

Kundalini Yoga Therapy
Sydney, NSW
yoga meditation and deep relaxation for people managing chronic illness and recovering from health conditions
11 studios offering yoga-nidra found near Surry Hills


Sydney, NSW
yoga meditation and deep relaxation for people managing chronic illness and recovering from health conditions


Annandale, New South Wales
Yoga that makes you feel energised . relaxed and joyful .


206 Woodville Road, Merrylands, NSW
Welcome! Come and be nourished and uplifted at our yoga centre in Merrylands. Here you will find a clean spacious,air conditioned studio in our own premises. Our mission is to make yoga classes available and affordable to everyone, especially during this challenging times. Join us in our free online classroom and enjoy our live yoga and meditation classes and courses on daily basis. Free of charge/donation based.


Core Gymball Studio, Unit 18, Menai, New South Wales
Life is a journey, not a competition


131 Old Pacific Highway, Oxenford, Queensland
Boutique Yoga DNA Studio open to all yoga enthusiast and mindfulness lovers to Experience a NEW Way of YOGA + MIDFULLNESS + VINYASA + YIN YOGA + YOGA NIDRA


100 Hodgkinson St Clifton Hill (near cnr Gold St), Clifton Hill, Vic
REVITALISE & RESTORE......-GENERAL CLASSES - ASANA (POSTURES) & PRANAYAMA (BREATH REGULATION) YOGA CLASSES -- PERSONALIZED YOGA / YOGA THERAPY TUITION - MEDITATIVE COURSES - KIDS YOGA.

Holland Park, Queensland

Holland Park, Queensland
Camp Hill, Queensland

Newstead, Queensland

Bulimba, Queensland
Yoga nidra, often called "yogic sleep," is one of the most quietly transformative practices in the entire yoga world. Unlike the dynamic movement of a vinyasa flow or the precise alignment work of iyengar yoga, yoga nidra invites practitioners to lie completely still and travel inward through a guided meditation that leads the body to the threshold between waking and sleep. Those who discover it tend to become devoted almost immediately, marveling at how something so effortless can feel so profoundly restorative. A single session is said to deliver the equivalent of several hours of deep sleep, and many practitioners report emerging from a session feeling as though they have been gently reassembled from the inside out.
The roots of yoga nidra stretch back thousands of years into the tantric traditions of ancient India, where the practice was used as a vehicle for deep self-inquiry and spiritual awakening. In the twentieth century, the practice was systematized and brought to a broader audience largely through the work of Swami Satyananda Saraswati, a disciple of the legendary Swami Sivananda. Satyananda codified what he called the Bihar School method of yoga nidra in the 1960s and 1970s, drawing on both classical tantric teachings and emerging insights from modern psychology. His foundational text, Yoga Nidra, remains an essential resource for teachers and students alike. More recently, teachers such as Richard Miller have developed contemporary adaptations, including the iRest protocol, which has been used in clinical and therapeutic settings including veterans' programs and trauma recovery work.
A typical yoga nidra session is accessible to virtually anyone. Participants lie down in savasana, fully supported by blankets and bolsters if needed, and are guided through a structured sequence that includes a sankalpa or heartfelt intention, a systematic rotation of awareness through the body, exploration of breath and sensation, and a gentle movement through layers of consciousness. Sessions generally last between 30 and 60 minutes, and no prior yoga experience is required. The benefits are wide-ranging and well-documented, encompassing stress reduction, improved sleep quality, relief from anxiety and depression, and a deepened sense of self-awareness. It is particularly well-suited for people recovering from burnout, chronic stress, trauma, or illness, as well as for anyone who finds seated meditation challenging or simply wants a more restorative complement to an active practice. For anyone ready to discover what true rest and inner stillness actually feel like, yoga nidra offers an open and welcoming door.