I know its not always possible to connect with other yogis, that we all need extra inspiration in our own practices, and sometimes even a little kick in the butt to get into that yoga zone. I hope this blog will help you with that (and me, too!) as I share pieces of my classes, practices and inspiration with you.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Hip Opening Fun Yoga Flow!
**Just a side note as its almost Thanksgiving... all the twists in this vinyasa make it great for keeping your digestion in shape! Just don't attempt it when your belly is full ;-)
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Practice at home with Marisa just took on new meaning: Halli and I are releasing a cd - come celebrate with us (with yoga, of course!)
I am VERY excited to announce the imminent release of my first practice album with Halli Bourne. Based on the retreat we lead each January - see the link to the right for more information - this is a supremely relaxing practice meant to encourage openness in body and mind; an expansion of worldview to help one find greater ease and optimism in life. We are so very proud of it and hope you will enjoy it as much as we do!
It will be available as a download or a physical cd from CDBaby.com, as well as at Yoga del Sol and other local venues. To celebrate, we will be holding a free practice session based on the cd led by both myself and Halli at Yoga del Sol Studio on Saturday, November 15 from 4-6pm. We hope you will join us!
It will be available as a download or a physical cd from CDBaby.com, as well as at Yoga del Sol and other local venues. To celebrate, we will be holding a free practice session based on the cd led by both myself and Halli at Yoga del Sol Studio on Saturday, November 15 from 4-6pm. We hope you will join us!
Friday, October 24, 2014
Asana for connecting with your pelvic floor
Last evening, we finished up a 3-week series intended to help folks connect with their pelvic floor to find greater balance and support in their practice and in their life. The following is the practice we did last night - all postures either stretch or strengthen your pelvic floor. Most postures give the opportunity to do both at once. Move through the practice with a breath that carries as deep as you can get it, preferably so deep you can feel it moving your pelvic floor subtly. I hope you enjoy it - let me know how it goes!
Relaxation - legs up the wall, feet on the wall 90/90/90 angles, or savasana with sandbags on thighs.
Hip circles on all 4s with low back as neutral as possible
Hip circles in knee down lunge with foot to outside of hand
Downward Facing Dog - bending and straightening knees with breath
Upward facing dog
Vimasana
Frog - lifting one foot at a time
Plank
Warrior 1
Uttanasana bending and straightening knees
Mountain Pose
Hula Squats - reach arms up as you stand up, draw hands to waist elbows back as you take utkatasana
Viniyoga Warrior
Wide Angle Forward Fold
Malasana
Reclining Hero
Active Supta Baddha Konasana
Happy Baby with Sacrum on the floor
Jathara Parvritti with hips/knees 90/90. Holding 1/2 way down.
Supta Baddha Konasana with back on bolster - can press heels together to engage pelvic floor
Mula Bandha
*A special shout out to Leslie Howard, whose work with yoga and the pelvic floor was a huge inspiration for this practice.
Relaxation - legs up the wall, feet on the wall 90/90/90 angles, or savasana with sandbags on thighs.
Hip circles on all 4s with low back as neutral as possible
Hip circles in knee down lunge with foot to outside of hand
Downward Facing Dog - bending and straightening knees with breath
Upward facing dog
Vimasana
Frog - lifting one foot at a time
Plank
Warrior 1
Uttanasana bending and straightening knees
Mountain Pose
Hula Squats - reach arms up as you stand up, draw hands to waist elbows back as you take utkatasana
Viniyoga Warrior
Wide Angle Forward Fold
Malasana
Reclining Hero
Active Supta Baddha Konasana
Happy Baby with Sacrum on the floor
Jathara Parvritti with hips/knees 90/90. Holding 1/2 way down.
Supta Baddha Konasana with back on bolster - can press heels together to engage pelvic floor
Mula Bandha
*A special shout out to Leslie Howard, whose work with yoga and the pelvic floor was a huge inspiration for this practice.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Start each day by falling in love with yourself!
