Yin Yoga: A path to deep relaxation

Yoga that gets under your skin: In Yin Yoga, positions are held for up to 5 minutes and thus have an effect on the deep connective tissue in your body. An essential aspect is the balance of yin and yang.

Yin yoga

While our everyday life is very fast and active (= yang), yin yoga is the ideal balance to relax after a turbulent day. In addition, this yoga style is a perfect complement to the more active yang yoga practice, where you use your muscles more. With Yin Yoga you can be completely passive and let go. Immerse yourself in the benefits of slowness and the stillness of yin!

What is Yin Yoga
Origin & History
Yin and Yang - the inseparable couple
Meridians & Chi in Yin Yoga
Typical yin yoga asanas
Book tips & DVDs
Yin Yoga with Helga Baumgartner
Restorative Yoga - the difference to Yin Yoga

(1) What is Yin Yoga?

Hatha yoga refers to the powers of the sun (ha) and moon (tha). In the Taoist tradition, where the roots of Yin Yoga lie, one speaks of Yin and Yang. These forces are also at work in our bodies. Yin Yoga should help to bring these aspects into a healthy balance.

Yin yoga

The yin-oriented part of the yoga practice is therefore slow, mindful and calm, while the yang-oriented yoga is primarily dynamic, active and invigorating. However, the archetype of our modern yoga can be found in the gentle stretching and the long stay in the asanas, the conscious self-awareness and the free flow of the breath.

How to practice Yin Yoga

The yin positions are held for 3 to 5 minutes. During this time it means "doing nothing", surrendering to the attitude and letting go. This gentle way has a great effect on your body:

  • Yin yoga works like an acupuncture session - only without the needles. By holding the Yin Yoga postures for a long time, different meridians are addressed and possible blockages are released. The meridian system seems to be connected to the deepest layer of connective tissue, so that the flow of life energy is positively influenced.
  • In contrast to a yang-oriented yoga practice, where we mainly let our muscles play, in yin yoga deeper layers of the body such as fascia, ligaments, tendons and joints are addressed .
  • Yin Yoga helps to let go of old thought patterns and to develop a healthy trust in life . With Yin Yoga, the stillness within you becomes alive and opposites are balanced.

Maybe Yin Yoga is even the mother of Hatha Yoga? Already in the Hatha-Yoga-Pradipika (HYP) - one of the most well-known classical yoga writings - some yin postures are described to prepare the body for meditation. However, the perfect balance of yin and yang was already known in the old writings, and so the second half of the HYP is devoted to more powerful yang postures such as the forearm stand.

(2) Origin & History: From Taoist Yoga to Yin Yoga

Although yin yoga has probably existed for many centuries, there is a history of "modern yin yoga" of sorts. It begins in an auto mechanic's shed in Montana, where Pauli Zink not only repaired cars, but also taught Taoist yoga . Paulie Zink was trained in Asian martial arts from an early age and his master Cho Chat Ling eventually appointed him his successor.

Paulie Zink's yoga was well received: the positions held for a long time, the infusion of the five elements and the yin and yang elements must have exerted a certain magic on people. This also applies to Paul Grilley , who saw a TV report about the extremely flexible martial artist in 1987 and contacted him.

Grilley was particularly enthusiastic about holding positions for a long time and became Paulie's student. In fact, Grilley previously taught yang-oriented yoga such as Ashtanga. He studied anatomy and finally had the idea of ​​offering his own Yin Yoga classes, where he incorporated his knowledge of anatomy as well as insights from Dr. Hiroshi Motoyama, who has published extensively on the connections between chakras, meridians and human anatomy. Back then, Grilley called the whole thing Taoist Yoga .

A well-known student of Paul Grilley - Sarah Powers - finally came up with the idea of ​​calling this gentle yoga style Yin Yoga. Sarah is also another interesting figure in Yin Yoga history as she combines Yin Yoga with components of Buddhist psychology.

(3) Yin and Yang - the inseparable couple

An essential aspect of Yin Yoga is the balance of Yin and Yang. These are as different as a couple can be and yet inseparable.

The Taoist symbol Taijitu describes the two aspects that cannot exist without each other. Each half contains a part of the other half - and this is how you form a unit.

A traditional image is of a man picking rice: his back is to the sun (yang), his front is to the earth (yin). Yin and yang are relative - because they are related to each other and contained in each other. Either they are in balance or they are not.

