Deep relaxation and restorative practice

Use yoga nidra / NSDR-style guided relaxation to drop the body into a sustained parasympathetic state.

Why it works

Sustained guided relaxation — progressively releasing muscular tension and slowing the breath while staying aware — shifts the autonomic balance toward parasympathetic dominance and tends to raise HRV during the practice. Doing this regularly may help the system learn the calm state more readily.

How to do it

  1. Lie down somewhere undisturbed and follow a guided body-scan or yoga-nidra/NSDR track.
  2. Let the breath slow naturally and release tension region by region.
  3. Stay aware rather than falling asleep, if the goal is restorative rest.
  4. Practice regularly, not only in crisis, to make the calm state more accessible.

Evidence

Relaxation practices (progressive muscle relaxation, body scans, yoga nidra) show benefit for stress and anxiety and tend to increase parasympathetic markers during practice. Trial quality varies. (observational)

Acute parasympathetic shift during practice is reasonably supported; durable resting-tone change is less certain and trial quality is mixed. A reliable, low-risk state-regulation tool regardless.

Common mistake

Only reaching for it when already in crisis, expecting an instant fix. The benefit builds with regular practice so the calm state is easier to access when you need it.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach can build a short, regular restorative-relaxation habit and guide it, so the parasympathetic state becomes a place you can find on demand rather than by luck.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).