Fabulous Post from Claudia Welch at www.prana.com, essentially on loving your self and just how healthy that is. Those of you with kids, sounds like starting early can make a huge difference. Ayurveda gives us such a great map for exploration! Check it out below :-)
Ayurveda Life: Using Love and Focus To Change Our Lives
Monday, October 20th, 2014
We are excited to bring you another post in a comprehensive series on the practice of Ayurveda. ‘Ayurveda Life’ is a weekly series of posts from some of the most influential Ayurvedic authors and organizations. We are proud to partner with Banyan Botanicals and hope that you enjoy and share these posts with your communities.
“Yoga and Ayurveda are sister sciences that developed together and repeatedly influenced each other throughout history. Yoga and Ayurveda work together to enhance their great benefits on all levels”.
“The link between yoga and Ayurveda is prana, or the life force. Yoga is the intelligence of prana seeking greater evolutionary transformations, while Ayurveda is its healing power…” ~ Dr. David Frawley
Using Love and Focus To Change Our Lives
One of the powerful tools of healing and change in Ayurveda, is dinacharya, or a healthy morning routine. Ayurveda recognizes that, when we change our mornings, we change our days and….voila! our lives change.
But for morning routines to really serve to transform us on a deep level, we can’t…er…hate them.
A healthy morning routine can feel boring. Like a forced march. Like one more component of a life already too filled with obligation and chores.
There are many places a student of Ayurveda, or of life in general, may learn the important physical components of a healthy daily routine, but all too often, she may find herself temporarily adopting all these healthy practices, becoming overwhelmed, and ultimately choosing, instead, to hit the alarm, turn over and fall back asleep and continue in the momentum of her life…even if it is a life she is not enjoying. A life tainted with attachment to mental, emotional or physical habits that serve her poorly. Habits she knows she had better break, lose or change, in order to improve and enjoy her life, but finds she simply cannot.
Replacing unhealthy habits and patterns with boring ones is…not likely to work for long. The unhealthy ones are stubborn and the boring ones are…boring. Why are the unhealthy ones so stubborn, and what can we do to support the new, healthy habits to supplant them?
When we experience stubborn patterns of behavior, thinking, or illness that, despite a great deal of effort, won’t budge, it is like these were etched in cement. They’ve been with us so long that they might as well be. Often these are patterns that reach back into our early childhoods or even infancy.
In our formative years—when we are infants and young children—the matrix of our consciousness is like wet cement, into which patterns are easily etched. During this entire time, a part of our brain called the nucleus basalis, related to efficient creation of new neural pathways, is turned on 24/7. Somewhere around puberty, the cement dries, and the nucleus basalis turns off. This is useful, as keeping all those pathways alive requires a tremendous amount of energy. By preserving active patterns and pathways, and pruning away ones that are dormant or rarely, we are able to conserve more energy. However it also makes it harder both to erase old patterns and to create new ones.
Hence the difficulty in changing stubborn emotional, mental or physical patterns when we are older.
Wouldn’t it be great to have some magic softening serum that we could pour into that cement so we could more easily change our patterns?
There is such a serum. It is called oxytocin, and it renders the matrix into which impressions are made in the brain, more vulnerable to new impressions. It is precisely like softening the cement.
Oxytocin, sometimes called the “love hormone,” or the “cuddle hormone,” is a hormone that increases when we feel a loving connection to someone or something. When we love, we get softer, and so do our brains.
When oxytocin rises, our neural pathways are rendered more receptive to new impressions. Love makes us more receptive to change.
Almost every time my guru would put us into meditation in the mornings, he would say, “Do your meditation lovingly. Don’t think of it as a burden.” As with anything the saints say, there are secrets to this that go deeper than the obvious meaning, but my guru said it so often that I stopped hearing it. That is, until many years after His passing, when I learned about oxytocin.
Once we have softened the cement, we need to consider how to make a new impression. Wouldn't it be great if we could turn that nucleus basalis back on?
Ahh, but we can. Through focus. Concerted focus is one of the few “on” switches that reactivate the nucleus basalis, allowing us, once again, to more efficiently create new neural pathways.
The combination of love, which stimulates oxytocin and softens the matrix into which impressions are made, and focus—which reactivates the nucleus basalis—is therefore a powerful combination that makes real change more within our grasp. If we employ this duo in our morning routines, we create an even more powerful agent of change.
