On World Sleep Day, Sailendra Raane, yoga expert and founder of Mahati Wellness, explains how yoga and small lifestyle fixes can help you lay the groundwork for a good night's sleep.
We are currently living in an age where constant digital stimulation has become the norm.
Most of us miss out on the fact that sleep isn't just a hiatus in our day. It is an essential biological process.
Quite a few of us believe insomnia or restless nights are mental issues.
However, the secret to healthy, deep sleep lies in the physical placement of our spine and the harmony of our breath.
I feel true relaxation is not a passive state but an active evolution of a sympathetic nervous system.
It evolves from our fight or flight mode to the parasympathetic mode in which the body finally rests and digests.
This shift can happen only when we expand the spine and regulate our oxygenation levels.
If you struggle to rest, chances are that your body is still retaining the day's stress via shallow breathing and a stiff spinal column.
By blending yoga asanas with your daily lifestyle, you can shift from temporary fixes and develop a lasting groundwork for good, restful sleep.
Most urban professionals do 'chest breathing.' It is a shallow habit of trapping carbon dioxide in the lower lungs.
This chemical disparity keeps the brain on high alert.
I want to emphasise that yoga focuses on 'oxygenation ability.'
By shifting the spine and deepening the breath, we send a signal to the brain to release the sleep hormone, melatonin.
Practise these five important asanas to change your sleep hygiene.
You can call it the basis of spinal health. A stiff spine becomes a barrier to the nervous system's capacity to relax.
How to do it
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The curative inversion works like a biological switch. It reverses the flow of the blood and takes pressure away from the heart and veins.
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This pose works like a sensory reset.
By grounding the forehead, you calm the brain’s frontal lobe which is, many times, overstimulated due to the screens we use.
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Stress is stored physically mostly in the pelvic region and hips.
By opening these areas, you let the diaphragm move more easily.
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Try placing one hand on the heart and the other on the belly.
If the belly doesn’t move, you are not breathing right for sleep.
Lay emphasis on making the belly rise like a balloon to ensure there is maximum oxygenation.
Twists are important to cleanse the internal organs and free the tiny muscles between the vertebrae.
How to do it
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I want to remind you here that yoga is just one aspect of the equation.
For lasting relief, your daily lifestyle should be in alignment with your body's natural rhythms.
Your last meal should finish at least three hours before going to bed.
You cannot go into a deep sleep state if the body is busy digesting the meal.
Keep a check on your breath throughout the day.
If it seems shallow, you are building up CO2 and stress. For a balanced system, you should practise deep nasal breathing.
With a combination of correct asanas, conscious breath and mindful eating, you are not just fixing your sleep for one night, you are rewiring your system for a lifetime of improved rest.
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