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Yoga thatโ€™s truly relaxing and meditative can be surprisingly hard to find these days. (If youโ€™ve ever found yourself doing biceps curls in a โ€œyogaโ€ class, you know what Iโ€™m talking about.) And while thereโ€™s a place for yoga classes that feel more like interval workouts, sometimes you need a practice that allows you to slow down and reset.

One antidote to the yoga trends that make your heart race (like โ€œsnake yogaโ€โ€”yes, you read that right) is somatic yoga, a practice that combines somatic movementsโ€”where you focus on how an exercise makes you feel by moving your body as gently and compassionately as possibleโ€”and yoga postures and that emphasizes the mind-body connection.

But what, exactly, is somatic yoga, and what makes it so different from the kinds of classes youโ€™re probably more familiar with? We asked two veteran teachers to explain, and to share the benefits of this unique practice.

Okay, seriously, what is somatic yoga?

Somatic yoga classes typically include yoga poses you already know, plus somatic exercises, which are typically simple, small movements aimed at promoting more awareness within the body.

But in somatic yoga, itโ€™s often not so much what youโ€™re doing thatโ€™s unique, but how youโ€™re doing it. โ€œWe’re practicing holding our attention on what weโ€™re doing throughout the entire practice,โ€ says Lisa Tatham Flynn, a New York City-based teacher certified in Hanna Somatic Education and trauma-informed yoga therapy. โ€œItโ€™s a first-person, internal, lived-experience practice,โ€ unlike in some other types of yoga, where you may be focused on your body from the outside in.

Not all somatic yoga classes look exactly the same, and different teachers may have different approaches (some may incorporate elements of yoga therapy, for instance, or Feldenkrais Method). But here are some ways that a somatic yoga class might look and feel different from other forms of yoga.

1. Itโ€™s about how you feel, not achieving a posture

Unlike in other forms of yoga, where the focus may be on achieving a posture or a movement with the correct form or to the fullest extent, in somatic yoga, the actual shapes that the body is making arenโ€™t so relevant, says Armen Menechyan, a Los Angeles-based teacher specializing in yoga therapy and somatic practices and founder of Pรผr Joy.

โ€œThereโ€™s no right way that a posture needs to look,โ€ Menechyan says. Instead, somatic yoga encourages moving within a range thatโ€™s comfortable for your body, and approaching the movement with a sense of playfulness and exploration.

2. Youโ€™ll probably spend lots of time on the floor

The first thirty to forty minutes of Menechyanโ€™s classes are often spent on the floor, moving from a relaxed, lying down position. In the Hanna Somatic Yoga that Flynn teaches, students relax on the floor between postures, taking a minute to โ€œnotice the sensory feedback that the movement generated,โ€ she says. โ€œThereโ€™s information coming from the skin, muscles, joints, bones, and your peripheral nervous system up to your sensory cortex, and your motor cortex uses it to help you do whatever movement comes next.โ€

3. Itโ€™s not focused on stretching

For some people, yoga is basically synonymous with stretching. But in somatic yoga, โ€œwe donโ€™t stretch,โ€ Flynn says. In fact, instead of focusing on the lengthening side of a movement (for example, your back during cow pose), in somatic yoga, the focus is on the contracting side of the movement (so the abdominals in cow pose).

The idea is that โ€œby putting our attention on the contracting side of the movement, weโ€™re using our nervous system to inhibit the lengthening side from contracting, and it gets to lengthen without being stretched,โ€ Flynn says.

4. Much of the practice happens in your mind

Hanna Somatic Yoga teaches that students should visualize doing a posture before actually doing it. โ€œWhen you do a visualization, your premotor cortex sends whatโ€™s called a motor plan to your body, letting your muscles know what they’re going to need to do,โ€ Flynn says. And if thereโ€™s a posture that youโ€™re not able to do, or that just isnโ€™t in your practice that day? โ€œDo it in your imagination,โ€ she says.

โ€œSomatic yoga encourages moving within a range thatโ€™s comfortable for your body.โ€ โ€”Armen Menechyan, somatic yoga teacher

The benefits of somatic yoga that’ll convince you to give it a shot

1. Reengaging dormant muscles

โ€œMost of us have places where we carry sensory motor amnesia,โ€ Flynn says. โ€œYou lose the sense of what a muscle feels like or what it does.โ€ She says we might experience this as a range of motion that is limited and doesnโ€™t seem to improve no matter how much we stretch it. Somatic yoga helps to reengage and reset those muscles, she says.

2. Managing tightness

Flynn says somatic yoga can help teach your body to help release muscles that it is contracting habitually. โ€œYour nervous system is working 24/7 to maintain those contractions, so if you think about your brain as a computer, you have less bandwidth available,โ€ she says. โ€œSleep is affected, and if youโ€™re holding tight abdominal muscles, as many of us are, digestion and breathing are probably affected.โ€

3. Better mind-body connection

โ€œI think the biggest benefit that my head and my heart are aligned, and Iโ€™m not neglecting my body,โ€ Menechyan says. Flynn likens the idea of integrating your mind and body to having a sixth sense. โ€œYouโ€™re tuning in, youโ€™re developing that sixth sense, which gives you a sense of how you are in any moment,โ€ she says. โ€œWhen you have the ability to internally monitor, you have the ability to self-regulate and self-heal.โ€

4. Shifting out of the sympathetic nervous system

Flynn says somatic yoga can help practitioners shift from the sympathetic nervous system, where your body is activated and stressed, to the parasympathetic nervous system, where your body is relaxed and conserving energy. โ€œYouโ€™re not going to remain there all the timeโ€”life means thereโ€™s moments when you need to become activated,โ€ she says. โ€œBut you wonโ€™t stay activatedโ€”youโ€™ll reset.โ€

5. Mental and physical relief

โ€œIf Iโ€™ve had a stressful day, the class will bring me back home to my body,โ€ Menechyan says. โ€œIf thereโ€™s any sort of symptoms of anxiety or depression, it’ll give me space around that to see more clearly. When it comes to chronic pain and fat

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