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How to relax What is the best, deepest relaxation in yoga? Yoga Nidra is the deepest relaxation in yoga I know. What does it mean? Well, the answer to that has varied over the centuries. It’s often translated as yoga sleep, but sleep is understood very differently in yoga. In yoga, sleep is not the absence of consciousness. It’s just a different stage of consciousness. In the earlier centuries of yoga, yoga nidra even was considered the highest form of consciousness, the closest to God. In this altered conscious state, one experiences continuous awareness of the self and a merging or even engrossing with God’s consciousness. But today, yoga nidra most often refers to a state of deep relaxation in which the senses are aware of external stimuli but do not in any way react, even in the mind. You can do yoga nidra on your own. Admittedly, it’s easier to have someone with a kind and gentle voice to guide you in, through your body survey and back out. I’ve actually transferred some of Shiva Rae’s yoga nidras onto my Ipod and sometimes go into yoga nidra to help me transition into night or during the day when I need deep rest. (Be sure to see nilmabu's product gallery of CDs). I like to say “yoga nidra,” but I also really relish doing it. I come out feeling refreshed and renewed. Patanjali wrote of sleep in the 10th Sutra of Chapter One - Sleep is the mental activity that has as its content the sense of nothingness. - trans. by Alistair Shearer Sleep is the turning of thought abstracted from existence. - trans. by Barbara Stoler Miller
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