If we are tense, rushed, distracted, or result-oriented while we do our morning practices, oxytocin is not flowing and the nucleus basalis is dormant. When we apply love and focus, the combination has a calming effect on the nervous system, body, and spirit and allows us to more efficiently create new patterns. This dynamic duo can help us truly replace stubborn patterns. A loving and focused morning routine serves as medicine to remedy old patterns and establish healthy new ones.
So, it is not sufficient to go through the motions of a healthy daily routine. We need to be willing to fall in love every morning. This could be with a piece of music, a representation of the Divine, a pet, a parent, a child, a spouse, Nature…the object of our love is not as important as the act of loving itself. It may be useful to pick something impersonal to love, like nature or a representation of the divine or the Good Orderly Direction (the G.O.D.) of the universe, so that it is a stable recipient of our love, unable to be threatened, but the most important thing is that we fall in love. Every morning.
A healthy morning routine, the most important component of a dinacharya—a healthy daily routine— may eventually become habit, then nature, and change our lives, but it will do so more quickly and enjoyably if we employ love and focus.
~Dr. Claudia Welch
Dr. Claudia Welch, author of Balance Your Hormones, Balance Your Life: Achieving Optimal Health and Wellness Through Ayurveda, Chinese Medicine and Western Science, is a Doctor of Oriental Medicine, an Ayurvedic practitioner and speaker. Dr. Welch lectures internationally on Eastern medicines and Women’s Health, joyfully exploring how ancient idea apply to, and explain, today’s reality. Learn more atwww.DrClaudiaWelch.com.
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
The Ocean's Breath
I've spent alot of time in the ocean this past week , as I explore Maui. The ocean is not a place I've always felt comfortable but it's really growing on me. Its like a good friend that it just took a while to connect with. As I connect with it more and more, I've been noticing the subtleties of how it moves, how it breathes, the rhythm and flow. It's like a pranayama. I'm not quite sure of what is movement, breath or energy but it all comes together into this amazing, life affirming experience.
As the tide is rising and the waves are getting more intense, I've noticed there is a distinct pattern that lets you know how big the wave will be. There is a moment where you feel everything pulling out to sea, even your feet if you don't anchor yourself. Then there is a moment of stillness. Finally the wave rises behind you, a gentle arc, then rolls over itself into shore, crashing and rushing yet still maintaining its calming essence and energy.
If I try to breathe like a wave, I find myself with a steady inhale til I am completely full, a pause at the top, then I let the exhale come rushing gently out. That gentle quality is important. The wave maintains all the way to shore, it just gets smaller; it doesn't become anything else, its still a wave. Less about change, more about the cycle.
Combining this breathwork with my asana practice gave a lovely vinyasa. Ebbing and flowing from posture to posture, using the wave to inspire my movement led to undulating, spine releasing postures that move the whole body and balanced my energy, carrying me into a state of bliss. My favorite flows? There were three... Inhale to child's pose --> pause --> exhale to cobra. Inhale to downward facing dog --> pause --> exhale to upward facing dog. Inhale to bridge --> pause --> full puvana muktasana/apanasana.
The movement changes, but the breath, the breath keeps its cycle - taking you deeper into each expression, inside and out.
Blissed out at the beach...
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Bedtime Yoga
It's late at night, you have a big day tomorrow, you know you should go to bed (maybe on your Casper mattress - they requested this yummy post :-). Your body is exhausted but your mind is racing. How on earth will you ever get to sleep? How about a little yoga to soothe your soul?
Forward folding poses all help create deeper relaxation and internal focus. Any of your favorites are good options - paschimottanasana, resting pigeon, wide angle forward fold, and especially child's pose.
Twists help to wring out the tension that builds along your spine during the day and help you integrate one side of your body (and mind!) with the other. As it is evening, reclining twists are especially nice - jathara parivrtti, supta matsyendrasana.
Any pose you choose, you will want it to be relatively static with deep conscious breaths throughout your hold. Dynamic poses (and backbends) tend to raise your energy, the last thing you want when you are trying to wind down. So leave the sun salutations til you actually see the sun!
My number one best bedtime practice? Viparita Karani (legs up the wall) with pranayama (conscious breathing). This one is especially great as, if your bed is against the wall, it can be done in bed. It will help your circulation as the return toward your heart is easier with your legs up and it will help move the lactic acid from your legs so you won't be sore from that workout you did earlier. What pranayam pattern to do? Use your favorite as it will relax you more. And lengthen your exhale slowly and consistently - this signals to your nervous system to switch from fight or flight to rest and digest, jut where you want to be.
