Styles & Classes
Restorative Yoga — The Case for Doing Less
Bolsters, blankets, and long supported holds. The pose does almost nothing; that is the point.
In restorative yoga the props do the work. You are propped into a comfortable shape and held there for minutes at a time, until the nervous system finally accepts that nothing is required of it and lets go.
How to practise it
- Gather props first: two bolsters or firm cushions, a folded blanket, and a strap or belt.
- Choose three or four shapes and stay in each for three to eight minutes.
- Support the body so fully that no muscle has to hold the pose — that is the test.
- Keep the room warm; a cooling body cannot fully relax.
- Let the exhale lengthen on its own. Do not force it; just make room for it.

Common mistakes
- Under-propping, so the body still braces and never fully softens.
- Coming out of a pose the moment it gets boring. The settling happens after the boredom.
- Treating it as stretching. Restorative is about the nervous system, not the hamstrings.
Rest is not the reward for the practice; sometimes it is the practice.
In the studio, and at home
This is the practice for a hard week, the week of a cold coming on, or the evening after a long flight. Nothing here is in a hurry, least of all you.
Rest is not the reward for the practice; sometimes it is the practice. Restorative yoga is permission, held for a few minutes at a time.
Questions we hear
It is not cardio, no. But down-regulating a stressed nervous system is real, measurable work — you simply do it by resting well rather than moving hard.
Two bolsters or firm cushions and a couple of blankets cover almost everything. You can improvise the rest from what a home already has.