Daring to Rest: Reclaim Your Power with Yoga Nidra Rest Meditation
By Karen Brody
()
About this ebook
As modern women, we’re taught that we can do it all, have it all, and be it all. While this freedom is beautiful, it’s also exhausting. Being a “worn-out woman” is now so common that we think feeling tired all the time is normal. According to Karen Brody, feeling this exhausted is not normal—and it’s holding us back. In Daring to Rest, Brody comes to the rescue with a 40-day program to help you reclaim rest and access your most powerful, authentic self through yoga nidra, a meditative practice that guides you into one of the deepest states of relaxation imaginable.
It’s time to lie down and begin the journey to waking up
Though it comes from the yogic tradition, yoga nidra doesn’t look like a typical yoga class—the entire practice is done lying down. As you listen to a guided meditation, you’re gently taken into complete inner stillness, effortlessly releasing into a healing state that works on both cellular and subtle body levels.
With Daring to Rest, Brody presents a comprehensive yoga nidra program that unfolds in three phases: rest for physical exhaustion, release for mental and emotional exhaustion, and rise for tuning in to the “life purpose exhaustion” that can come when we’re not in our full power. Each phase includes a downloadable yoga nidra guided meditation and supportive practices.
“By directly accessing your subconscious mind, yoga nidra helps shift the long-held patterns that prevent you from stepping fully into your purpose and power,” writes Brody. “Now is the time to break the cycle of fatigue and return to your truest self—the woman you are when you’re not constantly exhausted.”
Karen Brody
Karen Brody is a women’s well-being and leadership expert who helps women journey from worn out to well rested and then dream big in their work and lives. A certified yoga nidra instructor, she is the founder of Daring to Rest™, a yoga nidra-based self-empowerment program for women. She has an MA in Women and International Development from the Institute of Social Studies in the Netherlands, and a BA in sociology from Vassar. Karen is also a playwright, and Birth, her theater-for-social-change play has been seen in over 75 cities around the world. She is the mother of two boys and met her husband in the Peace Corps. She resides in Washington, DC, but considers the world her home.
Related to Daring to Rest
Related ebooks
Yoga Nidra: The iRest Meditative Practice for Deep Relaxation and Healing Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBringing Yoga to Life: The Everyday Practice of Enlightened Living Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Art of Mindful Relaxation: The Heart of Yoga Nidra Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYoga for Life: A Journey to Inner Peace and Freedom Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Yoga The Spirit And Practice Of Moving Into Stilln Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Meditation Made Easy Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Year of Yoga: Rituals for Every Day and Every Season Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Flex Your Mind: 10 powerful Yoga principles for less stress in a busy world Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYoga Nidra Meditations: 24 Scripts for True Relaxation Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYoga Nidra: A Meditative Practice for Deep Relaxation and Healing Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Yoga Nidra Meditation: A Meditative Guide for Conscious Relaxation, Deep Sleep and Stress Relief Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYoga Nidra: Blissful deep relaxation Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Fierce Medicine: Breakthrough Practices to Heal the Body and Ignite the Spirit Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Embrace Yoga's Roots Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Yoga & Psyche: Integrating the Paths of Yoga and Psychology for Healing, Transformation, and Joy Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYoga Nidra Deep Sleep Meditation 6 Guided Meditations for Relaxation, Overcoming Anxiety, Stress Relief and to Fall Asleep Fast Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHow To Do Restorative Yoga Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHealing Through Yoga: Transform Loss into Empowerment Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsGravity & Grace: How to Awaken Your Subtle Body and the Healing Power of Yoga Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Restorative Yoga: Reduce Stress, Gain Energy, and Find Balance Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Yin Yoga: An Individualized Approach to Balance, Health, and Whole Self Well-Being Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Self-Awakening Yoga: The Expansion of Consciousness through the Body's Own Wisdom Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Structural Yoga Therapy: Adapting to the Individual Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Revolution of the Soul: Awaken to Love Through Raw Truth, Radical Healing, and Conscious Action Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Art of Attention: A Yoga Practice Workbook for Movement as Meditation Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dancing Mindfulness: A Creative Path to Healing and Transformation Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHow Not To Teach Yoga: Lessons on Boundaries, Accountability, and Vulnerability - Learnt the Hard Way Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A Life Worth Breathing: A Yoga Master's Handbook of Strength, Grace, and Healing Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Exercise & Fitness For You