Finally, after you have completed your practice, however short or long, and are starting to feel relaxation and calm settling in, go to bed. Take your savasana here. Focus on your breath and let yourself drift away....
Forward folding poses all help create deeper relaxation and internal focus. Any of your favorites are good options - paschimottanasana, resting pigeon, wide angle forward fold, and especially child's pose.
Twists help to wring out the tension that builds along your spine during the day and help you integrate one side of your body (and mind!) with the other. As it is evening, reclining twists are especially nice - jathara parivrtti, supta matsyendrasana.
Any pose you choose, you will want it to be relatively static with deep conscious breaths throughout your hold. Dynamic poses (and backbends) tend to raise your energy, the last thing you want when you are trying to wind down. So leave the sun salutations til you actually see the sun!
My number one best bedtime practice? Viparita Karani (legs up the wall) with pranayama (conscious breathing). This one is especially great as, if your bed is against the wall, it can be done in bed. It will help your circulation as the return toward your heart is easier with your legs up and it will help move the lactic acid from your legs so you won't be sore from that workout you did earlier. What pranayam pattern to do? Use your favorite as it will relax you more. And lengthen your exhale slowly and consistently - this signals to your nervous system to switch from fight or flight to rest and digest, jut where you want to be.
Finally, after you have completed your practice, however short or long, and are starting to feel relaxation and calm settling in, go to bed. Take your savasana here. Focus on your breath and let yourself drift away....
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
How Yoga Changed My Life - new blogging from local yogini!
Our local yoga community is full of interesting people! Bridget Hales started a blog this spring and has been posting about yoga, wellness, parenting, and food (yum!). I encourage you to check out her blog, she has such a lovely writing voice - http://hotteatravelandthyme.blogspot.com/ - her latest post is How Yoga Changed My Life :-) Enjoy and let her know it!
Sunday, July 6, 2014
Can you believe it? Humans prefer an electric shock to being left alone with their thoughts
This experiment blew my mind! We clearly need more practice being with ourselves... what do you think? Do you spend time with yourself, alone? Honestly, its one of my favorite things to do but I do still distract myself an awful lot (especially with all my electronics). *I am inspired now to put them down more often, less I get to a point where I'd rather shock myself than do nothing with myself*
Read on for the article From The Verge - http://www.theverge.com/2014/7/4/5870573/rather-electrocute-ourselves-than-be-alone-with-thoughts By Arielle Duhaime-Ross
Humans prefer an electric shock to being left alone with their thoughts
The experiment was simple. All the participants had to do was enter an empty room, sit down, and think for six to 15 minutes. But without a cellphone, a book, or a television screen to stare at, the assignment quickly became too much to handle. In fact, even when individuals were given time to "prepare" for being alone — meaning that they were able to plan what they would think about during their moments of solitude — the participants still "found it hard," Timothy Wilson, a psychologist at the University of Virginia and lead author of the study, told The Washington Post. "People didn’t like it much."
Read on for the article From The Verge - http://www.theverge.com/2014/7/4/5870573/rather-electrocute-ourselves-than-be-alone-with-thoughts By Arielle Duhaime-Ross
Humans prefer an electric shock to being left alone with their thoughts
The experiment was simple. All the participants had to do was enter an empty room, sit down, and think for six to 15 minutes. But without a cellphone, a book, or a television screen to stare at, the assignment quickly became too much to handle. In fact, even when individuals were given time to "prepare" for being alone — meaning that they were able to plan what they would think about during their moments of solitude — the participants still "found it hard," Timothy Wilson, a psychologist at the University of Virginia and lead author of the study, told The Washington Post. "People didn’t like it much."
So the researchers decided to give each participant the option of doing something else, besides just thinking. But what they came up with wasn’t exactly pleasant because, instead of just sitting there, participants were now also allowed to shock themselves as many times as they liked with a device containing a 9 volt battery. Still, for many, that option seemed like a better deal.
