workshop on Saturday 21st and Sunday 22nd of September. The Restorative Yoga workshop is suitable for total beginners. BOOK HERE
Article first published in www.vaildaily.com