Bigger Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Male Body Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Super Joints: Russian Longevity Secrets for Pain-Free Movement, Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Muscle for Life: Get Lean, Strong, and Healthy at Any Age! Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Thinner Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Female Body Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Calisthenics Codex: Fifty Exercises for Functional Fitness Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle: Summary and Analysis Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Tight Hip Twisted Core: The Key To Unresolved Pain Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Genius of Flexibility: The Smart Way to Stretch and Strengthen Your Body Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Felon Fitness: How to Get a Hard Body Without Doing Hard Time Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Weight Lifting Is a Waste of Time: So Is Cardio, and There’s a Better Way to Have the Body You Want Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Convict Conditioning: How to Bust Free of All Weakness—Using the Lost Secrets of Supreme Survival Strength Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Yoga Beginner's Bible Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Polishing the Mirror: How to Live from Your Spiritual Heart Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The 12-Minute Athlete: Get Fitter, Faster, and Stronger Using HIIT and Your Bodyweight Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Anatomy of Strength and Conditioning: A Trainer's Guide to Building Strength and Stamina Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Resistance Band Workouts: 50 Exercises for Strength Training at Home or On the Go Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Wheels of Life: A User's Guide to the Chakra System Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Super Shred: The Big Results Diet: 4 Weeks, 20 Pounds, Lose It Faster! Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Intelligent Fitness: The Smart Way to Reboot Your Body and Get in Shape Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Shred: The Revolutionary Diet: 6 Weeks 4 Inches 2 Sizes Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Ultimate BodyWeight Workout: Transform Your Body Using Your Own Body Weight Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Roxane Gay & Everand Originals: Built for This: The Quiet Strength of Powerlifting Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Body by Science: A Research Based Program to Get the Results You Want in 12 Minutes a Week Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Seven Spiritual Laws of Yoga: A Practical Guide to Healing Body, Mind, and Spirit Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Yoga: 50 Poses and Meditations for Body, Mind, and Spirit Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Yamas & Niyamas: Exploring Yoga's Ethical Practice Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Reviews for Daring to Rest
0 ratings0 reviews
Book preview
Daring to Rest - Karen Brody
For R., women, and humanity.
If you close your eyes,
you will see far.
KENYAN PROVERB
CONTENTS
Dear Sister
Introduction
The Foundation
1Why Rest Is So Important for Women
2Welcome to Yoga Nidra
3The Daring to Rest Program
PHASE ONE Rest
4Intention: Aligning with Your Heart’s Desires
5Body: Feeling Grounded, Relaxed, and Safe
6Energy: Welcoming Back Your Life Force
PHASE TWO Release
7Mind: Letting Go of Burdens
8Wisdom: Becoming the Witness of Your Life
9Bliss: Knowing Everything Is Okay
PHASE THREE Rise
10Lead: A New Model of Embracing All of You
11Life: Daring to Rest Forever
EPILOGUE Final Yoga Nidra Pompom Shake
Gratitude
APPENDIX 1 Scripts for Daring to Rest Yoga Nidra Meditations
APPENDIX 2 Your Daring to Rest Toolbox
Notes
Recommended Reading
About the Author
About Sounds True
Copyright
Praise for Daring to Rest
DEAR SISTER,
Welcome. I wrote this book for you as an invitation to improve your well-being and dream big using yoga nidra , a meditative practice that can help you realize true, deep rest. Through these pages, you can discover your path back to whatever your heart desires, including better sleep, clarity of mind, loving relationships, and the courage to make a difference in the world. I wrote this book to help women get some much-needed rest, reclaim their radiant nature, and lead at home and work from a more peaceful place. I felt called to share with you a meditation technique that is both practical and life changing and that will help you give birth to anything in your life from a well-rested place.
I could speak for days and months and years about yoga nidra meditation. Why? Because yoga nidra transformed my life, and I have seen it, again and again, in some way, change the life of every woman it touches. Yoga nidra combines what I feel are two key components women need in their lives: a well-rested body and a deep connection to one’s soul. A well-rested, healthy body helps the soul fulfill its purpose.
