about

 
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For the past 25 years, I’ve been teaching people all over the world the principles of pausing and deep listening through restorative and slow flow yoga and mindfulness practices, and my signature technique, LARLAR, for overall body, mind, spirit health and wellness.

To me, slowing down, turning inward, and deeply listening to our body and heart is perhaps the most meaningful form of self-care work we can do. When we are more compassionate and connected with ourselves, we are able to be more compassionate and connected with others and the world around us. In this way, our practice not only benefits us, it benefits everyone we are in relationship with, and everyone we come into contact with. This is truly why I practice, and why I offer the classes, retreats, workshops, and trainings I do rooted in my signature technique, LARLAR .

But relaxing didn’t always come easily to me.

from yoga to deep listening

I started practicing yoga and meditation when I was nine years old, but it wasn’t until the early 90s that I began a passionate, personal study of yoga. 

I first became certified to teach yoga in 1994 from the ISHTA yoga lineage with Alan Finger. From there, I spent a decade studying with some the greatest yoga and meditation virtuosos of our time, from Jon Kabat-Zinn and Jack Kornfield to Ram Dass, Tara Brach, and Sharon Salzberg. Erich Schiffmann  became my primary yoga influence in 1997; and in 1998, I met my primary meditation teacher, Pema Chödrön, when the Omega Institute invited me to teach at her annual retreat. As a certified yoga therapist and teacher trainer, I was introduced to the cutting-edge work of world-renowned healers, doctors, and neurologists in mind-body medicine, including Herbert Benson, Daniel Siegel, Richard Davidson, Sara Lazar, and Rick Hanson. All together, these teachers and traditions have informed my integrated approach to sharing yoga and mindfulness practices that are infused with compassion and ease, and meant to attune the body, mind, and spirit to nature, and inspire an integrative, holistic healing experience. 

But it wasn’t until 2000, six years into teaching yoga and a decade into my corporate marketing career, that my yoga became Deep Listening: the healing practice it is for me today. I loved the heat, power, and athleticism of my yoga practice, which in a way made me feel solid and secure in a family full of boys. After a series of life crises, I realized that style of yoga was not the type of practice I needed to become a more active participant in my own well-being. I needed to stop doing and start being—to strive less and relax more.

First, there was chronic fatigue and other health challenges that came from my high-pressure job in publishing. As if overnight, the lifestyle I thrived in plummeted me—and all I had the energy to do was lie down on the ground. I had no choice but to turn to restorative yoga, which healed me in ways I didn’t even know I needed. It revealed a web of tension under my tightness that was keeping me from partnering with the earth and breath to promote my well-being. So, I left my director position at St. Martin's Press to transform part-time yoga teaching into my full-time vocation.

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But restorative yoga didn’t just heal me once. After losing a dear family member and managing the health issues of my child for years, I found myself so depleted that I developed epilepsy—or so we thought. My body started shaking in a way that looked like that disease, but in reality I had been so fundamentally shaken I lost the ability to control my body’s movements. Dedicating myself to my yoga practice was necessary to give myself the care I needed to rebuild again—and again, and again; and learn to release and expand into my nature—which has enough space to hold my restlessness and my relaxation at the same time.

These three challenges helped me restore my health and well-being in a way I’m so grateful for. I’ve made it my vocation—in my personal practice and my teaching—to share the work of Deep Listening: to cultivate the ability to pause and grow grounded, present, and open. To compassionately care for ourselves with whatever is going on inside or outside. When we practice in this way we are developing a relationship with ourselves that provides exactly the type of strength and security we need most to navigate life from a place of mindfulness, wisdom, compassion, and authenticity.

Today, I am a certified Yoga Therapist, recognized by the International Association of Yoga Therapy. I have also been a featured teacher at respected holistic learning centers internationally, including the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health, Omega Institute, 1440 Multiversity, Mohonk Mountain House, and Blue Spirit Retreat Center. My Calm Body, Clear Mind DVD and RelaxMore CD have been spotlighted and highly recommended by Dr. Mehmet Oz, Yoga Journal, and several others. I loved offering a TEDx Talk on Metta Meditation, and contribute as a featured Yoga Expert to Prevention, Mindful, Yoga Journal, Yoga International, and more.

 

practice now

You can practice the principles of Deep Listening through yoga, meditation, and relaxation with me live and online all over the world.

 
 

online classes

retreats & workshops

as featured in

 

about my practice

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When I started yoga, it was as if I was driving a car without any side or back mirrors—eyes forward, hands gripped on the wheel. I was intensely focused on my ambitious career, my exercise routines (and side hustle as a fitness instructor, before I became a full-time teacher), and my growing family. I wanted to do more and achieve more, but instead that mindset created conditions of tension and gripping in my body. Eventually, I was forced to stop when I was sideswiped, in the form of serious illness.

It was through mindfulness practices—restorative yoga, slow flow yoga, and meditation—that I finally started to feel like I could take a leisurely drive through my life, get where I wanted to go, but also arrive there with presence, ease, and joy. And mindfulness has become the foundation of all my teachings because of its ability to heal deeply on an energetic and physical level from the non-stop movement along the highway of life.

  • what is mindfulness?

    the core of long-term wellness

  • what is restorative yoga?

    mindful movement that softens and surrenders layers of deeply held tension

  • what is slow flow yoga? 

    mindful movement that flows with the pace of the breath

  • what is meditation?

    practices to tap into the wisdom of the heart in stillness

a few of my favorite things

recommended books, props, and other tools to support your practice, well-being, and joy. 

contact jillian

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I love hearing from my global community of fellow yogis, trainee graduates, and colleagues every day.

If you are inquiring about a speaking engagement, interview with Jillian, or bringing her Deep Listening practices to your organization, we look forward to talking with you. To contact Jillian and her team, please email jillianpranskyreg@gmail.com.