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Beginning a Restorative Yoga Teacher Training

2/1/2025

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II was excited to begin YogaRenew's Restorative Yoga teacher training last week, especially since my back injury flared up, and I felt very good about practicing some long savasana variations while absorbing lots of information about calming the neuromuscular system and what we call "the calm cascade," a release of hormones and other metabolic chemicals in our bodies that occurs when our mind & body are given a chance to rest and relax. 

These metabolic materials support so many aspects of healing on the cellular level. 

I will likely finish this and then do a Yin Yoga certification.  Yoga therapy is a big part of Integrated Positional Therapy, and that's the modality I'm using the most these days when I'm not doing head/neck/shoulder NMT. 

I've been practicing yoga for 20+ years, but it's nice to formalize this with some good teacher training.  I prefer restorative and yin yoga these days, saving deeper stretch techniques for use in the context of my mobility and corrective exercise workouts. 

There's some debate but it was brought to light in a New York Times article some time ago that deep static stretching doesn't have much benefit, and some advanced yoga poses are downright dangerous.  Gentle stretching has amazing benefits, as does contract/relax variations.  And as a body weight exercise system, yoga is great training for neuromuscular control and basic strength. 

But some deep static poses just don't make sense. 

Why aspire for range of motion that puts you in the category of hypermobility?  Much muscle pain relates to hypermobile joints - joints need stability.  Furthermore, ligaments need to be taught and supple to do their job of hold bone to bone with slight movement.  If we are in deep, high-sensation stretches past normal range of motion, there's a chance we are stretching ligaments, not just muscle and fascia.   

I have been hurt in pigeon pose by overstretching ligaments made vulnerable by pregnancy.  My right rotator cuff will never be the same from power yoga chaturanga.  I avoided yoga classes for many years and took a Pilates and corrective exercise path of teacher training for this reason. 

Lee Albert's positional therapy system got me back into yoga, because the gentle restorative poses he recommends are exercise gold for balancing problem areas and overall posture.  And healthy breathing patterns are a big part of pain management.  Yoga tends to focus a lot on the breath, another plus for the practice. 

There is so much benefit from that "calm cascade" that yoga lets us access in the safe framework of a restorative class.  I'm looking forward to bringing these benefits to my practice, and to help my clients. 

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    Nicole Urell is a Pilates Instructor and Certified Stretch Coach, also certified in corrective exercise and somatic practices. 

    She is a neuromuscular and orthopedic massage therapist who brings her love of restorative movement into her treatment sessions

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