So what is yoga nidra?
Yoga Nidra is often translated as yogic sleep,
But it isn't actually about falling asleep.
It's a guided practice that invites the body into deep rest while awareness stays present,
A threshold state between waking and dreaming.
Where something inside you finally gets to suffer.
The roots of this practice reach back to the Upanishads.
Some of the oldest spiritual texts of India,
Which points to something simple and radical.
Beneath your thoughts,
Your emotions,
And everyday roles,
There is a deeper essence of who you really are.
And Yoga Nidra is a way of returning to that essence.
In practice,
You lie down.
A teacher guides you through the body,
The breath.
Sensation,
Visualization,
And intention.
And here's something that genuinely fascinates me.
Research suggests that one hour of Yoga Nidra can offer the equivalent restoration of four hours of sleep.
Not because you're asleep.
But because the nervous system enters such a profound state of rest that it begins to repair itself at a cellular level.
In my own teachings,
I work with the five koshas,
The five layers of being,
Described in yoga philosophy.
We begin with awareness of the physical body and the breath.
Then we move inward,
Layer by layer.
Through the mind.
Through intuition.
And towards a place of wholeness that was never actually missing.
People come to Yoga Nidra for different reasons.
Some are exhausted and need real rest.
Some are drawn by philosophy,
Curious about who they are beneath the surface.
And some arrive simply because they can't switch off.
And find that this practice does it for them effortlessly.
So whatever brings you to Yoga Nidra,
Allow the practice to meet you exactly where you are.