The Many Paths of Yoga Nidra

Yoga Nidra Training

People often inquire about my Yoga Nidra Teacher Training and wonder why I don’t teach in this way or that way and I remind them that just like there are many ways to teach asana, there are many ways to teach Yoga Nidra. Instead of being dogmatic about one particular style, I train teachers to understand the essentials of the practice, what it’s pointing to so that they can eventually teach powerfully from their own assimilated experience and not as a rote version of their teachers.

It reminds me of the beginning of my yoga journey, as I was just discovering this incredible practice. I used to be fundamentalist about the way I thought that yoga “aught” to be taught. If I went to a yoga class and it didn’t have certain poses or wasn’t conducted in a certain way, I would leave complaining, “That wasn’t yoga!” Have you ever done this? It’s natural. I think that this mind set is common when we are learning a new discipline—we want to try to understand it so we narrow its definition to distinguish it from other practices. But very often, with any subject, once you try to analyze it in depth, the definition of it tends to open up to be exponentially more expansive than you can imagine. One of my earliest yoga teachers said, “If you understand one thing all the way down to its root, you will understand everything.” What he meant was that everything is pointing to the same thing, Source. This conversation inspired me to write an article posted in Conscious Life News.

Just like in yoga asana schools, in Yoga Nidra there are many different approaches to practice setting the same condition for the same end. I approach my trainings with this essential principle: if you understand the big picture of Yoga Nidra—what it is, how it facilitates your own relationship to understanding Self, know some of its history, and the essential elements of why it works—then I believe you will use the principles, tools, and tactics that suit your teaching style the best to be the most effective for the individual needs of your students. That way, you will powerfully impact your students through the power of your own experience and voice and not a rote version of your teacher. As I'm sure you agree, there's no one "right" way to teach Yoga Nidra. That's why I think it's important to understand Yoga Nidra at its root to understand how each principle (like the using the koshas, for example) may effectively lead students to experience the benefits of Yoga Nidra.

What is Yoga Nidra?

I define Yoga Nidra like this: Yoga Nidra is the yoga of sleep: its goal is samadhi, experiencing yourself as Oneness and achieves this through a method of entering the Nidra mind state, the hypnagogic, in-between state, of waking and dreaming, through systematized relaxation and layered Awareness. Yoga Nidra is the meditative process of learning to identify yourself as Awareness itself. By layering your Awareness systematically through the maya koshas, or layers of illusion— what we typically identify as “us” such as body, emotions etc.— we come to experience our infinite Self, our True Self, that of Awareness itself.

Online Yoga Nidra Teacher Training

There are many ways that a teacher could facilitate Awareness through Yoga Nidra. My Yoga Nidra training approach is to leverage the koshas heavily as perhaps the most effective way to disidentify as ego and identify as Awareness itself. I teach myriad approaches to bring awareness to each kosha. For example, in the Anamaya kosha, one could use the 61-points of awareness in the body, or explore Awareness through the body by following the pattern of the homunculus, the parts of the body which have a ready access to the brain or in other words which those spots which are the most accessible for Awareness. After all, the Anamaya kosha is but one of the filters through which to practice experiencing yourself as Awareness. Also, I understand that the body is a powerful conduit for Awareness and can help to anchor other things like thoughts or emotions in a way that makes the information you may be aware of more salient and available. For example, one might inquire into an emotion and become curious to it in Awareness by also exploring which part of the body seems to resonate with that emotion.

As for the application of the body scan, in the beach paradise meditation I used a basic body scan to help relax the body while bringing awareness to the Anamaya Kosha. As you pointed out, this is a meditation that uses the Anamaya kosha and Vijnanamaya kosha (both implicitly rather than explicitly) to gain a great sense of relaxed alertness. It's not a typical Yoga Nidra practice that I might teach in a class.

Yoga Nidra in Your Voice

I am confident that even if you don't think your voice is all that awesome, YOU have a special knowledge and approach to Yoga Nidra that people need to hear. There's only ONE of you and the world needs your approach to this vital practice. You will impact students in a very unique way that only you can, with whatever voice the Universe has given you. I'm sure your voice is awesome but in my training, I do go into depth how to use your voice as a tool to facilitate Awareness, you know avoiding serial gerunds, upturns, and sounding like the hold music at the bank 🙂. Yes, you can certainly work on your voice in my training there's a module that assigns you some voice work to practice. Also, one tip to help you cultivate your voice, starting with simply recording yourself teach (even reading a script) and listen to the tone of your voice.

Below is a Yoga Nidra which I think you might enjoy. While not all Yoga Nidra practices need to explore each kosha to facilitate Awareness, this practice is a little more indicative of my regular way of teaching, one that employs using all the kosha. I hope you enjoy it. You can listen directly or download it to your computer or smart device.

Yoga Nidra: The 5 Bodies
Copyright © Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved

Brand New Yoga Nidra Trainings!

LISTEN TO THIS POST
Copyright © Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved

I’ve got some really exciting news!

Short back story …

So, a long time ago, I was that kind of depressed person who was afraid of emotions so I just turned them off. Consequently, for the space of about a decade, I didn’t feel happiness, sadness, grief, or loneliness. I didn’t feel anything. I remember during that time thinking that I couldn’t remember what it felt like to have fun.  

After about 10 years of feeling like this, I discovered Yoga Nidra, or the yoga of sleep. This is the guided meditation where you lie down, get very relaxed, and follow the facilitator’s words as you become increasingly more aware of the different layers of your being. 

During one of my very first Yoga Nidra sessions, I had a life-changing experience. I became very, very relaxed and began to experience myself as pure Awareness. I know, what does that even mean? For me, it felt myself flying through the cosmos, outside of time and space. I felt as if the Universe and I were one and the same. I felt that though this thing called “Scott” had a finite body, emotions, and thoughts, and that my true identity was something so much more immense, complete, and beautiful than any of those other parts of my being. 

This one Yoga Nidra experience dropped some massive and cosmic clarity into my lap. It helped me to understand my human existence with all of its vicissitudes is nothing to avoid, but rather to live out to the fullest. And just like that, I felt safe to feel emotions again. It was like a miracle healing because that night I went home and the floodgates of emotions opened. Oh, the boxes of Kleenex that absorbed more than 10 years of emotions! From that moment forward, I’ve bravely met every emotion that has come my way. I love and have fun again! 

Yoga Nidra does so much more than help you heal from emotional repression. The most common benefits of Yoga Nidra include less stress, better sleep, decreased anxiety and depression, increased self-confidence, lowered blood pressure, increased production, creativity, and learning. Mostly what Yoga Nidra does is help you wake up to your innate power and perfection and it does it in the most relaxing way imaginable. It’s seriously like napping your way to enlightenment. 

In addition to my own transformation, I’ve seen countless other people who have benefitted in large and small ways through this accessible and non-dogmatic practice of deep and relaxing mindfulness. Therefore, I decided to devote much of my life to this fascinating and transformative practice. So, for the previous dozen or so years, I’ve been practicing, studying, and teaching Yoga Nidra. I’ve been featured in podcasts about Yoga Nidra, written a blog largely devoted to the subject, written countless articles, and even written a book about Yoga Nidra. I host regular Yoga Nidra classes, workshops, courses, and I’ve traveled all over the world offering Yoga Nidra trainings.

While teaching a live Yoga Nidra training, it dawned on me how much the world needs more Yoga Nidra and to do that how much it needs more qualified Yoga Nidra teachers. So I began to make the recordings of my trainings available as a digital download on my website. I was proud of this training product but it was very DIY. Before long, though, people around the world were learning my method of Yoga Nidra. 

During the few years since my training went global, something thrilling started happening. Graduates of my program began sending me their original Yoga Nidra recordings in their native languages of Spanish, French, German, Chinese, or Thai. I began to see that this Yoga Nidra training is bigger than me. Truly, my training was spreading across the globe and deserved an upgrade. So, I began to revise. 

After two years of growing, learning, and updating my curriculum, I still felt miles away from building the new program. Then, in July of 2020 I caught wind of a Product Creation Boot Camp hosted by Eric Edmeads and Speaker Nation. If you don’t know him, Eric Edmeads is an absolute force of nature. He is one of the world’s most successful speakers, entrepreneurs, business and health coaches and an absolutely phenomenal online product creator. He created perhaps the world’s most successful health program called Wildfit. He works in the company of powerhouses like Richard Branson of Virgin Records and Virgin Airlines, and Vishen Lakhiani of Mindvalley, and Tony Robbins of, well, Tony Robbins. I absolutely love Eric’s stuff and I really trust him as a guide and so when I heard about this Product Creation Boot Camp, I felt it was exactly what I needed to give my current online Yoga Nidra training the wings that it deserved. 

A few weeks later, I holed up solo in a friend of a friend’s house in Moab, Utah for a week with little or no distractions so I could engage with this roughly 60-hour live, intensive course production training. I’m glad I did because it gave me the time and space to learn volumes, not only about how to offer my new online Yoga Nidra training in a way that it deserved, but I also had many eureka moments about the practice itself, not to mention great illumination about myself. 