Most of the people who decided to shock themselves did so seven times. These results baffled the researchers. "I mean, no one was going to shock themselves by choice," Wilson, told The Washington Post in reference to his initial position during the conception of the study, published yesterday in Science. One man even gave himself 190 electric shocks over a period of 15 minutes, Wilson told The Atlantic, but his data points weren’t included in the final analysis. "I’m still just puzzled by that."
Still, the fact that they chose to shock themselves at all, on their own, was unexpected. And this had nothing to do with curiosity about what the shocks would feel like, because the researchers made sure that each individual received a shock before the beginning of the session.
Yet, people voluntarily shocking themselves repeatedly wasn’t the only surprise. According to the researchers, men showed a marked preference for the negative stimulation. Out of 24 women, only six decided to shock themselves, but 12 out of the 18 male participants figured electric shocks were worthwhile. This, the researchers hypothesize, might have to do with the fact that men appear to be more willing to take risks for the sake of a intense and complex experiences than women.
The results of this study are tentative, however, and the sample sizes — a total of 11 experiments that included between 40 and 100 university students each — were fairly small, so researchers will need to repeat them. But for now, it would appear that humans, especially men, seem to prefer receiving negative, even painful stimulation, to suffering through the bouts of obligatory "mind-wandering" — which you could also call "boredom," depending on how you want to look at it.
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Finding Your Happiest Yoga Hips - Integrated Practice and Pelvic Floor Awareness
Our final class incorporates some awareness of the pelvic floor and exploration of how the many ways our hips move can enhance our postures...
The pelvic floor isn't really a part of
the hips, but it can have a very significant impact on the hips if it
is tight. This will impact flexibility in the hips as it inhibits
ROM for the pelvis and sacrum – as you already know most of the hip
muscles attach to these two boney structures.
Go ahead and lie down and let's find
the muscles groups that form the pelvic floor. The contraction of
these muscles can be very subtle, especially if they are tight, so
focus and be patient with yourself. Lie in Supta Baddha Konasana
(knees apart, feet together), this stretches the pelvic floor a bit
and can make it easier to sense.
- The first (outermost) layer of your
pelvic floor attaches public bone ↔ tailbone. Draw these bones
toward each other, can you sense the layer? What else happens in
your body?
- The second layer attaches SITZ bone ↔ SITZ bone. Draw these bones toward each other, can you sense the layer? What else happens in your body?
- The third layer attaches sacrum ↔ pubic bone. Draw these toward each other, can you sense the layer? What happens elsewhere in your body?
- Try engaging all the layer – what does that feel like, what do you notice?
- Deepen your breath – can you feel it as it moves your organs toward your pelvic floor? If you can, try contracting the pelvic floor, then the belly as you exhale – really moving the breath UP.
For our hips purposes, we are not going
to work on strengthening these muscles, rather we will focus on
awareness to bring a greater understanding to their role and maybe a
little extra relaxation. For all intents and purposes, these muscles
are really a part of your core, working with your central body
muscles, i.e. abs. As you move through your practice, take a moment in each pose and see if you can sense the role of your pelvic floor.
As you practice, explore the engagement
and release of different muscle groups toward the enhancement of the
pose. How would it feel to engage more internal rotation in your utkatasana or uttanasana? How would it feel to engage more flexion in your anjaneyasanas? Experiment, play, develop your awareness. Each body is different, find what support you best, find what opens your pose more deliciously. Consider working antagonist groups against each other (these are muscles that oppose each other - flexors/extensors, adductors/abductors, internal rotators/external rotators). Incorporate this new knowledge into your everyday practice for happier hips.
Note – I am working on a pelvic floor
series class and will offer it as soon as I find the time. Stay
tuned!
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Yoga for Happy Hips: Rotators
Marisa's Class Notes:
External Rotation – the “Deep Six”
external rotators attaching from sacrum and pelvis to femur +
gluteous maximus, with a little help from some of your hip flexors
and adductors. Most of us have some natural turn out here because of
how our thigh bones sit in the acetabulum. But many of us have more
turn out than that because these muscles are tight from every
postures esp. sitting and stressing. This can lead to piriformis
syndrome (often called sciatica) as one of the deep six – the
piriformus – gets tight and applies pressure to the sciatic nerve.
If these are tight for you, a very simply way to stretch them is to
change your standing posture so that the insides of your feet are
parallel instead of turned out.