This book shows you how to make peace an inside job. I am convinced that if more women (and men) practiced yoga nidra, we would create a more peaceful world because we would all be more at peace with ourselves. We would all sleep better. We would prioritize being good to ourselves. We would stop chronically burning out, and if we did burn out, we would quickly forgive ourselves, chuck perfect,
and reboot. We would bravely tell the untold stories wanting out of our heads and finally release story lines that no longer serve us. We would lead more companies and feel more confident and creative, doing it our way instead of how it’s always been done (which isn’t working for women, by the way). We would model to our children how to not be afraid of the dark—within us or outside of us.
My first yoga nidra teacher, Robin Carnes, always ended her yoga nidra meditation sessions with the words, Yoga nidra is a service of love we give to ourselves and all others. It mentors us into an understanding of our true nature, and it shows us that when we serve ourselves, we serve all others; when we serve others, we serve ourselves.
This is the spirit from which this book is being offered to you. May this book help you be good to yourself, rest well, heal, lead, be wildly creative, and stand in your full power. May it also help you recover a deep sense of peace within and then go spread peace to others.
The time is now to take back rest.
Let’s do this—together.
With love and shaking my yoga nidra pompoms,
Karen
INTRODUCTION
Fifteen years ago, I was a young mom with two active boys under the age of two. My older son slept so little and cried so much that for over a year we ate every meal with the vacuum cleaner on just to keep him calm. Living with so much tension and so little sleep made me feel and act crazypants . My everyday thoughts included things like, What day is it?
and Oh, was that a curb I just drove over?
I had been a confident young woman, and I had lots of experience as a leader. But once sleep deprivation and chronic stress hit, my confidence sank to an all-time low. Who am I again?
and All I want to do is sleep
became my mantras. That’s when a family legacy of panic attacks kicked in unexpectedly, in my local supermarket, and I began taking anti-anxiety pills.
"I’m fine," I told everyone. It made sense that I would be constantly exhausted and full of panic. For a mom in this situation, there was no other way to be, right?
Turns out I was wrong. There was another way.
I found it by accident when I wandered into my local yoga studio. As I read through the class choices, I heard a voice echoing in the hallway. Attracted to its energy, I walked toward the voice and found twenty or so women lying on the floor with blankets over them, looking blissed out. The woman at the front desk told me it was a yoga nidra class.
What are they doing?
I asked her.
I guess you could say they’re doing nothing. It’s like taking a yogic nap.
She explained that yoga nidra is the art of conscious relaxation
and said it is also known as the sleep of the yogi.
I was already familiar with meditation, though I hadn’t meditated in years, and what she described sounded like a kind of meditation, but one I could do lying down instead of sitting up. I signed up for the class immediately.
A week later, I stood at the classroom door, took a deep breath, walked in, and lay down. To be honest, even though I had years of experience in meditation, I wasn’t looking to meditate or even consciously relax.
I was just desperate to lie down and get some rest.
What I got was the best rest of my life. It also turned out to be the first step on my journey to feeling like myself again—my truest, most powerful self.
Right away my weekly yoga nidra sessions felt deeply restorative in my physical body. My nervous system was no longer permanently on high alert, and I felt rested for the first time in a long while. But suddenly there was more. As I continued practicing yoga nidra, something began to tug at my core. A portal was opening. At times my heart would flutter, making me wonder, What is this new thing wanting to emerge? I was being nudged to take a close look at my fine
life and make some changes.
At the same time, there was a part of me hollering, "Curl back up to fine! The temptation to not change a thing in my busy life, and to not rest, was looping through my mind most days for a few months or so after I began practicing yoga nidra meditation regularly. I loved it, and yet every Friday at noon, when my yoga nidra class met, I had a long list of excuses to not lie down. Shifting lifelong patterns can be a one-step-forward, one-step-back dance, but over time, the yoga nidra magic kept calling me back, and I gave myself permission to rest more, slow down, and not live in the
fine" zone.
