If you train hard all week, your rest day is not time off, it is part of the training. Self-Care Sunday is a simple weekly ritual that gives your body the recovery it actually needs and resets your mind for the week ahead. It is built for people who push: lifters, runners, yogis, anyone whose default is “do more.” This routine is your permission, and your plan, to do less on purpose.

Why Recovery Is Not Optional
Progress does not happen during your workouts. It happens during recovery, when muscles repair, the nervous system resets, and your body adapts to the stress you put it under. Skip recovery and you do not get fitter, you get more tired, more injury-prone, and closer to burnout. Our guides on why you should rest between workouts and yoga burnout explain what happens when you do not.
A dedicated recovery day is the simplest way to make sure it happens, instead of always being squeezed out by the next session.
The Self-Care Sunday Routine
Treat this as a menu, not a checklist to grind through. Pick what your body needs this week.
|
Block |
Focus |
Time |
|
Morning slow start |
Wake without an alarm, hydrate, no rush |
30 to 60 min |
|
Active recovery movement |
Gentle yoga, mobility, or a walk |
20 to 40 min |
|
Restorative practice |
Deep, supported, parasympathetic |
20 to 30 min |
|
Body care |
Foam rolling, bath, skin, whatever restores you |
flexible |
|
Mind reset |
Journaling, planning the week, digital quiet |
20 to 30 min |
1. A Slow Morning Start
No alarm, no rushing. Hydrate, make a calm drink, and resist your phone for the first stretch of the day. This sets the tone: today is for restoring, not achieving.
2. Active Recovery Movement
Recovery is active, not horizontal-all-day. Gentle movement increases blood flow to tired muscles and speeds repair without adding stress:
- A gentle yoga flow or post-workout stretch session.
- Mobility work for the areas that took the most load this week.
- An easy walk outdoors.
Keep it light. If you are shaking or straining, it is no longer recovery.

3. Restorative Practice
This is the heart of recovery: practices that switch your nervous system from “go” to “repair.” Hold each supported pose for several minutes and breathe slowly:
- Restorative yoga with props (see what restorative yoga is).
- Legs-Up-the-Wall, one of the most restful poses for tired legs (see Legs-Up-the-Wall).
- Yoga Nidra, a guided deep relaxation that delivers serious rest in 20 to 30 minutes (see yoga nidra).
- Savasana to close (see Savasana).
Props make these genuinely restful. A pair of Eva Olaben Blocks, a yoga strap, and a cushioned mat let your body fully release.
4. Body Care
Tend to the body you train. Foam rolling, a warm bath, a contrast shower, skincare, a proper meal, whatever genuinely restores you. This is also a good time to care for your gear, like cleaning your yoga mat so it is fresh for the week.
5. Mind Reset
Recovery is mental too. Spend a quiet stretch journaling about the week, loosely planning the next one, and stepping back from screens. A calm, clear mind is as much a part of being ready as fresh legs.
Make It a Weekly Ritual
- Pick a consistent slot. Sunday is traditional, but any rest day works. Repetition makes it automatic.
- Protect it. Treat it as a real appointment with yourself, not the first thing to cancel.
- Set the scene. A tidy corner, a candle, and comfortable activewear you can move and rest in make it inviting.
- Adjust to the week. A heavy training week needs more restorative work; a lighter week can lean into mobility. Listen to your body.
Done weekly, Self-Care Sunday is not indulgent. It is what lets you keep training hard without breaking down.

Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do on a self-care Sunday?
Start slow, do gentle active recovery (light yoga, mobility, or a walk), then a restorative practice like yoga nidra or legs-up-the-wall, some body care such as foam rolling or a bath, and a mind reset through journaling and time off screens.
Is it better to rest completely or do active recovery?
For most people, gentle active recovery beats lying down all day. Light movement increases blood flow to tired muscles and speeds repair, as long as it stays easy and low-intensity.
What yoga is best for a recovery day?
Slow, supported styles: restorative yoga, yin, gentle flow, and yoga nidra. They activate the parasympathetic nervous system and help the body repair instead of adding more training stress.
How does a recovery day improve my training?
Your body adapts and gets stronger during recovery, not during workouts. A dedicated recovery day repairs muscle, resets your nervous system, lowers injury risk, and prevents burnout, so you can train harder the rest of the week.
How often should I have a self-care recovery day?
At least once a week is a good baseline for anyone training regularly. If you train very intensely, you may need more restorative work woven through the week as well.







