Yoga 101

Yoga 101 Yoga 101 promotes body & mind well being through relaxing movement practices.

Treat yourself 🪷💛
21/08/2025

Treat yourself 🪷💛

🪷💛The humming bee breath, also known as Bhramari Pranayama, is a breathing technique where you inhale through your nose ...
27/07/2025

🪷💛
The humming bee breath, also known as Bhramari Pranayama, is a breathing technique where you inhale through your nose and exhale with a humming sound, like a bumblebee, with your mouth closed.

Here's how to practice it:
Find a comfortable seated position: Sit with your spine straight, either cross-legged or in a chair with your feet flat on the floor.

Close your ears: Gently place your index fingers on the cartilage of your ears, blocking the ear canal.

Inhale deeply: Take a slow, deep breath in through your nose.

Exhale with a hum: As you exhale through your nose, make a low, humming sound like "hmmmmm".

Continue: Repeat this process for several breaths, maintaining a consistent humming sound during the exhalation.

  🪷💛
27/07/2025

🪷💛

🪷💛
26/07/2025

🪷💛

🌌 The Secret Symphony Between Your Fascia, Emotions, and Lymphatic Flow 🎻

What if your body’s emotional memory wasn’t just stored in your brain — but in your fascia?

Welcome to a revolutionary understanding of how your connective tissue, your feelings, and your fluid flow are in a constant, beautiful dance — and how healing your lymphatic system might just help you heal your heart.

💡 Fascia: The Body’s Hidden Conductor

Fascia is a web-like connective tissue that wraps around every muscle, bone, nerve, and organ. It holds the structure of your body — but it does much more than that.

According to research from Harvard Medical School and the Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies, fascia has mechanosensory and emotional memory capabilities. Yes — your fascia feels.

When trauma, stress, or suppressed emotion occur, fascia can tighten, harden, and hold. This causes stagnation not only in muscles or joints — but in your lymphatic flow.

💧 Stagnant Emotions = Stagnant Lymph

The lymphatic system relies on the mobility of fascia and muscle contraction to move lymph. If your fascia is restricted from old trauma, surgery, or chronic emotional stress, your lymph slows down, detox backs up, and inflammation can quietly rise.

Imagine unresolved grief from years ago living not just in your heart — but in your hips, chest, and even your gut fascia, causing chronic puffiness, digestive issues, and fatigue.

🧠 The Vagus Nerve Connection

Your vagus nerve, the major highway between brain and body, winds through fascia-rich territories. Emotional restriction in fascial areas — particularly the neck, chest, and diaphragm — can impair vagus function, leading to:
• Anxiety
• Gut imbalances
• Poor sleep
• Lymphatic congestion in the head and neck

When you release fascial tension through manual lymphatic drainage (MLD), myofascial release, breathwork, and somatic therapy, you stimulate both lymphatic movement and emotional processing. This is where true detoxification happens — physically and emotionally.

🌿 The Body Remembers — But It Can Also Release

Fascial and lymphatic therapies are now being recognized not just as physical tools, but as emotional release mechanisms.

One 2022 study in Frontiers in Psychology noted that manual body therapies, particularly fascial and lymphatic work, can unlock “stored emotional pain” and “activate parasympathetic (healing) response.”

🌀 So what does this mean for healing?

If you’re feeling stuck emotionally, tired physically, or puffy and inflamed — the issue might not be just in your gut or your hormones.

It may be in the fascia that hasn’t felt safe enough to let go.

💎 Practical Tips to Support the Fascia-Emotion-Lymph Axis:
1. Dry Brushing – stimulates fascia and superficial lymph capillaries.
2. Manual Lymphatic Drainage (MLD) – softens tight fascia, moves trapped toxins and emotions.
3. Diaphragmatic Breathing – releases the solar plexus and vagus nerve.
4. Myofascial Self-Release – foam rolling with mindfulness.
5. Castor Oil Packs – soften adhesions and release stored trauma.
6. Movement with Emotion – dance, stretch, or cry as you move lymphatically.
7. Somatic Therapy – consider working with trauma-informed practitioners who understand the body-emotion connection.

✨ Final Thought:

You are not “too sensitive.”
Your body just speaks the language of truth — and it speaks it through your fascia and lymph.
Listen, release, and watch the healing ripple through your whole being.

📚 References:
• Schleip, R. (2022). Fascial plasticity – A new neurobiological explanation. Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies.
• Porges, S. W. (2021). Polyvagal theory: The transformative power of feeling safe. Norton & Company.
• Harvard Health Publishing. Fascia: The connective tissue that supports our body.
• Frontiers in Psychology (2022). Manual therapies and emotional processing: A somatic-emotional feedback loop.

©️

Camel Pose (Ustrasana) is a great pose for opening your heart and strengthening your back. Here's a step-by-step guide t...
20/07/2025

Camel Pose (Ustrasana) is a great pose for opening your heart and strengthening your back. Here's a step-by-step guide to safely lead you through the pose (beginner to use props) - be considerate to your body and don't overextend where you are at with your practice 🪷💛

🪷💛
20/07/2025

🪷💛

Benefits of practicing child's pose daily 🪷💛
20/07/2025

Benefits of practicing child's pose daily 🪷💛

🪷💛
16/07/2025

🪷💛

🙏🙌💛

🪷💛
16/07/2025

🪷💛

Make it a great new week! 🥰

A 2009 pilot form of Yoga study found that practicing yoga in a heated room Could increase bone density in older adults....
16/07/2025

A 2009 pilot form of Yoga study found that practicing yoga in a heated room Could increase bone density in older adults.
Hatha yoga - an ancient form that emphasizes physical postures can improve cognitive function, boosting focus and memory, 🪷💛

Address

Fourways

2191

Website

https://yoga101.co.za/

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Yoga 101 posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Yoga 101:

  • Want your practice to be the top-listed Clinic?

Share