But we all know that learning and doing are very different things. One of the things that makes Eric Edmeads such a remarkable facilitator of online courses is his ability to inspire people to follow through and finish the damn thing! This Product Creation Boot Camp course was no different. He promised that for anyone who could finish their project by October 15th, they would be entered into a contest to win 1 of three spots on an Instagram Live event to help bring a broader audience to their project. 

I wanted one of those spots badly, so I immediately came home from Moab and got to work. I spent weeks completing and fine-tuning my 120-page outline and working on the course details. I soon realized that it was waaaaaay more work than I had anticipated. 

About 10 days before the October 15th deadline, my wife and I were sitting outside early one morning during our daily coffee date when my wife asked, “Are you going to make your deadline?” With a pang of disappointment I told her that I thought it would be too difficult to complete in time: I had to film, edit, and compress about 35 hours of lectures, record 25 Yoga Nidra recordings, create multiple PDFs—oh and build a site and upload all of my content on Teachable, a site for online courses which I had never used before. So, no. This project was too big. I could finish in a month or two maybe, just not in time for the deadline. 

She looked at me in the eyes and in not so many words essentially told me to get my ass inside and get to work. So I did. 

Something you need to know about me is that I’m stupidly optimistic. Despite my unrealistic hope for the impossible, completing this project seemed beyond even my warped conception of possible. Regardless, for the next 10 days I put my head down and cranked out 12 to 18-hour days working on this project. During the process, I’d get a momentary glimpse of hope, that maybe, just MAYBE, I might be able to finish. Then, that hope would fade as new issues or problems arose. I’d continue to work through those issues and hope would return, then fade, and return … all the way to the date of the deadline. I was a wreck!

To qualify for the chance to have an IG Live spot with Eric I needed to submit my completed project by 10pm on October 14th. At EXACTLY 10pm on the 14th, I pushed send and submitted my project. Done. It was a fucking miracle, the product of raw, stubborn, and dumb persistence. Thanks to my wife who could see something inside of me that I couldn’t see myself. 

I took a day or so to rest and be a dad again. 

Then, a few days later, to my complete astonishment and surprise I was informed that I was one of the three chosen to be featured in Eric’s Instagram Live feed!!! I did the happy dance until my legs were exhausted. I’m still doing the happy dance. Mostly, I am thrilled to have been pushed by something to finish what I feel is a worthy and much-needed project, one that ended up being much bigger than I had expected but which I feel is to the scope that it deserves. 

So, what’s in this new course? 

There’s something for everyone, regardless if you want to teach Yoga Nidra. One of the things that Eric taught me to offer in all courses was to answer the questions, “what,” “why,” and “what if,” as well as “how.” I believe that to be a good teacher of any subject, you need to deliver the message from your own assimilated experience and not as a rote version of your teacher. I believe that you gotta learn for yourself the “what” and “why” before you learn the “how.” That way, you’ll eventually find your own way to do it and when you do you’ll be more impactful. 

By addressing the “what” and “why” of Yoga Nidra separate from the “how” to teach it, I realized that I actually have not one but TWO courses— one for those who are interested in receiving the vast array of benefits from the practice including healing from stress, sleeplessness, and self-limiting beliefs as well as learning about Yoga Nidra’s power to help you to source the power that is already inside of you to live an extraordinary life, and another vast course for those who wish to take the information of the first course and leverage it to learn how to expertly share it with the world. 

The first course is called Waking Up with the Yoga of Sleep. This go-at-your-own-pace course is about waking up to who you really are. It uses Yoga Nidra to help you remember and experience your birthright of infinite power. Waking Up with the Yoga of Sleep helps you to deeply relax while you gain a universal perspective about your life to experience it as miraculous, extraordinary, and rich. In this course, you will learn about waking up from the beautiful and necessary illusions of body, emotions, thoughts, beliefs, and circumstantial happiness. It guides you to wake up to an eternal joy that is fundamental to your being and helps you arrive at a cosmic perspective of life’s problems. This course helps you to truly experience yourself as Oneness. In addition, you’ll also be receptive to the vast other possible benefits of the practice including but not limited to less stress, better sleep, decreased anxiety and depression, increased self-confidence, lowered blood pressure, increased production, creativity, and learning. This course is about creating some YOU time for yourself. It is relaxing, illuminating, empowering, and fun.

Contained in Waking Up with the Yoga of Sleep is a curriculum of relaxing Yoga Nidra practices, energizing breathing practices, and focusing mindfulness practices before and after fun and engaging teaching lectures. You get a copious library of resources to support your journey including: Yoga Nidra recordings, breathing practices, mindfulness practices, gentle yoga videos, links, PDFs, podcasts, blog posts, and more. 

The second course expands greatly on the first and is called Facilitating Transformation with the Yoga of Sleep. This follows up the foundational “what” and “why” of the first course with essential information with the “how” of to teach it. This course uses Yoga Nidra, pranayama and mindfulness practices, PDFs and detailed lectures to lead you step-by-step toward not only how to create your own effective Yoga Nidra classes and scripts, but how to so with your OWN voice to truly facilitate Yoga Nidra as an expert in only the way that YOU can. 

In this course, I share the essential tools, tactics, and roadmaps to guide you to being a truly effective teacher, not as a rote version of me but with your own voice. In this course, I teach:

  • The role of the teacher and how to create an effective teaching container.

  • The Yoga Nidra Roadmap: how to create an engaging, relaxing experience that meets the specific needs of your students. 

  • 15 essential tools and tactics to teach effective Yoga Nidra classes and write Yoga Nidra scripts.

  • How to connect the dots to build a Yoga Nidra class or write scripts using your own voice.

  • Onboard and leading 1:1 led and dyad practices and even teach you how to self-practice. 

  • The science and magic behind how Yoga Nidra facilitates healing so you can benefit the needs of yourself and your students.

But it doesn’t stop there… Most yoga and Yoga Nidra courses only instruct you how to teach a class. Not this one. As a career yoga and Yoga Nidra instructor with almost 20 years of experience, a former yoga studio owner, and the owner of a registered Yoga School that has taught graduated hundreds of yoga and Yoga Nidra students, I recognize the unfair gap between someone who is new or newer to the industry and someone who has 2 decades of experience. I want to share what’s taken me thousands of dollars of personal and business coaching and the blood, sweat, and tears of almost 2 decades of trial and error in this industry to help you catch your stride in a fraction of the time it took me. This course gives you the actionable, practical, and real-life information about how to really go out and share Yoga Nidra with the world like a boss. 

This is why after learning how to teach Yoga Nidra effectively, I also offer and several additional modules about how to: 

  • Generate interest for Yoga Nidra in the yoga studio, community, and online. 

  • Format and price classes, workshops, courses.

  • Teach online with easy, effective and inexpensive tech, Zoom classes and workshops, audio recordings, etc. 

  • Conduct private 1:1 and group sessions and courses.

  • Organize and execute fun and engaging yoga retreats. Give yourself a paid vacation and make a huge impact for your students

  • Make Yoga Nidra accessible to your students with non-racist non-sexist language, in teaching and marketing

  • Support your students with added value of recordings, follow up, and integration tips. 

I even provide a video series with 5 career-building tools that you can start using today to build your own “Mechanism of Influence” that allows you to make a global impact while also making a great living. These are tips that I usually reserve for my 1:1 mentor students which have helped make my career. In truth, the tuition for the course is worth just this module alone!

In both courses, I feature something really remarkable. While taking Eric Edmead’s course, I realized something extraordinary about the way that I teach Yoga Nidra. It was so intuitive and behind-the-scenes to my own experience that I didn’t even recognize that it was happening. Through a mental exercise, I realized that I get the same calming and cosmically-illuminating  experience whether I’m practicing, writing about, or teaching Yoga Nidra. I realize that after putting in the more than 10k hours to become an expert in this subject, I have developed a unique ability to teach Yoga Nidra while in the very state I’m facilitating for my students. I’ve had some incredibly beautiful and illuminating revelations while teaching. This is huge! 

So, in both of these courses, I teach you how to use the Yoga Nidra state of mind to facilitate your learning of the subject. In the teachers course, I even teach you how to get yourself into state while teaching Yoga Nidra so that you can lead the experience from the place you’re inviting your students to experience. In such a state, you cannot teach a bad class. This technique is revolutionary and I can’t wait to share it with you!

My stuff is going live and I can’t wait for you to check it out. Regardless if you are interested in these courses, I’d be honored if you would please tune in to watch my interview with Eric Edmeads on Thursday, November 12th at 8:30 am MST (10:30 am EST). 

I hope you’ll also check out my two courses which I am so so so so excited about. I’m confident that you will love them while also gaining much needed relaxation and learning volumes about yourself and the Universe in the process. 











Yoga Nidra: What and Why, Training and Scripts

What Is Yoga Nidra and Why Practice It?

Yoga Nidra is the yoga of sleep. It’s goal is samadhi, experiencing yourself as Oneness and achieves this through a method of entering the Nidra mind state, the in-between state of waking and dreaming, through systematized relaxation and layered Awareness. I offer online Yoga Nidra trainings to help people learn to write their own Yoga Nidra Scripts and make a powerful impact in the world through this transformational practice.

