Yeah, she appears to be ok active and exploring since. I attempted to feed her but all she did was literally pushed it away from her with her snout haha and showed no feeding interest. So I will just hold off one feeding cycle as Nanci proposed. Thanks for your advice everyone. I will keep updates on her if things get worse.
Smell the inside of the enclosure as soon as you lift the lid off for any foul rotten smell(regurge). Yes, snakes do yawn to realign their jaws from time to time, but your description does sound like a regurge. This could have been the second dry-heave after the snake actually puked it up somewhere just prior to you seeing this one with nothing comming out. Sankes will typically wriggle from side to side and move backwards a bit when they regurge. If it did regurge, there is something definitely wrong. There are generally a few basic things that cause this.
1 Not enough under belly heat
2 Too large a meal
3 handled snake before meal was digested(stress)
4 intestinal bacteria from fouled water or meal
The very WORST thing anyone can possibly do is to immediately attempt to feed a snake that has recently regurged, as the snakes stomach needs time to replenish the acids, electrolytes, and gut flora(good bacteria) for proper digestion. This usually takes around 7 to 10 days, and THEN you want to make SURE it is offered a much smaller meal for several feedings until you know the snake can successfully hold those down. Only then can you gradually start upping the size over some time.
If the snake regurges again if a smaller meal is taken(in two to three days), it needs to see a vet for a throat smear and fecal-floatation to diagnose the cause. Flagyl helps immensely with ridding their intestinal tract of bad bacteria, but it also kills GOOD bacteria too, so you must NOT offer ANY food for at least 7 to 10 days after the last dose of Flagyl(Metronidazole) at the rate of 50 mg./per kg. of body weight. Additionally, there are probiotics like "nutri-bac" that replenish good bacteria back into their gut to aid in normal digestion. Kathy Love talks about this on her site as well.
Anyway, I have saved the lives of many people's snakes when they followed this advice to the letter. continued regurgitations can easily lead to the snakes death if the proper measures are not adressed ASAP!
good luck with it.
~Doug