

Skin and Wellness Haus
Lismore, New South Wales
41 studios offering restorative found within 200km of Lismore
FindYoga lists 41 restorative studios and class providers in Lismore. Browse timetables, compare styles and find the right restorative session for your level — whether you're stepping on the mat for the first time or deepening an established practice.


Lismore, New South Wales


Tullera, New South Wales


Richmond Hill, New South Wales


72 Byron St, Bangalow, NSW
#yogalates #slowflow #vinyasa #yin #barre #pilates


Beechmont, Queensland


12 Classic Way, Burleigh, Queensland
Stillness through Movement


Burleigh Waters, Queensland


2532 Gold Coast Highway, Mermaid Beach, Queensland
Your Yoga Sanctuary


Worongary, Queensland


Mermaid Beach, Queensland


Surfers Paradise, Queensland


Chevron Island, Queensland


Southport, Queensland


Paradise Point, Queensland


Mt Cotton Rd, Mt Cotton, QLD


Underwood, Queensland


Holland Park, Queensland


Holland Park, Queensland


Camp Hill, Queensland


St Lucia, QLD
Marina James Somatic (Yoga) Therapist I Counsellor


East Brisbane, Queensland


Woolloongabba, Queensland


West End, Queensland


West End, Queensland
Restorative yoga is the art of doing less to receive more — a deeply nourishing practice that invites the body and mind to settle into stillness, release held tension, and activate the body's natural healing response. Unlike more dynamic styles of yoga, restorative practice relies on fully supported poses held for extended periods, often five to twenty minutes at a time. Practitioners use an abundance of props — blankets, bolsters, blocks, and straps — to cradle the body so completely that no muscular effort is required. The result is a profound sense of ease and surrender that many describe as transformative, and that keeps students returning to their mats again and again, especially in times of stress, exhaustion, or recovery.
The modern restorative yoga tradition owes much of its development to B.K.S. Iyengar, the legendary Indian yoga master whose meticulous attention to alignment and innovative use of props laid the philosophical and physical groundwork for the practice. His student Judith Hanson Lasater played a pivotal role in bringing restorative yoga to Western audiences, refining and popularizing the approach throughout the 1970s and beyond. Lasater's teaching emphasized the therapeutic dimensions of supported poses, drawing on an understanding of the nervous system and the body's stress response to craft a practice designed specifically to counteract the toll of modern life. Her influence remains deeply felt in restorative classrooms around the world today.
A typical restorative session moves through just a handful of carefully sequenced poses — perhaps a supported child's pose, a reclined twist, legs up the wall, and a long, blissful savasana. The room is often dimly lit and warm, with soft music or gentle silence setting the tone. Instructors guide students into each shape with careful attention, adjusting props until every part of the body feels genuinely held. The focus is on activating the parasympathetic nervous system, shifting the body out of fight-or-flight mode and into a state of rest and repair. Regular practitioners report reduced anxiety, improved sleep, lower blood pressure, and a greater sense of emotional resilience. Because the practice places virtually no strain on muscles or joints, it is beautifully suited to beginners, older adults, those recovering from injury or illness, pregnant individuals, and anyone whose life has simply become too busy, too loud, or too demanding. Restorative yoga is an open and generous practice with no prerequisites other than a willingness to slow down and be still — and for those who accept that invitation, it has the quiet power to change everything.