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Om Som Yoga + Ayurveda Podcast

Kaya Sthiram: The Yogic Foundation Of Mental Steadiness

31 min18 januari 2026

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ON THIS WEEK'S EPISODE:

In this episode, Aaron is joined by our Studio Manager here at Om Som and Senior Teacher Lina for a grounded exploration of Kaya Sthiram, the steadiness and stillness of the body as the foundation for meditation. Together, they unpack one of the most common frustrations people experience in practice: “I can’t meditate because my mind won’t stop.” Rather than approaching stillness through effort or mental control, this conversation reframes meditation as something that begins in the body. Drawing from classical yoga teachings, lived experience, and practical application, this episode explores why mental steadiness cannot arise until the body feels safe, settled, and unmoving, and why stillness has always been taught as a somatic experience before a mental one.


DEFINITION & ETYMOLOGY:

Kaya (काय) means body, field, or embodied formSthiram (स्थिर) means steady, stable, unmoving, able to hold
Kaya Sthiram refers to the steadiness of the body and the field of awareness inhabiting it. It is not rigidity, but a grounded stillness that allows awareness to settle.


KEY CONCEPTS & INSIGHTS:


A restless mind is often the result of an unsettled body
Stillness does not begin with thought, but with sensation
The nervous system must recognise safety before the mind can rest
Ancient yogic teachings observed that animals only rest once their bodies fully settle
Kaya Sthiram acts as a doorway into parasympathetic regulation
The body is the first anchor for awareness before breath or mantra
Modern overstimulation keeps the body vigilant, preventing mental stillness
Asana exists to prepare the body for meditation, not to bypass it


TEXTUAL SOURCES:


Yoga Sūtra 2.46

Sthira sukham āsanam, posture as steadiness and ease


Yoga Sūtra framework

Asana before pranayama, pranayama before meditation

Haṭha Yoga Pradīpikā

Asana steadies the body and brings firmness
Classical teaching

When the body is steady, prana settles, and the mind follows


PRACTICAL INTEGRATION:

Do fewer asanas and hold them for longer periodsMinimise fidgeting, adjusting, and unnecessary movement in posesUse the body as the anchor for attention rather than the mind
Repeat a simple internal cue such as “I am here” or “Where are my feet?”
Pause between tasks in daily life and notice bodily sensations
Allow the body to fully settle before moving on to the next action
Meet basic needs first (thirst, hunger, rest) before asking the mind to be still
Practise small moments of stillness throughout the day as daily Kaya Sthiram


SHARE & CONNECT
Thank you for listening to the Om Som Yoga & Ayurveda Podcast. Please share this episode with someone it might support, and connect with us on social media or via our website.
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We operate a yoga studio in Berwick, Victoria, Australia, offering classes, workshops, and Yoga Teacher Training programs. We’d love to connect with you wherever you are on your journey.


HARI OM

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