Yin yoga

The image of a rice farmer is often used to illustrate yin and yang: his back is towards the sun (yang), his front towards the earth (yin).

Yin and yang also work in our body and in our thinking. Yoga aims to harmonize these forces.

  • Our yin side is less active, closer to the core, dry and cool, receptive and more earthy. On a physical level, for example, tendons and ligaments are assigned to the Yin.
  • Our yang side is more active, loving warmth and light and closer to the surface. The hard, inelastic parts in the body such as bones, joints, skin and muscles belong to the yang.

Yin and Yang are mutually dependent. In our time, life is often very fast and active - so Yin Yoga is the ideal balance after a turbulent day.

"Yin Yoga is necessary to balance our yang-heavy culture." Paul Grilley (Founder Yin-Yoga)

(4) Meridians & Chi in Yin Yoga

In addition to the principle of the polarity of yin and yang, there is another important basis in the yin yoga tradition: the life energy that flows within us. This force, which is also called prana, chi or qi, is like a glue that holds our world together - inside and out. We humans have a physical body and, in the sense of yoga, four other energy bodies (Koshas), which are traversed by a network of energetic pathways. These channels are called meridians, in which the life energy flows.

The meridian system appears to be almost identical to the deepest layers of connective tissue. The flow of life energy is positively influenced by holding the positions for a long time. With Yin Yoga, there is the possibility of having a targeted effect on a specific meridian system and thus stimulating organs, emotions and the five elements that work in the body.

"Meridians are the channels on which the chi travels to the organs." Christine Ranzinger (Yin Yoga teacher and author)

(5) Typical Yin Yoga Asanas

Yin yoga is mainly practiced while sitting or lying down. A yin yoga class can focus on one organ, or practice a mix to strengthen all elements and stimulate the flow of qi. The procedure is:

  1. Slowly get into the exercise and become calm
  2. Bring the attention inwards and connect it to the breath
  3. Stay passive in the asana (3 to 5 minutes) and let go step by step, adjust your posture if necessary, e.g. if you feel unwell or in pain

Do you want to try out some yin yoga asanas with instructions? Here, together with Helga Baumgartner, we show you the following Yin Yoga positions:

(6) Book tips & DVDs

If you feel like practicing Yin Yoga at home with a DVD, we recommend the Yin Yoga DVD "The Foundations Of A Quiet Practice" by Paul Grilley.

Yin yoga sequences (90 and 60 minutes) can also be purchased on DVD from the online yoga platform YOGAMOUR.

We also have 3 book tips for bookworms

  1. The book "Yin Yoga" by Helga Baumgartner is a detailed collection of Yin Yoga postures for every level and the exact explanation of the associated meridians. What is special about this book is the merging of Chinese energy theory with the basics of Indian yoga roots. Information about chakras, meridians and the element theory can be found very clearly and concisely.
  2. Sarah Powers' book "Insight Yoga" is dedicated to a Yin practice that stimulates the flow of Qi (Chi) within the meridian system and balances and strengthens organ systems, as understood in TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine).
  3. Bernie Clark has created an extensive work with his book "The Complete Guide to Yin Yoga" . You can also look up a lot on the subject on his website yinyoga.com .

(7) Practice Yin Yoga with Helga Baumgartner

Helga completed her Yin Yoga training with the most well-known Yin teachers worldwide, including Paul Grilley and Sarah Powers. Helga embodies the gentle and mindful yoga practice like no other yoga teacher.

(8) Restorative Yoga - the difference to Yin Yoga

Wondering what restorative yoga is? An essential feature is that various aids are used for the yoga postures: blankets, pillows/cushions, blocks or yoga chairs. Anything that supports letting go is allowed. Restorative yoga is therefore primarily about relaxation and regeneration, while yin yoga is more about stretching and expansion as well as holding positions for a long time - and that can be exhausting at times.

Restorative yoga is ideal for people who need a very gentle practice, are ill or injured. The use of yoga props support the body to relax and allow postures that would otherwise not be possible.

Both Yin Yoga and Restorative Yoga slow down, are slower and gentler than yang-oriented yoga styles. It can happen that you practice maybe 10 positions in a 90-minute class. These yoga styles are therefore a beautiful way to look inward, slow down mental and physical activities, listen to your own breath and immerse yourself in deep relaxation. A real treat that is good for everyone. No matter whether you are a yoga novice, an experienced practitioner, an athlete or a senior.

Be Yin!

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