What Is The Goal of Yoga Nidra?

Yoga Nidra is the meditative process of learning to identify yourself as Awareness itself. By layering your Awareness systematically through the maya koshas, or layers of illusion— what we typically identify as “us” such as body, emotions etc.— we come to experience our infinite Self, our True Self, that of Awareness itself.

Source is Awareness— the fundamental Grand Singularity of the Universe. It’s what’s all around us, it’s in everything, it’s our origin. It’s where we came from before we were born and where we go after we die. Yoga Nidra is a relaxing method of exploring all the things we might be aware of, to feel them pointing us to experience our innate purity and consciousness, to Awareness itself.

Since Source, Awareness itself, is omnipotent (can do anything), omnipresent (all present), and omniscient (all knowing), with practices such as Yoga Nidra, when you align with your True Self, that of Awareness itself, you experience your birthright of your own fundamental and innate wholeness, the wholeness of Source. This wholeness is not dependent on time, events, circumstances, or conditions. It just is. Therefore, the byproduct of experiencing your fundamental wholeness through Awareness practices like Yoga Nidra, is healing in body, mind, and spirit After all, wholeness is synonymous with healed. Mostly importantly, what heals inside of us is the fundamental human malady—one which transcends all civilizations, time, and technology— which is the false notion of being separate from Source.

Gayatri Mantra suggests that if we were to understand that everything comes from Source, we’d understand that we are no different than the very thing we seek.

Up-leveling Your Consciousness: Waking Up with The Yoga of Sleep

Yoga Nidra is a process of leveraging your mind state and to evolve your stages of consciousness to achieve this understanding as mentioned in the Gayatri Mantra. Its systematic relaxation and method of layered Awareness helps to down-regulate your nervous system providing deep rest while simultaneously accessing certain brainwave states which can put practitioners into a flow state. Mostly, Yoga Nidra puts people into the Nidra state (low alpha, high theta) which acts like a secret doorway to experience the part of you that exists beyond your rational, linear thinking. It’s the doorway into your infinite Self.

Though Nidra means sleep, it’s more about learning to wake up. Yoga Nidra helps us wake up from the illusions of our false identities, and helps us wake up to the truth, that we are Source itself that what we are fundamentally is Awareness.

Unlike other forms of meditation, Yoga Nidra encourages relaxation—indeed it’s the driver for this expansive state of consciousness. Unlike other forms of meditation, practitioners are not trying to focus the mind at the exclusion of other stimuli. Instead, in Yoga Nidra one learns to welcome each object that arises into one’s field of Awareness, recognize it for what it is, and merely be the witness of it. These objects could arise either by the facilitator’s suggestion or may occur spontaneously. Objects can be internal or external, physical, mental, or emotional, and each exists as another yet beautiful pointer, constantly pointing to this moment, enticing Awareness to know itself through all that it can be aware of.

Ultimately, we have the pleasure and responsibility to apply the Awareness we reveal during practices like Yoga Nidra into the day-to-day reality of our human lives. With this greater Awareness it feels as if the colors have been turned up in our life. With this greater Awareness we become more present to the miraculousness of even the mundane. With this greater Awareness, we see everyone and everything around us as a constant reminder to wake up to the truth: that we exist inside the eternal pocket of perfection.

One of the great things about Yoga Nidra is that you gain the benefits of this profound and transformation practice regardless of whether or not you’re seeking to “wake up.” Yoga Nidra is such a powerful practice because its benefits are so readily available, even if you’ve never experienced meditation, mindfulness, or yoga. All one has to do is lie down, close their eyes, relax, and practice witnessing whatever arises into one’s field of attention. You don’t even need to call it yoga or Nidra or anything. Call it guided napping!

Benefits of Yoga Nidra

Both empirical studies as well as countless anecdotal stories point to the benefits of Yoga Nidra. The benefits of regularly experiencing Yoga Nidra and the systematized and prolonged state of Awareness, include but are not limited to:

  • Better sleep

  • Concentrated rest: for all of us but especially the chronically under-rested

  • Managing emotions—stress, depression/anxiety

  • Eliminating compulsions & addictions

  • Healing self-limiting beliefs

  • Reprogramming the unconscious mind

  • Lowering blood pressure

  • Calming the mind

  • Building confidence

  • Improving your mood

  • Healing trauma

  • Managing grief

  • Clarity and perspective over problems

  • Massively increased learning, creativity, and productivity

  • Spiritual advancement

  • Healing physical, energetic, emotional, and spiritual maladies

As facilitators of Yoga Nidra, we have a great opportunity by sharing this practice: we get the chance to wake up to our own innate perfection while helping others do likewise. Through many years of practice and teaching, I realize that facilitating the practice is itself a deep practice of Awareness, replete with all the same benefits. Again, regardless if enlightenment is on your radar or not, the world desperately needs the aforementioned benefits of the practice…and whether practitioners are looking for it or not, they’ll get the enlightenment part too.

While practicing YN is easy, learning to teach it effectively and skillfully is difficult. I’ve dedicated the last 12 years of my life to exploring this fascinating and crucial mode of self-discovery. I’ve written and published a book, I offer regular trainings, classes, and workshops around the world as well as online, I write about Yoga Nidra in online journals, magazines, and my blog. I practice Yoga Nidra regularly and I’m thinking about Yoga Nidra ALL. THE. TIME.

Yoga Nidra has taught me more about myself and the Universe than any other practice and I’m thrilled for the opportunity to sharing some of my experience and knowledge with you.

Yoga Nidra Training: Learn to Make Your Own Yoga Nidra Scripts

Over the years I’ve learned a few things about Yoga Nidra and today, I’d like to explore some of the key elements to this fascinating practice to help give you some of the tools to create your own transformational practices in the form of Yoga Nidra scripts, both for yourself and others.

My intention for doing Yoga Nidra trainings to help you find YOUR voice as you facilitate powerful transformation for yourself and the world through Yoga Nidra classes and scripts.

Reading someone else's script can be good, sometimes even great. I’ve created a book of Yoga Nidra scripts. But your true power lies within your ability to facilitate this practice with your own voice. I want to teach you some of the tools and tips to access your true power of transformation through the fascinating practice of writing Yoga Nidra scripts.

I can tell you from experience that by crafting well thought out scripts, you’ll find yourself also transforming in the process.


Yoga Nidra for Stress

Want to find an easy, effective, and enduring solution to stress? Perhaps you’re even interested in helping others reduce the stress in their lives? Well, tonight, I’m offering a live online Yoga Nidra class devoted to stress and this weekend, I’m hosting a workshop on how to write your own Yoga Nidra scripts to help people with stress, sleeplessness, grief, or any other topic.

Stress. We all have it. What to do about it … that doesn’t involve avoidance techniques such as binge watching Netflix, drinking, and eating Ben and Jerry’s by the truckload?

Yoga Nidra, the yoga of sleep, is a great alternative to mind-numbing dumbness and, potentially, Type 2 diabetes. Yoga Nidra is a form of guided meditation that uses layered Awareness and systematic relaxation to put you into a mind state called Nidra, the space between waking and dreaming consciousness.

Yoga Nidra for Stress

What world-renowned psychologists like Joseph Wolpe discovered is that you cannot be stressed and relaxed at the same time. Furthermore, getting comfortable with the ability to regularly enter the Nidra state, helps to strengthen your ability to practice merely witnessing what would otherwise be a stressor. Over time, such practices help you become increasingly less triggered by the same stimulus that would otherwise send you straight for Netflix and diabetes.

It’s easy to do. All you have to do is show up, close your eyes, and I’ll take it from there. Practicing it doesn’t require any previous experience. In truth, you don’t even need to stay awake for it to be effective. Besides, I always make a recording so you can practice at home and perhaps catch anything you missed on your subsequent meditations.

It’s nice to have a resource like Yoga Nidra recordings on your phone that you can tune into whenever you wish.

Please join me tonight for Yoga Nidra for Stress Zoom 6–7:15 pm MDT. Even if the time doesn’t work for you to join live, you can still watch/listen to the recordings later.

Yoga Nidra Training

While practicing Yoga Nidra is super relaxing and easy, guiding others through this transformative practice can be difficult. That’s why I offer a Yoga Nidra online training, and am also offering a LIVE YOGA NIDRA SCRIPT WRITING WORKSHOP this Saturday, 9–11 am MDT on Zoom. Again, I’ll be recording it so you can watch it later if you can’t make it live. Learn to write your own scripts! Click here for details.

I hope to see you tonight and/or this weekend for some great Yoga Nidra instruction!

Yoga Nidra Script Writing Workshop

Santosha and Valuing Perplexity

Yoga Nidra Training

Everybody has problems. We all struggle with what we don’t know about our own complicated lives. Of course, we want solutions to our problems tout suite, and if we could gain those solutions as painlessly as possible, that would be great. Consider, though, that our problems actually help us to become the people we are meant to be. So, how do problems, the yogic concept of Santosha, Yoga Nidra and learning to sit in the darkness sometimes, help us to do this essential growth?

