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Glossary›Shavasana

Glossary

Shavasana

A supine yoga posture in which the practitioner lies motionless on the back, resembling a corpse, used for deep relaxation and integration.

What is Shavasana?

Shavasana (also spelled Savasana), commonly known as Corpse Pose, is an asana in hatha yoga and modern yoga practice, most often used for relaxation at the end of a session. The practitioner lies flat on the back, arms resting alongside the body with palms facing upward, legs slightly separated and falling naturally outward, eyes closed. It is the usual pose for the practice of yoga nidra meditation and is an important pose in Restorative Yoga. Despite its apparent simplicity, Shavasana is often cited by practitioners as one of the most challenging asanas, requiring complete surrender of physical effort and mental activity.

Origins & Lineage

The earliest mention of the pose is in the 15th-century Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1.32, authored by Svātmārāma, a classic fifteenth-century Sanskrit manual on haṭha yoga. The text states: “lying down on the ground supine, like a corpse, is called Shavasana. It eliminates tiredness and promotes calmness of the mind.” Yogi Svatmarama, a 15th century CE sadhu belonging to Gorakh panth, wrote the Hatha Yoga Pradipika, which traces the lineage of the teachings to Matsyendranath of the Natha tradition.

According to scholar Jason Birch, the earliest textual reference to Shavasana is the 12th-century Dattātreyayogaśāstra, in which “lying on the ground like a corpse until the mind dissolves” is depicted as a Layayoga method and not a pose. The 17th-century Gheraṇḍasaṃhitā also mentions śava-āsana as one of the three classic texts of Haṭha-yoga.

The standardization of Shavasana as the concluding posture in modern yoga classes appears to be a 20th-century development. While documentation of when, why, or how this became standardized in modern yoga classes remains elusive, several styles of 20th century yoga incorporated śavāsana at the end of their classes for both meditation and rest after physical practice. The 20th century saw yoga gurus including Krishnamacharya and his pupils K. Pattabhi Jois and B.K.S. Iyengar, as well as Sivananda, establish schools of yoga in India and train teachers worldwide. In Sivananda yoga, Shavasana is practiced not only for final relaxation at the end of a session, but before the session and between asanas.

How It’s Practiced

The physical form of Shavasana is deceptively simple. The practitioner lies flat on the back on a yoga mat or firm surface. The legs extend naturally, about hip-width apart or slightly wider, allowing the feet to fall open to the sides. The arms rest several inches from the body, palms facing upward or in a neutral position. The back of the head contacts the floor, with the chin neither lifted nor tucked excessively. Eyes close. The entire body releases into gravity.

The internal practice involves systematic relaxation. Many teachers guide students through progressive body awareness, moving attention from feet to crown or vice versa. Breath settles into a natural rhythm without manipulation. The instruction is often to remain awake and aware while releasing all muscular effort—a state distinct from sleep. Supine postures like corpse pose were taken up to ease the mind and body into meditation and a state of mental dissolution (cittalaya) where practitioners dissolve into the depths of the self.

Duration varies. In studio classes, Shavasana typically lasts 5–10 minutes, though traditional teachings and Restorative Yoga may extend it to 20 minutes or longer. Props—bolsters under the knees, blankets for warmth, eye pillows—are common, particularly in therapeutic and restorative contexts.

Shavasana Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter Shavasana in virtually every yoga studio, from Vinyasa and Ashtanga to Yin and Restorative classes. It has become the nearly universal closing posture in Western yoga, often accompanied by dimmed lights, silence, or ambient music. Teachers cue students to “come into Shavasana” as a signal that the active practice has concluded.

Yoga nidra, a guided meditation practice, combines guided mental imagery with Shavasana (or “corpse pose”). Satyananda Saraswati constructed a system of relaxation through guided meditation in 1976, popularizing it in the mid-20th century. Audio recordings of yoga nidra—widely available on streaming platforms, apps, and in yoga studios—use Shavasana as the postural foundation.

Many seekers report Shavasana as their first experience of conscious relaxation, a practice of non-doing that stands in contrast to contemporary culture’s emphasis on productivity. Retreats, workshops, and teacher trainings dedicate significant time to refining the art of Shavasana, both as practitioners and as teachers learning to hold space for students’ vulnerability.

Common Misconceptions

Shavasana is not napping. While the body rests and the breath slows, the instruction is to maintain a thread of awareness—what some traditions describe as conscious relaxation or “sleep with a trace of awareness.” Falling fully asleep, though common among beginners or the exhausted, is technically a departure from the classical aim.

It is not merely rest after exercise. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika describes it as eliminating fatigue, but medieval and modern teachings frame Shavasana as an integrative practice—a time when the physiological and energetic effects of the preceding asanas settle into the tissues and nervous system.

Shavasana is not universally accessible. Individuals with trauma histories, particularly those involving vulnerability or loss of control, may find lying supine with eyes closed activating rather than calming. Modifications—lying on the side, keeping eyes open, sitting in a chair—are clinically and pedagogically appropriate alternatives. The insistence that “everyone must do Shavasana” reflects a lack of trauma-informed teaching.

It is not a modern invention, though its ubiquity in contemporary classes is. The posture itself has medieval roots; its standardization as the conclusion to every yoga class is a 20th-century convention shaped by influential teachers and the global spread of postural yoga.

How to Begin

For a first encounter with Shavasana, find a quiet space and lie on your back on a yoga mat, carpet, or firm surface. Set a timer for 5 minutes. Let your legs and arms rest in a comfortable position. Close your eyes. Begin with the breath: notice the natural inhale and exhale without trying to change it. When the mind wanders—and it will—gently return attention to the sensation of breathing or the weight of the body against the floor. When the timer sounds, take a moment before transitioning to movement: wiggle fingers and toes, stretch, roll to one side, and slowly rise.

To deepen the practice, consider attending a Restorative Yoga class, where extended Shavasana is central, or exploring guided yoga nidra recordings. B.K.S. Iyengar’s Light on Yoga (1966) offers detailed instruction on Shavasana, including prop use. Swami Satyananda Saraswati’s Yoga Nidra (1976) systematizes the guided meditation practice rooted in this posture. For scholarly context, consult Jason Birch’s research on medieval hatha yoga texts, available through academic journals and the SOAS Centre of Yoga Studies.

Related terms

yoga nidrahatha yogarestorative yogaasanapranayamameditation
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