As I began to feel well rested, I tapped back into my own internal rhythm, something I had neglected for a long time. Every time I lay down to practice yoga nidra, I felt the weight of all I was doing, and it became clear that I was stressed. And from a deep, meditative space connected to my natural rhythm, I was led to solutions to my stress. Everything that had felt urgent began to feel less urgent. I began to clear nonessential things from my schedule, and the sense of freedom from my to-do list was intoxicating. I started unplugging from the computer before dinner and didn’t go back afterward, so I could focus on my family and myself and then wind down before bedtime and get a good night’s sleep. I didn’t call friends back during the week—only on weekends, when I could go for a relaxing walk while talking. I said no to anything that made me feel out of rhythm, like unessential family travel or too many weekend activities.
Soon after I made yoga nidra an ongoing priority, my panic attacks disappeared. I realized that my family history did not have to become my reality, and in that first year of practicing yoga nidra meditation, I was able to stop taking anti-anxiety medication. It wasn’t easy to stop the medication, but practicing yoga nidra showed me that I could do it—that feeling calm and free was my birthright. Slowly, as I continued practicing yoga nidra, I began to connect back to all the original dreams I’d had as a young girl, like wanting to write. I released a big story I’d been telling myself for years: that a dyslexic who wasn’t allowed to take an English class in college couldn’t write. During yoga nidra, I kept hearing a whisper from my soul to screw that story and write a play.
So I wrote a successful play called Birth, which came straight from my soul. Yoga nidra reminded me that storytelling is in my bones, and if we don’t follow the wisdom in our bones, a part of us dies. It also showed me how deep rest and stillness could profoundly improve my health and leadership. I didn’t have to spend years as a worn-out woman, thinking this was a badge of honor or just the way you’re supposed to feel as a mother. After this, there was no turning back to just fine.
What About You? Are You Just Fine
?
If you’re a woman in today’s high-paced modern world, there’s a good chance you feel like I did all those years ago. Maybe, like me, you’ve been listening to the conventional wisdom for a long time: All mothers are tired. All women who work are crazy busy. Being tired all the time is normal. Maybe, like me, you tell yourself and others that you’re fine, not realizing that fine is often code for my life isn’t going well.
It’s easy to think worn out is normal because the worn-out woman model is the dominant model for women in our culture. Have you noticed how our culture loves women achievers, even if they’re exhausted every step of the way to the top?
Maybe you’ve tinkered around with empowerment tools and the latest health advice: Exercise more. Eat leafy greens. Drink more water. Buy supplements. No, you’ve got to get the right
supplements. Try probiotics. While these things often help when combined with rest, on their own, they typically aren’t solutions. They’re just stopgaps helping a tired body keep going a little more, and you’re sucked back into exhaustion again when confronted with the daily demands of life and not enough time.
Maybe, like I was, you’re taking some type of medication to help you feel better or sleep better. Maybe you’re thinking, I don’t have the time for rest
or How can rest really make a huge difference?
Maybe you’re wondering if daring to rest is worth the risk.
If any of this sounds familiar, I invite you take stock of your life now. Review any current physical, mental, and emotional health issues, including the red flags you may have been ignoring for years, and then ask yourself, Am I thriving?
Not just living, not just fine, but really thriving? Are you really the woman you want to be and that you know you could be, if you were operating at full power? Do you feel healthy? If the answer is no, how could deep, nourishing rest help you thrive? Is it worth the risk?
I wrote Daring to Rest and created the Daring to Rest program to help women give up the all-too-familiar worn-out woman paradigm and replace it with an urgently needed, well-rested one. What I’m offering you in this book is a rest program that will help you reboot your health and your life so that you can begin dreaming big and leading from a well-rested place. I will reteach you how to rest deeply and then use this as fuel to live your life from a more peaceful, authentic, and purposeful place.
The world needs you and what you have to offer. But it needs the fully alive, well-rested you, not the exhausted you. Imagine a world where women make rest and rhythm a priority and operate more from their full power. That’s the new daring-to-rest world you’re about to enter.