Problems Can Give A Push


Sometimes, it is only by questioning, wondering, or struggling, that we are driven to understand an otherwise hidden part of ourselves and our potential. Our questions and problems fuel us to open our hearts, to seek for inspiration, to perform the necessary work, and more profoundly, to abandon our will to the grander wisdom of the divine. The Divine knows how easy it is to be anesthetized by easy and numbed out by normal. Comfortable can sometimes get in the way of us becoming the greatest version of ourselves.


Light Creeping In


Like the late, great Leonard Cohen says in his song, "Anthem":

Ring the bells that still can ring;
Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack in everything;
That’s how the light gets in.
— Leonard Cohen

Even the rhyme is broken! He's pointing to the idea that it's through our brokenness, through our problems that we find the avenue toward the light.


Yoga Nidra and Observing Problems

When faced with problems, we must at once be willing to seek and do, and also we must sometimes learn to simply sit comfortably and be with what we don't know or with what doesn't feel comfortable-happily resolved with the phrase, "I don't know." And sometimes to get real answers we must be willing to sit in our own darkness for a while. One way to learn to do this is through Yoga Nidra, the yoga of sleep. Yoga Nidra is a practice of guided meditation that leads you through layered awareness and deep relaxation to practice learning to simply witness whatever is presented to your attention, be that emotions, problems, physical sensations or whatever. It helps you to practice experiencing yourself as Awareness itself, as Source, which has no needs, problems, or issues. Then, when this awareness is married back to you every-day life, the part of you that feels like it does have problems, you have such an incredible perspective over your life’s problems. Yoga Nidra is one of the ways that you can cultivate the power to be able to sit with your problems without allowing them to feel like they control your life.


This human tendency for control occurs regularly in our yoga practice as many of us strive to either know everything there is to know about yoga or try to perfect our poses; we usually eagerly fill in whatever blanks present themselves in our life's scripts.


Instead, let us practice the yoga principle of Santosha, or contentment, by learning to sit with and even value perplexity, knowing that it's molding us into our highest being.



Sitting in the Dark

The following poem by David Whyte seems to speak directly to learning from the darkness, instead of running from it.

Sweet Darkness

When your eyes are tired

the world is tired also.

When your vision has gone

no part of the world can find you.

Time to go into the dark

where the night has eyes

to recognize its own.

There you can be sure

you are not beyond love.

The dark will be your womb

tonight.

The night will give you a horizon

further than you can see.

You must learn one thing:

the world was made to be free in.

Give up all the other worlds

except the one to which you belong.

Sometimes it takes darkness and the sweet

confinement of your aloneness

to learn

anything or anyone

that does not bring you alive

is too small for you.

~ David Whyte ~







Yoga: Playing With The Metaphor

Yoga Nidra

Since my first yoga class ever, I’ve been asking the question, “So what. What is yoga, how does it help me discover who I am? Why is it beneficial, and what does it have to do with a regular guy?” I asked myself, "Is this just another heath program? Is it meditation in motion? Is it maybe a physical rite on the way to spiritual end?” These are the questions I’m still asking and what I try to answer in my Yoga Nidra Trainings.

And 20 years later, I realize that it’s all of these and much more. I suppose that all these years later, I'm still asking that same question, “What is this?” Over the years, when I think that I’ve maybe got a handle on what yoga is, when I’ve think I’ve figured it out, I experience or discover something new about yoga and I have to expand my definition to include something bigger.

Yoga Nidra is yoga. It feels like a relaxing guided meditation but it’s yoga. How come it’s considered yoga? Well, I think according to the definition of yoga it is a practice that helps to move us toward yoga’s end: to connect body, mind, and spirit and as we “cease the fluctuations of the mind,” definition as per the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. Instead of moving the bod to be aware of the bod, we are simply aware of it as sensation. No movement necessary.

I believe that everybody must have their own definition of yoga. My current working definition (subject to change):

Yoga is the processes of understanding who I am through the method of listening.

That’s it. It’s pretty stripped down. You may notice that I didn't even say anything about asana. Of course, one of the ways I “listen” is by feeling and becoming aware of my body.

There are many ways to understanding what and who I am. I think understanding myself begins with understanding the grossest levels of awareness. The Yoga Sutras suggest how I treat other people and the ways I choose to organize my life is perhaps the first way of understanding myself. Then, I get to apply that same sort of attention and organization to something practical and close to home: my own physical body. If I'm paying close attention to my body in my poses and how I take care of myself, it might help me become more sensitive to more subtle parts of myself like my energy body. I will then discover how my body and energy dance together.

By the way, I'm convinced that the body isn't merely something to transcend on our way to higher understanding. The body is one of the most practical ways of feeling and experiencing my own divinity. After all, if you've ever seen someone who is extremely physically adept, like Michal Jordan or Mikhail Baryshnikov, it looks like you're witnessing God. And indeed to some degree you are. You're witnessing someone so developed in that line of understanding that they are reaching a sublime state of being.

Our physical body gives us such immediate and practical information about our being. And, because this is the vehicle, the container, of heart and mind, it makes sense to not only learn from it, but to also keep it healthy so that it can take us where we want to go. Besides, it's fun. It feels good. What could heaven possibly be but some variation of those two things. Even when I experience love, I can only do that through the nuts and bolts of this body. When my heart feels like it's going to grow bigger than my chest and burst out of it, or like it's being stepped on and smooshed black, it's still within the container of my body that I experience and understand that.

Yoga Nidra Training

In a Yoga Nidra practice, one way I use my body to cultivate greater Awareness and come to “cease the fluctuations” of my mind, is to do a Sanctuary Practice. The Sanctuary Practice uses visualization and an incitement of one’s senses to evoke the feelings one has in their most favorite place. This use of one’s senses to evoke one’s personal inner-sanctuary acts like a metaphor to help someone experience the way they most naturally feel as an expression of the Oneness. Whether there in real-life or visualizing the sanctuary, each acts as a metaphor for how one’s most natural comportment.

Similarly, the body acts as a metaphor for us to help understand that eternal part of us that cannot be defined by something so limited and finite. Nonetheless, it’s a great tool to bring context to something that is otherwise perhaps unknowable.

As I think about this question of ‘what is yoga and how does it help me understand who I am’ when I’m doing yoga and Yoga Nidra. Please enjoy my free Sanctuary Practice which you can download/listen to below.

Someone who understood this beautifully is Mary Oliver in her poem about this discovery of who we are through listening and how the body plays a vital role in that discovery. I'm convinced that Mary Oliver is a yogi but who works with a pen rather than a mat. Check it out.

POEM (The Spirit Likes To Dress Up)

The spirit

likes to dress up like this:

ten fingers,

ten toes,


shoulders, and all the rest

at night

in the black branches,

in the morning


in the blue branches

of the world.

It could float, of course,

but would rather


plumb rough matter.

Airy and shapeless thing,

it needs

the metaphor of the body,


lime and appetite,

the oceanic fluids;

it needs the body’s world,

instinct


and imagination

and the dark hug of time,

sweetness

and tangibility,


to be understood,

to be more than pure light

that burns

where no one is –


so it enters us –

in the morning

shines from brute comfort

like a stitch of lightning;


and at night

lights up the deep and wondrous

drownings of the body

like a star.”

― Mary Oliver, Dream Work

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Sanctuary Practice
Copyright © 2017 Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved

Yoga Nidra Dyad

Yoga Nidra Dyad

Yoga Nidra Dyad

What’s a Yoga Nidra Dyad, why can’t you make a Yoga Nidra script for a dyad, and why are Yoga Nidra dyads so transformational?

Yoga Nidra: The Yoga of Sleep

Yoga Nidra is called the “yoga of sleep” but don’t let the name fool you, it’s actually a pathway to waking up. What you wake up from is the illusion that your life is ordinary, predictable, and broken. What you wake up to is the magnificence of your True Nature, that of Awareness itself. This “waking up” not only makes for transformational personal and spiritual growth, healing, and wholeness, but most satisfyingly helps you to live your current life, rich with joy, clarity, and presence.

Yoga Nidra is a pathway to inquire into and cultivate a tangible relationship with your most eternal and perfect Self, that of Awareness itself. To rediscover your essential Self, one must cultivate greater Awareness by first dis-identifying as all illusory parts of our being, our ego. The ego in this context is any finite, limited, or changeable part of being, e.g., body, energy, thoughts, etc. In other words, your ego is anything that’s not your eternal Self, the part that comes from Source. In Yoga Nidra, another name for the layers of your ego is the maya koshas, a Sanskrit word meaning “the sheaths of illusion.”

Maya Koshas: The Layers of Illusion

Yoga Nidra uses the maya koshas, the sheaths that obfuscate your True Nature of pure Awareness, as the essential tools to illuminate Awareness. This happens because through all the things you can be aware of, you illuminate Awareness itself. Yoga Nidra leads you to be aware of your body, your emotions, your thoughts, etc, the shows you that what those all have in common is that you’re aware of them. Essentially, instead of identifying as the costumes, the changeable and illusory elements like body emotions, thoughts, etc., Yoga Nidra helps you understand yourself as the thing that underneath the costume, Awareness. BUT, since the costumes are part of our existence, we get to put on the costumes again but with increased clarity, purpose, and perspective. Yoga Nidra is an incredible practice that helps you live more fully because you’re more sure of your True identity.

