09:04

Release Stress, Relax The Jaw

by Julie Peters

Rated
4.7
Type
guided
Activity
Meditation
Suitable for
Everyone
Plays
10.2k

Jaw tension is deeply connected to tension in the belly and pelvic floor. All these areas tend to tense when we're feeling stressed. When we can lie down, breathe, and relax, we can repattern away from stress and release any emotion that is stuck inside these parts of our bodies. Feel better by relaxing your jaw!

StressRelaxationJawFacial TensionBreathingPelvic FloorEmotional ReleaseGroundingEnergyBody ScanDiaphragmatic BreathingEnergy FlowMind RestBreathing AwarenessPelvic Floor ExercisesFacial Tension Relief

Transcript

Welcome to this guided meditation for relaxation through softening and releasing the jaw.

Jaw tension is incredibly common and often a sign of stress.

The jaw will hold automatically even while we're sleeping.

The jaw is also intimately connected to the breath and the pelvic floor,

And when we release this whole apparatus the nervous system softens and relaxes.

If you haven't already,

Please lie down in a comfortable position.

If possible,

Rest with a towel or a blanket rolled behind your neck,

Supporting the natural curve of your neck.

Have a bolster under your legs or keep your knees bent with your feet on the floor and allow the knees to rest together.

If it's comfortable for you,

Let your hands rest on your belly.

Take a few deep breaths in through your nose,

Out through your mouth.

Rinse through whatever's been happening for you today and give yourself a chance to settle into this shape,

To settle into our meditation practice.

Take a moment to acknowledge the land beneath your body,

The earth that holds and witnesses you.

Acknowledge your relationship with this land,

Both personally and historically.

If you know the names of the traditional people of this land,

Call them up now.

Now take a moment to relax your body as much as you can.

Let the shoulders drop.

Soften the shape of your hands.

You could even wiggle your toes a little to let them settle into stillness.

And now we'll focus on relaxing your jaw.

Often when we hold tension in the jaw,

It's because we're holding back an emotion.

When we're trying not to feel something we're feeling,

We tend to hold the breath and the jaw helps us do that.

When we release the jaw and the breath together,

Sometimes we release emotion as well.

It doesn't matter what that emotion is or what it's about.

We're not here to fix,

Judge,

Or analyze.

If emotion arises during this meditation,

Just allow it.

Keep breathing.

Notice your belly rising and falling as you breathe.

Allow the belly to expand up into your hands or toward the sky as you inhale,

And gently fall back as you exhale.

If your belly was the front of a soft balloon,

Your pelvic floor would be the bottom of that balloon.

So this,

The pelvic floor,

Is a net of muscles around your genitals that supports your pelvic organs.

It's shaped a little like a diaphragm,

Similar to the one under your ribs that helps you inhale and exhale.

Notice if you're holding tension in this area around your genitals and see if you can let that go.

As you inhale,

The soft balloon fills and the pelvic floor expands toward your feet.

As you exhale,

It gently,

Naturally contracts toward your heart.

You can also imagine that there's a diaphragm at the back of your throat around where your soft palate is.

As you relax,

Imagine the back of your throat rising and falling with your breath.

It doesn't matter which direction you feel the movement rising on inhale and exhale.

Just imagine the back of the throat soft enough to move with your breath.

Now,

These three diaphragms can move together,

The throat,

The one around the low ribs,

And the pelvic floor.

The inhale draws air in,

Filling the diaphragms like sails on a beautiful day.

On the exhale,

The sails gently shift,

Moving in the opposite direction.

Allow the winds of your breath to move these parts of your body,

Your belly gently lifting and releasing with each breath.

Stay soft.

Notice that emotions or thoughts might be arising.

Allow them to flow with your breath as well.

Don't fight them.

No need to resist.

It's safe to feel whatever you feel right now.

If you allow yourself to feel the emotions,

They can flow through you on the waves of your breath.

Notice if thoughts are coming up related to the emotions,

Especially thoughts about the future or the meaning of your emotions.

You can't read the future.

It doesn't matter what these emotions might mean.

Let the thoughts be present,

But adjust your attention back to your breath.

Keep focusing on softening the jaw,

Softening the pelvic floor.

Allow the channel of energy to run freely from your throat to your pelvic floor.

Simply allow this energy to move through.

Now take a moment to notice how you feel.

How do you feel in your body?

How is your mood?

Whatever it is,

Is okay.

Take as long as you'd like to rest here.

You may like to return to this meditation tomorrow or daily while you're working on repatterning the tension response in your jaw and pelvic floor.

When you do feel ready to move out of this meditation,

Take a few deep breaths.

Wiggle and stretch as you like and eventually roll over to one side.

Perhaps you'd like to drift away to sleep now or move on to a wonderful,

Soft,

Relaxed rest of your day.

Thank you for listening.

Meet your Teacher

Julie PetersEdmonton, AB, Canada

4.7 (580)

Recent Reviews

Willow

August 8, 2025

Interesting and helpful. I loved the sails analogy 🤍 Thank you so much Julie 🙏

Kim

February 1, 2025

Julie, I’m truly grateful for this (and all of the meditations you’ve done). So much information gently and softly packed into this one in particular. I’ll be using this one a lot! 🙏❤️

Faye

December 24, 2024

Thank you. Peace.

Ben

December 21, 2023

I carry ao much tension in my jaw when I'm stressed, which is often. I keep coming back to this one for relief and to listen to myself and see what's stressing me.

Paula

December 12, 2023

Wonderful thank you! Really good for menstrual cramps too!

kit

December 10, 2022

Wow. That was fascinating and just what i needed. Thank you for not having background music.

Lucy

December 3, 2022

Really helpful to release jaw & pelvic tension ♥️

Kath

September 2, 2022

That was lovely. Surprisingly I felt more relaxed after the visualisation. Thank you!

Eden

July 3, 2022

Loved this we acknowledge the custodians of our local land! Very insightful practice, thank you

Mer

June 12, 2022

Beautiful timbre and pace. Love the connections. Will revisit. 💚🌈

Heloise

April 16, 2022

So simple and beautiful images Will do it many times Merci 🙏

Emma

April 13, 2022

Lovely guidance! Thank for encouraging the acknowledgement of our history with the land and recognizing the original inhabitants of the land!

Liesel

March 19, 2022

Great Meditation to relax. Loved the explanations of the "other" diaphragms.

Jenny

February 8, 2022

Beautiful meditation. Coincise but clear and useful. Thank you ❤️

Caitlin

January 15, 2022

I hold a lot of tension in my jaw and found this very helpful! It was both relaxing and informative

Marian

January 4, 2022

Very interesting conjunction of pelvic floor, diaphragm, and throat. Quite enjoyable.

Jill

December 25, 2021

Excellent! 💜

Eviva

December 12, 2021

Really interesting to connect the jaw and throat with the diaphragm and pelvic floor. Definitely the pelvic floor is so subtle but I think with work and some of your other meditations as well it will become more clear. Thank you 🙏🏻

Tony

November 23, 2021

Wonderful meditation. Thank you for sharing it. Namaste.

Eva

October 7, 2021

Thank you!

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© 2025 Julie Peters. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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