Take a 2-hour nap in 10 minutes. It feels great!
https://wholesomeresources.com/3169/3169/
Wholesome Resources for Mind-Body Mastery through Yoga, Meditation, Guided Imagery, Stress Relief, Wellness
by John
Take a 2-hour nap in 10 minutes. It feels great!
https://wholesomeresources.com/3169/3169/
by Julie Lusk

Eye Movements
After a while, eye muscles tire out and it becomes harder to focus. To prevent this from happening, you can practice these eye movements. They will strengthen your eye muscles and eyesight and stimulate the brain. Visual, auditory, and sensory perception can increase. Do them sitting up, standing, or lying down.
Here’s How
Chidakasha: Quieting the Mind by Stilling the Eyes Using the sense of sight is a very effective centering technique. Doing so can have a beneficial effect on the brain as well. Have you ever noticed that you can still see even with your eyes closed? All that is needed is to try. You might see it as darkness, designs, colors, spots, or a combination. It does not matter. What matters is passively focusing your attention on what is being seen and watching it as it changes. Have fun watching whatever appears as it comes and goes on the inside screen of your closed eyelids. This brings you into the moment and quickly settles down mental restlessness. Yogis refer to watching this inner space of consciousness as Chidakasha. ( Yoga Nidra for Complete Relaxation & Stress Relief, page 115)
Julie Lusk, MEd, E-RYT 500, has more than 35 years of expertise in stress relief, yoga, relaxation training, guided imagery, and meditation as an international author, recording artist, and workshop leader. Julie is the author of Yoga Nidra for Complete Relaxation and Stress Relief, Yoga Meditations, two volumes of 30 Scripts for Relaxation, Imagery and Inner Healing, and Desktop Yoga®. Her audio downloads and CDs include Wholesome Relaxation, Power of Presence, Yoga Nidra Essentials, Blue Moon Rising, and many others. Learn more at WholesomeResources.comWelcome!
Thanks for purchasing the audiobook
Yoga Nidra Meditations: 24 Scripts for True Relaxation by Julie Lusk
Use this guide as a supplement to the audiobook
FYI
Chapter 1 – Yoga Nidra Essentials

Chapter 2 – Guidelines for Personal Practice
Appendix 1 – Pratyahara and the Rotation of Consciousness
Sensory Motor Cortex of the Brain (c) 2015 Julie T Lusk
Used with permission from Yoga Nidra For Complete Relaxation & Stress Relief, page 116. All rights reserved.

Appendix 2 – Chakras: Subtle Energy Centers
Glossary & Pronunciation Guide pdf
Recommended Resources pdf
Bibliography & References pdf
Contributor’s List pdf
Mudras are yoga positions, gestures, and seals for your hands and fingers that facilitate health, healing, psychological balance and spiritual transformation. Some mudras use the whole body and breath. They are effective, easy to learn, practical and powerful, and anyone can do them.
This hand mudra is called Purna Hridaya. It can help promote mental/emotional stability. Breath capacity and the immune system also can improve. It can bring relief when you’re feeling the blues.
How to do the Purna Hridaya hand mudra
This 4-minute video explains more.
Buy a video download of Yoga Nidra for Emotional Wellbeing that uses Purna Hridaya hand mudra.
https://youtu.be/QZhzWTNcu7Y
More about Hand Mudras
by Julie Lusk
My notes from hearing the Dalai Lama on May 14, 2010 – Indianapolis, IN
The Dalai Lama was in Indianapolis to speak on Facing Challenges with Wisdom and Compassion.
It was at the Conseco basketball arena. Just like a basketball, the sound bounced around making it hard to hear clearly. It reminded me of the acoustics when we heard Thich Nhat Hanh in Chicago. Too much echo.
Still, I picked up a lot and I’d like to share it with you with the understanding that any misconceptions are on my part, and not on the part of the Dalai Lama.
All people want to achieve, and have the right to happiness and inner peace.
Should there be more Buddhism in America? No. He said Americans already have the answers for finding true happiness and inner peace by way of the religions we already practice. Practicing common sense is another viable path.
Different religions rely on different qualities and pathways to achieve happiness and inner peace. Some rely on faith, others promote surrender, while compassion is the path for others. All these qualities, and religions, have the potential to take us to true happiness and inner peace. We should do our best to respect the different religious paths and know that each has its own benefits that reach out to various cultures, temperaments, and times. It’s about having respect for all religions.
All humans, no matter the color, culture, sex, or age, have a common connection to compassion that is biological and instinctual. The love of a mother and the instinct of protecting the child are good examples. Even a mother bird may sacrifice her life for the sake of her baby. Compassion is instinctual, however, it gets covered up and overruled by the thinking mind.