“Great, I’m Awareness. That that still doesn’t explain how one practices Yoga Nidra.”

Well, most often Yoga Nidra feels like a guided meditation where the practitioner invites you to relax and helps you do so by layering your Awareness. In other words, the facilitator invites you to be aware of your maya koshas which are (but not limited to) body, energy/emotions, thoughts, beliefs, and even bliss. Practitioners are invited to merely witness whatever arises in their field of attention (so long as it feels safe and doesn’t trigger trauma), whether by the facilitators suggestion or if it arises spontaneously.

You’ll often start a Yoga Nidra practice with an intention for practicing called a Sankalpa, establish an inner-sanctuary through a brief visualization, then the facilitator will invite you to be aware of your maya koshas by leading you through something like a body scan, then onto your prana layer, emotions, thoughts, etc. all the while practicing merely welcoming, recognizing, and witnessing whatever arises in your Awareness.

This gets a little meta but hang with me …

How Opposites Reveal the Oneness

Throughout the practice, a facilitator may invite the practitioner to be aware of opposites—feeling right hand then left hand, for example. At first, the facilitator invites the practitioner to merely witness the two objects as separate sensations. Then, the facilitator may have the practitioner experience them simultaneously. The part of you that can witness two seemingly opposite things is that which does not exist in the realm of opposites. The part that can feel both simultaneously is the part of your that is the Oneness, Source, Awareness itself. See where I’m going with this??? This action of holding opposites overrides the rational thinking mind, one of the most pernicious koshas—great for studying for the bar exam, terrible for experiencing the realm of Oneness.

The maya koshas such as the mind are illusions because they are changeable, here one moment gone the next. They exist in a realm of binaries, one of this or that, have or have not. What ancient wisdom teaches and what Yoga Nidra helps you to experience (not just theorize about) is that the part of you that never changes is Awareness. It’s also Source itself. So, Yoga Nidra helps practitioners identify as unchanging Awareness rather than the changeable koshas. Read more about how opposites reveal Oneness

Awareness is your True Nature, that which is aligned with and as Source. It’s your most natural way of being. It’s just that we naturally tend to identify as all the stuff that we can feel, touch, see, think, emote, etc. The problem is that all that stuff is changing all the time and can never be the eternal, most real part of our Being, the part that always is. But don’t despair because those parts exist as the best tools we have to illuminate what we truly are, Awareness itself.

“Ok, cool. I can experience myself as Awareness by layered awareness and by negating opposites. What is a dyad again?”

So, a Yoga Nidra dyad is essentially doing what Yoga Nidra is so good at doing, coming to know your True Self (Awareness) though all the objects you can be aware of, but instead of following a facilitator’s suggested layering of objects to be aware of, the practitioner instead indicates what they are aware of in the moment and the facilitator helps them to simply witness those things. In this way, instead of the facilitator leading the practice, I like to think that it’s the practitioner who is directing the show.

Why Dyads Are So Effective

The facilitator’s role is to inquire the practitioner what the practitioner is aware of, invite them to merely welcome, recognize, and witness whatever that is, and track the changeability of those objects. Perhaps the facilitator’s most important role is to keep reminding the practitioner that they are Awareness itself experiencing themselves in the form of whatever they are aware of.

This process of reflective awareness provides an incredible clarity and perspective about any objects which present themselves in a practitioners life, from emotions, events, physical or energetic or spiritual ailments. Essentially, when one knows themselves as Awareness itself—pure, whole, and complete—life’s problems seem to have a finite context. Great insight, healing, and transformation comes readily when someone is presented with their whole and complete Self. This process of clarity happens more readily because the facilitator can help the practitioner follow that which is most present in their field of Awareness, that which is actually calling the practitioner to wake up and pay attention.

Each object in your field of attention is actually inviting you to do one thing and that is to wake up and pay attention. Each object is arousing your capacity for Awareness. A dyad is so powerful because instead of inviting the practitioner to accept this or that into their field of awareness (as organized and deliberate as that method is to promote awareness), instead, the facilitator follows what is naturally and most poignantly asking the practitioner to wake up and pay attention to.

This is huge! It shows us that whatever we’ve been looking for in life is right around us at all times. It’s like having a massive wake-up moment, like a near-death experience or something, where you see the purpose of it all, then go back into your regular life and see all the same stuff but with new eyes. Certainly, not everyone comes out of every session having, “seen the light,” but it’s remarkable how many people experience incredible and lasting transformation from their very first session, either in a commonly led Yoga Nidra experience and especially in a Yoga Nidra dyad.

Why You Can’t Have a Yoga Nidra Script for a Dyad

You can’t make a script for a dyad because there’s no way you could predict what would arise in the practitioners awareness. It takes a broad perspective and understanding of Yoga Nidra as well an intuition and sensitivity to skillfully and compassionately lead a practitioner through a Yoga Nidra dyad.

Would you be interested in learning how to facilitate Yoga Nidra dyads? You can join me Saturday, September 26th from 9 am to 12 pm MDT for a training and practice of doing just this. The workshop will be recorded so you can watch it later in case you can’t make the live session.

You’ll learn:

  • Why dyads are so effective

  • How to practice them safely with your clients

  • The essential guide to dyads, The Yoga Nidra Dyad Roadmap

  • How to ascertain your student’s needs in the pre-screening

  • How to use the koshas as tools to affect transformation

  • The art of reflective Awareness

  • How to ground and navigate your student’s awareness

  • How to manage and facilitate emotions

  • How to help your students process and integrate the experience

  • Helpful professional, logistical, and tech tips.




This will be a virtual and recorded workshop via Zoom. You’ll have the opportunity to practice dyads with each other in breakout rooms. You’ll also have the opportunity to ask specific questions to your experience after your practice.

The world needs expert Yoga Nidra teachers. Become a masterful Yoga Nidra facilitator by learning Yoga Nidra dyads

Each person who registers will receive a recording of the workshop so even if you can’t make the time work for you, you may register and watch the training at your own convenience.

Counts as continuing education with Yoga Alliance!

Change is In The Air

Scott Moore Yoga

First day of fall. School has started (Zoom kindergarten is a blessing and a curse). Schedules are changing, becoming more busy, even despite the pandemic. The crescendo of political, social, and global noise is getting louder.

Leaves are changing.

Things are always changing. I don't know about you, but for me it's easy to get caught up in the momentum of this motion of change to the degree that it becomes impossible to avoid feeling constantly rushed, out of time, and strained. Ever find yourself asking, "When can a person take a breather?!"

I think once we realize that there is a possibility of stillness IN the change, we will find our mooring against the tides of change. We can skillfully navigate all the vicissitudes of life by creating a grounded seat from which all this change may happen around us without making us lose our center.

With a grounded relationship to change, you'll find yourselves not only able to navigate change but even thriving with change.

Here are a few ideas to help us stay grounded amidst change.

Simple Meditation Technique

Find a quiet place where you can possibly be undisturbed for a few moments (sometimes this is sitting in your car). Sit comfortably and set a timer for 10 minutes. Close your eyes and begin to count your exhales. If your mind wanders or you lose your count, start over with the counting. The objective is not to count to some outrageously high number, but rather to continue to come back to center when you leave. We all wander so there's no judgment when you do. Try doing this every day. You may want to extend the time to 15, 20, or 30 minutes.

Yoga Nidra Training

Get Outside

Make a point to go on a gentle walk and leave your phone behind. Find the joy in walking for the sake of walking. Inform yourself of the natural world and notice the trees, sky, flowers, etc. Wallace Stevens said, "Perhaps the truth depends upon a walk around the lake." When placing yourself in nature, you often remind yourself both of life's natural cycles as well as your own belonging to this beautiful and complex world.

Find an Online Yoga or Meditation Class

Find an online yoga class to class or roll out your mat and begin to move and breathe. I teach a few classes a week (including one today at 12 pm MDT) which you can join virtually and/or watch the recordings later. I also teach one class a week at Mosaic Yoga (Mon. 5:30 pm) where you can join live with a responsible socially-distanced protocol.

If you're practicing poses on your own, match your breath with the poses that your body seems to crave. If you’re practicing on your own, don't worry about practicing for a certain amount of time, just practice whatever feels the most natural. Allow your body the pleasure of gently warming up then release tensions with some long, slow, deep stretches. Give yourself several moments to rest in savasana and then go about your day.

With some help is keeping us grounded, we'll find ourselves ready to meet the changes that are unfolding.

Healing with Yoga Nidra

Yoga Nidra is like a guided meditation that leads people through deepening layers of Awareness through a very relaxing process of listening. Different from many other forms of meditation or mindfulness, Yoga Nidra does not insist a person focus on any one thing at the exclusion of others. Rather, the direction in the practice is to relax and simply welcome into your Awareness whatever arises, to acknowledge that object for what it is and without assessment, then to merely be the witness of it. Such a practice helps you to dis-identify from the things you might be aware of and find yourself aligning as Awareness itself. You become Awareness itself trying all the things you may be aware of like a costume. The effect of this expansive Awareness practice is not only very illuminating, it’s also incredibly relaxing. What’s even more interesting is that Yoga Nidra can be extremely therapeutic and has been known to facilitate broad-spectrum healing of body, mind, and spirit. 

