Site icon Women Fitness Org

Hangover Cure: 5 Yoga Poses to Practice in Bed

If you indulged a little too much at a cocktail party, and are looking for a way to prevent or cure a hangover, and you’ll likely get 10 different answers.

Yoga helps calm the nervous system, reset the endocrine system, and releases toxins from your body, so it is only fitting that it would help you recover from a hangover. Hangovers affect nearly every organ system in your body, from your gastrointestinal tract to your brain to your heart. So there’s no “magic cure where one remedy will get rid of every single hangover symptom.”

A quick yoga session is one of the best solutions to nurture your body in bed when you wake up!

Do these 5 moves for about three minutes each, breathing deeply to help get your blood flowing and get your body back on track from party hangover.

Corpse Pose (Savasana)


If you were out late, this flat-out position should be a piece of cake. Lying around like the dead could improve memory, reduce tension, lower blood pressure and reduce headaches!

Lie flat on your back (with your head supported on a pillow, if you wish), and extend your arms along your sides with your palms facing upward. Allow your body to “melt” into your bed, feeling all the points of contact you have with your bed, then breathe deeply and relax.

Supine Twist (Supta Matsyendrasana)

Use this pose to relieve and revive your lower back by elongating the muscles that run along your spine while also stretching your glutes, shoulders, and chest. Reclined twists also aid in the digestive process and rinse toxins from your body.

Bend one knee and draw it into your chest, then pull it across your body with your opposite hand. Extend your other arm to the side and turn your head to look at that hand. Keep your shoulders flat and breathe deeply, allowing the stretch to deepen with each exhalation. Return to the start and repeat on the other side.

Child’s Pose (Balasana)

If your head is spinning! it might be time for Child’s Pose, which calms, centers and soothes the brain, helping relieve stress as well as back and neck pain. This pose also helps balance the endocrine system, which regulates your hormones and nervous system.

Get on your hands and knees and spread your knees wide while keeping your big toes touching. Sit back and rest your glutes on your heels and fold forward over your legs. Either reach your arms forward in front of you or alongside your legs and allow your head to sink into a pillow. Hold and breathe.

Legs-Up-the-Wall Pose (Viparita Karani)

This semi-inverted pose can help ease bellyaches, remedy cramps, and alleviate migraine tension and anxiety.

Create a support with firm pillows or folded blankets and place it by the headboard of your bed, leaving a few inches in between the board and bolster. Starting on your side, scoot your tail onto the bolster, then roll onto your back. Walk your heels up the wall until your legs are straight and your pelvis is comfortable on the support with your tailbone in the little space between the headboard and the bolster. Close your eyes, breathe and relax your body limb by limb from your head to your feet.

Supported Fetal Pose


This primal and relaxing pose is traditionally done on the right side since the heart is on the left, rolling onto your right places your heart above the organs, helping regulate the pulse and allowing blood pressure to gradually reach homeostasis.

Bring your legs down slowly from the wall and lie on your right side. Use your biceps as a pillow and allow your entire body to relax in any way that feels naturally comfortable for you, breathing deeply. In any case, if you fall back asleep, you’re already in bed, so relax!

A party hangover can prove troublesome if left ignored.

Exit mobile version