Daring to Rest: The Program
After experiencing firsthand the profound changes yoga nidra can lead to, I became an uncharacteristically enthusiastic yoga nidra cheerleader. Years after I started practicing, I realized that yoga nidra made my heart sing, and I sought out training in two different yoga nidra methods. From there, I developed Bold Tranquility, a company dedicated to showing worn-out women their way back to deep rest and their purpose through the benefits of yoga nidra meditation.
This book will lead you through the Daring to Rest program, in which you practice yoga nidra meditation for forty days in order to break the cycle of fatigue, feel healthy again, and reconnect to your soul’s calling—the woman you are when you’re not completely, constantly exhausted.
The yoga nidra meditations will teach you how to step into a deeply restful, timeless state that relaxes your body and helps you feel physically rested. But physical exhaustion is just the first layer of exhaustion. If it were the only layer, then just getting more sleep or sleeping better would resolve fatigue. Yoga nidra meditation helps you clear the burnout you’re experiencing at the deeper, subtler levels of your being so that you can feel rested and whole again on not just the physical body level, but mental, emotional, and spiritual levels as well.
Chapter one explains what real rest is (Hint: It’s not just another self-care activity) and why it is so important for modern women. Chapters two and three provide you with everything you need to know about yoga nidra meditation and how the Daring to Rest program works.
Then the second, third, and fourth sections of the book lead you through the forty-day program’s three phases:
Phase One: Rest
addresses physical exhaustion.
Phase Two: Release
addresses mental and emotional exhaustion.
Phase Three: Rise
addresses the life-purpose exhaustion
that typically arises when we are not operating at our full power.
At the end of the Rise phase, I will show you how to incorporate yoga nidra meditation and other principles and practices from this book into your life, so you can continue to make rest a priority—because a well-rested lifestyle is forever.
Please note that while the program is forty days, it takes into account real life and gives you permission to not practice some days—because chucking perfect is a much-needed skill for well-rested women too.
In addition to the yoga nidra meditations themselves, I offer complementary practices in each chapter, from writing to movement to harnessing your power to access intuitive guidance. Women are multidimensional, so often the way into healing varies from woman to woman. Pick and choose what suits you.
Throughout the book, I share some of my stories and the stories of women I’ve worked with in my programs, hoping they provide you with guidance, assurance, and awareness on your journey. Many of the women’s names have been changed, and some stories are composites to capture the essence of the teachings. I’m deeply grateful to every woman who bravely said yes to sharing her story. The protective mama in me asks you to deeply listen, respect their truths, and feel into (or think with your heart
) how they relate to your truth.
Since I’m an enthusiastic yoga nidra cheerleader, I will be shaking my yoga nidra pompoms throughout this book, not just because yoga nidra helped me go from an exhausted, worn-out woman to a more well-rested woman, and not just because I’ve seen it do the same for other women, but also because I know that on a deep, cellular level, yoga nidra heals many dimensions of ourselves and infuses us with unspeakable courage in all areas of our lives—courage to give ourselves permission to rest, and more. When you lie down with yoga nidra, you are guided into stillness, and it’s through discovering this inherent stillness in yourself that you find freedom.
Now, my dear Sister, it’s time to lie down and begin the journey to waking up.
THE FOUNDATION
1
WHY REST IS SO IMPORTANT FOR WOMEN
You probably don’t need to be convinced how important it is to rest. You know you’re exhausted, stressed out, and frazzled. And you’re not alone. Consider these statistics:
•In a 2014 report by the National Sleep Foundation, 24 percent of women said they had woken up feeling well rested for zero of the past seven days.¹
•Women have more insomnia and higher depression levels than men.²
•The number of women aged 20–44 taking medications for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) increased 264 percent between 2001 and 2010.³
Do you truly think that the number of women having problems with focus and attention suddenly jumped for no clear reason? Of course not. This dramatic rise in medication use is our cry for help. Add to this the high numbers of women taking medication for depression—in one survey, 23 percent of all American women between the ages of 40 and 59—and one thing is clear: women are out of rhythm.⁴ And how do you come back into rhythm? Rest. What if the inexpensive treatment of rest could give women their lives back?
Sleep specialist Rubin Naiman, PhD, says, "Buddhist philosophy teaches that depression results from excessive activation