Practitioners regularly assert that Yoga Nidra has helped them heal from myriad issues and maladies including, insomnia, anxiety, high blood pressure, grief, and even trauma. How does this practice which acts like a relaxing guided meditation help practitioners to arrive at greater wholeness in body, mind, and spirit? 

To discover the ways in which this fabulous and relaxing form of mindfulness heals, it’s important to understand the essential purpose of the practice. The purpose of Yoga Nidra is to dis-identify with what we typically and erroneously feel is us—our body, emotions, thoughts, etc.—and learn to align yourself with your True Nature which is Awareness itself. Truly, you are Awareness in the form of all the things you can be aware of, such as body, emotions, thoughts, etc. You are the beautiful marriage of infinite consciousness married to the finite form of your body and suchness of your life. Yoga Nidra is an easy, practical, and enjoyable way to develop a tangible relationship with that marriage of consciousness and form. 


Yoga Nidra leans on ancient wisdom (Tantra) which suggests that everything in the Universe, including and especially ourselves, comes from Source. Source is whole, full, complete, and rests in a state of boundless equanimity, a quality that feels like an eternal love—one big, fat YES! from the Universe. This ancient wisdom also suggests that our True Nature is synonymous with Awareness. If you are Awareness, the more you lean into your essential being by practicing prolonged states of attention and by welcoming, acknowledging, and merely witnessing whatever presents itself to your Awareness, you gain a cosmic perspective about the current circumstances in which you find yourself. This alone has the almost magical power to lift you out of the cyclical hamster wheel of emotional turmoil. Furthermore, it gives you the wherewithal to respond rather than react to your circumstances, grounded from a place of practiced presence, one of deep and loving compassion. Once you know who you are, you start to align your life in the direction that befits such a noble and divine being. 



Another way that Yoga Nidra has the power to heal is that once you align with your True Nature, that of Awareness itself, you lean into that part of you that is already whole, complete, and healed. You know how you start to act like the folks you hang around with? Well the more you are in the presence of wholeness, it’s incredible how you simply stop entertaining all those parts of you that don’t serve your highest being. With a regular exposure, to wholeness you start to align to your own most natural way of being, your Source Nature, and feel yourself healing in body, mind, and spirit.



Here’s the thing: yoga, meditation, and Yoga Nidra don’t give you anything you don’t already have. They simply take off some of the conditioning, the layers, or forgetfulness we have around our already perfect self. 

Yoga Nidra Script



Well, can Yoga Nidra cure acute, chronic, or even terminal diseases and conditions? I’ve heard my students tell me how Yoga Nidra has helped them cure everything including: sexual dysfunction, insomnia, heart disease, high blood pressure, depression and anxiety, substance abuse/dependency, stage fright, trauma, and serious emotional abuse. Moreover, what Yoga Nidra helps you to heal is the fundamental human malady which is feeling separate from Source. When you know that you are fundamentally whole, despite any finite condition you may have in body, mind, and spirit, you live your life richly and fully knowing that each thing that presents itself to you is an opportunity to lean into witnessing, into presence, into experiencing yourself as Awareness. So yes, Yoga Nidra can help you heal in the traditional way of healing and it can also help you experience a level of wholeness that extends beyond what any regular physician would deem as whole. 



And at the end of the day, one of the superpowers of Yoga Nidra is that it offers you concentrated rest. They say that 30 minutes of Yoga Nidra is the equivalent in rest as a solid 2-hour nap. The entire mode of Yoga Nidra is to use relaxation to enter into the “Nidra” state of mind, which is like a daydream state. This state acts as a special pocket of consciousness wherein you can gain incredible insight, rest, and healing. Rest is the first order of operations for any kind of healing in body, mind, and spirit. Just by the fact that Yoga Nidra is restful in nature, it helps facilitate healing. If you or someone you know is convalescing due to any circumstance, try doing some Yoga Nidra. At very least you will get a solid bout of conscious rest. I can assure you that you’ll feel better when you’re done. Doing this regularly will be like adding currency to your wellness bank account. 



Once, I was asked to give private yoga lessons to a man who was working with stage 4 colon cancer. On our first session together, I told him that while what we do may or may not help to cure his cancer, our goal was to become as healthy as possible given whatever circumstances and allow the process of healing to unfold as it does. We did very gentle poses, some breath work, and a LOT of Yoga Nidra. Together we had some transcendent experiences, some of the richest and most enlightening experiences of my life. I remember seeing my client-turned-life-long-friend emerge from some of these practices, wide-eyed, and crazy looking and almost shouting, “What was that! It was incredible!” My friend eventually succumbed to cancer but he soaked as much life and vitality as possible with the remaining years we had practicing yoga together. I believe that despite the fact that he eventually died, he experienced a level of wholeness that many people only dream about.


Experience this practice for yourself and enjoy the healing that comes through Yoga Nidra.

Yoga Nidra for Healing
Copyright © 2019 Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved
Yoga Nidra for Healing

Learning to Fail

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Some of the greatest lessons in my life have been due to my failures. You? What are some of your BEST failures, I’m talking business, school, relationships, the whole gamut? I guarantee they have also been some of your best teachers, even if we can’t see that . . . yet.

Photo by Alex Adams

Photo by Alex Adams

Freaked to Fail

In high school I remember being so incredibly afraid to one day open my own business because…. what if I FAILED! Of course I had an extremely limited idea of what success looked like and what it took to find success.

Well, fast forward a few decades and I’ve opened and failed businesses. I've learned not to be afraid of failure. Sure, it's hard and nobody want's to fail but I’ve picked myself up from some very hard places and moved on. It's was because of some of these failures in many aspects of life that I’ve learned what I need to do in order to enjoy some great success in so many avenues of life, including making a living doing what I absolutely LOVE which is teaching yoga and meditation. Making a living doing what I love= one big, fat success.

I think about all kinds of things I've failed at from relationships to jobs to ideas. Each one has taught me an invaluable lessons. I’ve since learned not to be afraid of failures. They are powerful lessons that have shaped me into who I am today.

One of My Favorite Failures

When I was 19 I needed to earn some money for college so I was determined to do whatever it took, no matter how unpleasant the job was. Well, I got a temp job working on a construction site. I was utterly horrible at construction but was too damn proud to quit. Eventually the foreman fired me for my ineptitude. At the time I was incensed but I later realized how much of a favor he did for me. I wasn't serving ANYONE at that job, least of all myself. He freed me to go and look for my next job, one that I did so well that in a matter of months, the owner of the small company actually asked me if I wanted to become partners.

My Yoga Nidra Teacher Teaching Taught Me to Fail

I used to own a few yoga studios. They both failed. One of the highlights of owning these studios was when I was able to proudly host one of my greatest Yoga Nidra teachers, Dr. Richard Miller, for a weekend of workshops. Ironically, despite the great success of the workshops, he was the last big event we hosted before we had to announce that we were closing our doors. Concluding the weekend of workshops was an intimate dinner with a few teachers and Richard Miller. I came a few minutes late because I had to have a meeting with my entire staff letting them know that we were going to be closing our doors. When I told this unfortunate truth to Richard Miller, he leaned in close to me and without hesitation said, “congratulations!”

At the time I was taken aback, but with reflection the lessons I’ve learned from that experience are like gold in my hand. Not being weighed down by trying to make a brick-and-mortar business stay afloat has freed me up to concentrate on projects like my Online Yoga Nidra Teacher Training, Yoga Teacher Mentor Program, and projects like my Yoga Nidra Scripts booklet.

When I look back at owning the studios, I met my wife at that yoga studio and I often tell her that if I went through all that stress, heartache, and trouble only to have met here then it would have been worthing it. That’s true but the incredible gifts I’ve learned extend beyond just finding the love of my life. Ironically, I’ve learned so much about owning and running a business by all the ways that my previous business didn’t work. Both studios I opened are STILL running, but with different owners. I suppose I should be proud to have helped created such beautiful places to practice yoga. When I roll by those studios, I think, “Good on ya! I hope you’re doing well,” and “MAN! I’m happy not to own those anymore.”

Failures are perhaps some of our biggest teachers so maybe we don’t have to be so afraid of them. Maybe we can even have fun with them and dare I say, even be grateful for them. Inevitably, they help us evolve into into our highest being.

What are the failures you’re grateful for?

Yoga Nidra: Let Go and Be

Yoga Nidra is often called the “yoga of sleep,” however Yoga Nidra is more about waking up, wakening up to your ultimate Being. In my online Yoga Nidra classes and my online Yoga Nidra trainings, I discuss how the ancient yoga principles found in the Yoga Sutras help us find a practice of waking up.


According to the Yoga Sutras, the natural challenges in life provide us with refinement or Tapas, translated as the heat necessary for our transformation into our highest beings. Tapas is the process of waking up to our True Nature.




This heat inevitably leads us toward Swadhyaya, or self-knowledge. Self knowledge is both knowing how to best handle the Tapas, as well as what the Tapas reveals, which is the infinite Being waking up to know itself in this physical form and in this life. With greater self-knowledge you qualify for deeper tapas, then deeper self-knowledge, etc.




Beyond this cycle of growth and self-knowledge is the the ultimate step called Ishvarapranidhana, which means to lay it down at the feet of God. The ultimate step is to transcend this cycle of refinement and self-knowledge by enabling our ultimate act of free will which is to completely let go of control and submit to things just as they are. To merely be. Doing so up-levels our consciousness and then allows us to move back into the cycle of refinement and self-knowledge with greater understanding about what that process is doing. It’s like rebooting your life where everything is the same and yet your relationship to it is completely different.



Yoga Nidra is a method of relaxing inquiry into Self where through deepening relaxation and layered Awareness, you practice releasing all which doesn't’ serve you to see it for exactly what it is. With this perspective, you no longer identify AS that thing and can allow it to be. Because everything in this Universe has an orbit, you’ll find that as you stop clinging or resisting certain things in your life and allow them to just BE, they find their own expression and move along their orbit.



You have a magnificent capacity to simply BE!

I made up a myth that I want to share with you that will hopefully make these teachings come alive.

Let Go and Be: A Myth
© Copyright 2020 Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved

Yoga Nidra Training

Yoga Nidra is the relaxing and mystical journey deep into the inner-realms of consciousness where through a guided meditation, you get to experience your True Nature, something that feels one with all things, infinite, and whole.

Such wholeness leads naturally to profound healing, boundless equanimity, and and understanding of your life, unparalleled by every-day thinking. Stress, trauma, and scarcity seem insignificant after you've experienced the part of you that is infinitely larger than any of these smaller experiences. Truly, through Yoga Nidra you see into the vastness of the Universe that is within you.

Learn this transformative practice for your own soul evolution as well as learning how to lead others through this life-changing practice. This could be the most important work you do in a great long time.

This essential training is designed for those who wish experience the unparalleled magnificence of their True Self through Yoga Nidra, to deepen their knowledge of the practice Yoga Nidra by learning its philosophy, and learn to teach it. It’s a fascinating journey into self that gives you the tools to help others also make this deep, personal journey. This is an engaging, fun, and in-depth look at all things Yoga Nidra.


Weekly Live Online Yoga Nidra Classes


Now 2 classes weekly: Wednesday 6 pm and Sunday 9 am MST!

All classes are recorded so you can join live or watch later. Each participant receives the recordings to build your Yoga Nidra library.

Buy a pass, 4 classes for $40 or pay a drop-in for $12. If you buy a pass, you will be automatically signed up for both Wednesday and Sunday classes unless you indicate to me that you’d prefer either one or the other.

There is immense power in practicing together. These classes allow you to join from anywhere in the world. And because they are recorded and each of the classes are emailed to you after the class, this allows you to register and watch the session later as well as build your own digital Yoga Nidra library.
















Sankalpa: Being Known By The Universe Through Our Desires

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Copyright © Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved

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I'm so excited!!!!!!!

My new book, Practical Yoga Nidra, hits the shelves December 10th. That's like in 5 days! This is really a dream come true for me. I'm really proud of this book and I can't wait to share it with you.
The following is an excerpt from my book. My book offers a simple, 10-step guide to developing a Yoga Nidra practice, one that will help you reduce stress, improve sleep, and restore your spirit.

Preorder your book on Amazon ($12.99) by clicking on the photo and I’ll give you a FREE live, online Yoga Nidra class ($12 value).



Enjoy this excerpt and let me know what you think about the concept of Sankalpa and intentions. Keep in mind that though I’m writing about setting your intention for a Yoga Nidra practice, the practice of Sankalpa could be used for starting a yoga practice, meditation, or any project or goal.



Also, in my upcoming volume of Yoga Nidra recordings (available in a few weeks), I’ll have an entire practice dedicated to using Yoga Nidra, and in particular the use of Sankalpa, or intention setting, as a deeply mindful way of helping you to visualize your goals to make them into a reality.




Step 1 of the 10-Step Method is to set your intention. Sankalpa is a Sanskrit word that could most simply be translated as your intention. However, the practice of choosing your Sankalpa is a bit more entailed than merely stating your intention for your Yoga Nidra practice. Your Sankalpa is like a personal mantra or a statement of truth that you repeat in your mind as you begin your Yoga Nidra practice. I encourage you to sincerely consider your Sankalpa each time you begin a Yoga Nidra practice. If there’s something big in your life you feel you need, your Sankalpa could be the same each time. However try to picture what specifically you need today in relationship to that desire. In other words, don’t get stuck in the past with a Sankalpa that is outdated for you.

To choose your Sankalpa, it’s best to pause for a moment, close your eyes, take a few deep breaths, and become present by opening to your senses. Then reflect for a brief few seconds about what you need most in your life in the moment. Your Sankalpa might be for something practical and physical, something emotional, or something spiritual. You may even set an intention for the well-being of another person or whole group of people. Your Sankalpa doesn’t even have to be about what you want but rather maybe for the ability to articulate a recognition, appreciation, or gratitude for what you already have. It’s important that your Sankalpa is as short a sentence or phrase as possible. This helps you to gain clarity on what you really need or want. When choosing your Sankalpa, be positive, specific, and be present.

First, be positive. The Universe is one big, eternal yes. It’s inviting you to merge into its path of awakening to a complete understanding of this positivity and this yes. Yoga Nidra is about aligning with your True Nature and you can begin this essential alignment by choosing a Sankalpa that reflects this Universal positivity.

When choosing a Sankalpa, focus on what you want rather what you want to avoid. I heard one of my teachers, Judith Lasater, say, “What is worrying but praying for what you don’t want?” I grew up in Utah where everyone mountain bikes in the summer and skis in the winter. Coaches in both sports teach beginners to look where they want to go rather than where the don’t want to go. It’s incredible how focusing on something, good or bad, brings about its realization.

The next consideration in choosing your Sankalpa is specificity. Being specific paints a bullseye for the Universe to aim for. Make your Sankalpa one short sentence. Choose the exact thing you want rather than sweeping generalities. Once, a friend in her 20s asked the Universe for a car. Her intention was to own something with an automatic transmission and a sun roof. A week later, her family inherited a Lincoln town car that indeed had both automatic transmission and a sunroof but smelled like an ashtray, was 12 feet long, and probably older than she was. She drove that car gratefully but was sure that the next time she made her automotive intentions known to the Universe, she was sure to add that she wanted something a bit more sporty and hip.

Lastly, when choosing your Sankalpa, it’s essential to be present. The part of you that you’re communicating your Sankalpa to only understands the present. Past and future are abstract concepts regulated by different parts of your brain and being. When making your Sankalpa speak to what is rather than what isn’t. This means formulating something you’re searching for in present terms and focusing on where you’re at, what you have, and who you are now in relationship to where you wish to go.

Here are a few samples of Sankalpas that you can modify to help you create your Sankalpa that is positive, specific, and present:


  • “I’m on my road to ___________.”



  • “I already have everything inside of me that I need for ___________.”



  • “The Universe is ready to give me __________.”


What This Practice Does for You 


Your Sankalpa acts as a guiding star for how your journey of Yoga Nidra will unfold, what kind of awareness will be revealed, and which layers will be removed which obfuscate your ability to experience your True Self.

When you state your Sankalpa, you plant a living seed of spirit, hope, and desire inside your mind and heart as a clear and direct invitation to the Universe to reveal to you your true identity through that intention. Your Yoga Nidra practice cultivates the fertile soil for your seed of Self-Awareness to grow and bloom.

The beautiful and ancient Gayatri Mantra is one of the oldest mantras we know of and comes from the Rig Veda, part of a body of texts called the Vedas dating between 1700–1100 BCE. The Gayatri Mantra teaches how stating your Sankalpa before your Yoga Nidra practice works to help manifest that thing. The Gayatri Mantra states:

oṃ bhūr bhuvaḥ suvaḥ
tatsaviturvareṇyaṃ
bhargo devasyadhīmahi
dhiyo yo naḥ prachodayāt

My favorite translation of this mantra from Donna Farhi goes something like:

Everything on the earth and in the sky and in between
Is arising from one effulgent source
If my thoughts, words, and deeds reflected a complete understanding of this unity
I would be the peace I am seeking in this moment.

As this mantra says, if I understood the essence of all things—including myself and the thing I want—I’d understand that everything comes from the same source. Ultimately, I’d see that I’m no different than the thing I want.

While this is nice to understand on a philosophical level, it will most likely take a lifetime of practice (or more lives if there are more to be had) to truly understand this truth. Yoga Nidra is a perfect way to practice coming to understand this truth, by aligning with our magnificent Source.

According to Yoga Nidra philosophy, everything in the Universe is boiled down to Awareness. When you align with your basic Awareness through presence, Yoga Nidra being my favorite way to practice presence, you align with the origin of all things, including you and including those things you feel separate from. Remember, Yoga Nidra is about remembering and experiencing our fundamental wholeness. This is why this is considered a practice of yoga or “yoking” together of all things.

Your Sankalpa speaks to the eternal part of you that isn’t dependent upon past or future. Therefore, planting the seed of Sankapla in your heart and mind is like planting iris bulbs in the fall—they bloom in the spring whether you remember planting them or not. Because your Sankalpa works for your benefit whether you remember it or not, it’s essential that we be mindful and deliberate when choosing a Salkalpa.

The practice of Yoga Nidra is simply about being present. Starting your Yoga Nidra practice with your Sankalpa makes you very present by first, taking a moment to recognize your needs and second, by alerting the Universe how to best awaken you to your ultimate Awareness. You do this by practicing Awareness and an understanding that you are no separate from what you seek.

It reminds me of Leonard Cohen’s song “Anthem,” where the artist meditates on how through our perceived brokenness or sense of lack, we come to understand our own wholeness and illumination. We aren’t perfect despite our brokenness but because of it. Stating our Sankalpa is alerting to ourselves and the Universe the avenue by which we are coming to know ourselves as perfect, whole beings.

I'd like to share with you the powerful Yoga Nidra practice we had last week during our live, online Yoga Nidra practice. It's is a practice that is designed to develop your Sankalpa, your powerful intention and manifestation to the Universe for whatever you feel you need in your life right now.

It's about 21 minutes long. I hope you love it. Tell me what you think.

Also, you can click below to join this week's class on Sunday, December 8 at 9 am MST. This class theme is : You Are Bigger Than Your Beliefs

The Poison That Makes Us Holy

THE POISON THAT MAKES US HOLY: CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THIS POST
Copyright © Scott Moore Yoga LLC All Rights Reserved

Happy Monday! I hope your week is starting off marvelously.

Scott Moore Yoga

This morning I dropped Elio off from school and then decided to walk around a bit to record the audio of this post. Ultimately, I decided not to use that recording because there was too much traffic and it was too distracting so I re-recorded this and I think that is better.

Elio is getting used to his new school and is still having a little bit of a problem using the bathroom by himself so some mornings, like this morning, I drop him off at school, go to the gym or do some work at a cafe, then head back to school to encourage him to use the bathroom.

As I was walking around this morning, not far from Elio’s school, there is a beautiful, modern cathedral here in Nice. It’s got a very unique, rounded architecture and it’s gleaming while. This cathedral is dedicated to the Saint of Joan of Arc.

Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc Cathedral

If you don’t remember the story of Joan of Arc, she was a peasant girl in the 1400s who as a teenager received a revelation from God that she was supposed to lead the French army against the English and the Burgundians, a French dynasty who were at the time in league with the English and who today produce lovely wines— but that’s neither here nor there.

So against all rationale, the prince Charles of Valois agreed to allow Joan of Arc to lead the army. She did. They won. She was lauded and revered. Unfortunately, about a year later, she was captured by the English and the Burgundians and was burned at the stake as a heretic. She’s been held as someone very special to the spirit of France and it wasn’t until the 1920s that she was actually canonized and considered a saint and this church is dedicated to her.

I’m so happy that I walked by this church because it relates to the myth I want to tell today:

Today, I want to tell my rendition of the ancient Hindu myth about the Asuras and the Devas.

Long ago, in time out of mind, there were two groups of beings, the Asuras and the Devas. There couldn’t be a different sort of people. The asuras were earthly people, thought mostly of themselves, were a bit selfish. They probably loved Nascar, ate pork rinds, and didn’t recycle. The Devas on the other hand were beings that were very heavenly and always thinking of their inner divine nature. I imagine them dressed in gossamer white clothing, subsisting on tofu and vegetable broth, meditating for several hours a day, and leaving behind a faint smell of patchouli or incense whenever they left a room.

Well, those two kinds of being were about as opposite as you could imagine but they both wanted one thing and that was Soma. Soma was the elixur of eternal life. The Asuras wanted it because it felt so good to be eternal and the Devas wanted it so they could further devote themselves to the Divine. Now, the only way to get Soma was to ask Vishnu and if on the off chance that he granted you to have it, he would allow Lakshmi, the goddess of fortune and gifts to bestow it upon you.

So united in this common desire, the Asuras and the Devas got together and timidly asked Vishnu if they could have some Soma. He agreed but told them what they must do to get it. He was going to lend them his Sesha, Vishnu’s giant snake. They were to wrap this snake around a mountain which was to rest atop the giant tortoise Korma. If you’ve ever done Kormasana in yoga class, this is where that gets its name. Once the snake was wrapped around the mountain and placed on top of the Korma’s shell, they were to pull back and forth and oscillate it enough that they should somehow get the Soma. Grateful, the Asuras and the Devas agreed and began their task.

Joan of Arc Cathedral

The Devas being smarter than the Asuras opted to take the relatively benign tail of the snake, which had but four ends which some Sanskrit scholars say relate to the 4 bases of DNA structure, something that the ancients discovered long before Watson, Crick, both of whom studied the work of their colleague Franklin. The Asuras therefore received the head end of the sesha and were blasted by countless heads of a snake, each one shooting fiery blasts like a dragon.

The Asuras and the Devas began to pull on the sesha with all of their might and in their lust for Soma, they started to pull so hard that the sesha, as strong and divine as a character as he may be, became nonetheless very ill and began to vomit venomous bile which started to cover and poison the entire earth. Seeing the problem, the Asuras and Devas stopped their movement and decided that something must be done before the entire earth is engulfed with this poison.

They weren’t about to go back to Vishnu. He was kind enough to let them have the chance to get Soma in the first place. They didn’t want to return to Vishnu and tell him how in their blind lust for Soma, they made his snake sick and now the entire earth was starting to be covered in poisonous puke. Instead, they importuned Shiva. They asked him if he could help them out.

Mahadev Shiva

Siva surveyed the situation and gathered up all of the bile and drank it, neither swallowing it to digest it nor spitting it back up. Siva held it in his throat and sanctified it, turning his throat blue.

Saved, the Asuras and the Devas continued their task, this time taking great care to have a balance between steadiness and ease. After they developed a good rhythm, eventually the sea began to boil and riches started popping up out of the ocean. Soma was about to come at any minute.

Vishnu decided to give them one last temptation to see if they were worthy of the Soma and he sent a temptations out to see if the Asuras and Devas really had purity in their hearts to receive the Soma. I imagine Vishnu sending onto the beach a bunch of speedo and bikini-clad partiers, barbecues wafting the smell of rib-eye steaks, not to mention volleyball nets, beers, and music. To the Devas he sent over all the unicorn amulets, treasure troves of yoga pants, sensible shoes, and all organic produce that a healthy, spiritual person could ever want.

Well, despite all of their efforts to get to that moment, the Asuras caved and headed to the beach for beers and babes. The Devas stayed and soon Lakshmi gave them each a single drop of Soma which turned them into immortal beings like angels.

I love myths like that because we can interpret them in many ways. They speak to a truth that is large enough mean something different fo whomever hears it, regardless of spiritual orientation, practice, discipline, or period of life.

I love the idea in this myth about the balance of steadiness and ease. In the Yoga Sutras, the book where we get a lot of the philosophy of yoga from, there are really very few instructions for how we are to practice yoga, the physical practice. It does say, however that no matter what, you’ve got to find the balance between steadiness and ease. Whatever your physical, spiritual, and I would even say political practice might be, this story illustrations the value of balance. What’s more is how when you’re trying to improve your situation but approach your improvement with a fundamental lack of balance, how that can make things worse off than they were before.

And when things are bad, and even when they seem like they are going to poison the entire world, like the snake’s venomous puke, that somehow the Divine can help you hold that in such a way as to sanctify it

You’ve probably heard me mention this more times than you can count but it is a truth that has become imperative to my own personal spiritual evolution, and that is Leonard Cohen’s lyric from his song Anthem that says, Ring the bells that still can ring, forget your perfect offering, there is a crack in everything and that’s how the light gets in. This says that just like the poison of whatever may befall us, we become sanctified, the light gets in, when we learn to hold our imperfections. That it’s because of these faults, this brokenness, this poison, that we are rendered holy.

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It makes me think of our situation with Elio, learning to use the bathroom by himself at school. How he is struggling being the only kid at school who doesn’t speak French and how he is learning to have more independence and things and how we are the unique family at school because we don’t quite understand exactly how things work yet, at least not like the other French families. But how me going back to school is strengthening him and teaching him and how it gives me an opportunity to build a rapport with the directorice of the school and talk with his teachers regularly. This is building a special relationship between our family and the school.

It also makes me think about Joan of Arc and how she was killed for fundamentally backward, misogynist, and in my mind evil reasons, but how her spirit has endured and how she’s given hope and courage to countless French people and how she was like the original Wonder Woman in some ways and that she’s become a divine symbol which celebrates a woman’s power, intuition, and spirit and which is so strong that it’s still celebrated 600 years later.

I hope you enjoyed the myth. I’d love to hear about what you heard in this myth.

I hope that you can find ways in your life to celebrate balance in all of your practices. I hope that you’ll be able to find the divinity in the challenges that beset you and see how that all of our challenges are making us into the greater angels of our True Nature.

I hope you have a great week. Please stay tuned for some Yoga Nidra offerings I am going to announce coming up.