Find your external rotators with Gary's
Twist - lie on back, take one leg over body into twist. Turning from hips, turn kneecap toward sky. You should feel this distinctly in your bottom.
Internal Rotation – the internal
rotators and the abductors are one and the same – minimus, medius,
and tfl with a little help from a couple of your hams.
Normal range of motion for both is
about 45 degrees. We will explore this in our practice where you should feel the movement of internal rotation under the hand on your hip. In external rotation, try to shift the work out of the space under your hand and into your bottom, nearer your sacrum.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Happy Hips: Yoga for Adductors (inner thighs) and Abductors (outer hips)
From the second in our Happy Hips Series Class...
Marisa's Notes:
Adductors – muscles
of the inner thigh. Some are short, some are long. All connect
sequentially to thigh bone or lower leg bones. All connect to pubic
bone (and one also connects to SITZ). These muscles bring your legs
together (ADD them together!) Need a visual? Check here and look for the inner thigh muscles.
Find them - Lie down, use a
strap to help find your adductors. Be sure they are all inner thigh,
not the inside back of your thigh (the inner hamstring often
stretches with the adductors). Reasonable ROM here is supine, 90
degrees at hips, take leg to the side. Each side should be able to
achieve 45 degree angle or more without lifting opposite hip or
changing hip crease angle. Bear in mind, this assumes normal ROM in
hams. When strengthened in asana, these muscles are major
stabilizers, bringing in your center of gravity and taking excess
work from surrounding muscles.
---
Abductors – Outer hip.
These guys really hold your leg in the hip socket and help with
everyday activities like walking. Tensor Fascia Latae TFL (talked about last week),
gluteus medius and gluteus minimus. Need a visual? Look here.
Find your abductors – lie
on your side, hand on hip between the top of your pelvis and the head of your thigh bone. Lift leg with knee pointing straight
ahead (no rotation) and no movement of pelvis, you should feel those muscles engage. This is also a great
way to strengthen. Good ROM varies, mostly due to the restriction of
other muscles and the shape of your acetabulum.
These are also stabilizers
and worked against one another, the adds and abs can help you gain
more space in your hip and better balance. See if you can activate
these muscles in the standing leg of you tree pose. While working
against each other, you can also gain greater ROM in flexion and
extension as they seat the hip. In other words, its worth playing
with these muscles isometically in most yoga poses, even (maybe
especially as it will increase your proprioception) when they are
being stretched.
In the accompanying practice, you may wish to do Yin Half Frog if your adductors are a great deal tighter on one side than the other. Spend more time on the side that is tighter and do the looser side first (this sends signals to the tighter side to begin to let go). To do half frog, lie on your belly and take one leg out to the side, right angles in ankle, knee and hip.
For the Trikonasana (Triangle pose) be sure to work to keep the back abductors (outer hip) engaged as you move. This is not easy but will greatly develop your awareness.
Monday, June 9, 2014
Yoga for Happy Hips! Flexors and Extensors
We are starting up a series for Happy Hips tonight at Yoga del Sol. Exploring anatomy, yin asana and slow flow movement for better functioning hips. Juicy! Here is the home practice for our first week - working with flexors and extensors. Short and sweet :-) And for those of you that are geeks like me, you can find my class notes below...
Complex joint – Femur head into the
acetabulum of pelvis.
Ligaments hold the bone in the socket
and allow it range of motion in every direction.
Muscularly very complex. Muscles to
move the femur in all those directions, many performing more than one
action. All these muscles attach to other aspects of the body,
creating a variety of tug of wars up into the back and belly, down
into the knees.
So, if your hips aren't happy, chances
are something else isn't happy either. And chances are good that
that something else made itself known before the hips became obvious.
Common ailments of the hips..
Osteo-Arthritis – inflammation of the
joint
Osteoporosis – loss of bone density
Bursitis – inflammation of the bursa
(the fluid filled cushions within the joint)
Sciatica/Piriformis Syndrome –
Sciatica comes from the vertabra, not a hip condition tho it sure
feels like it! Piriformis Syndrone is the compression of the sciatic
nerve.
Stand up and try all movements...
Hips can flex, extend, internally
rotate, externally rotate, abduct, adduct.
We will focus on flexion and extension
today.
Hip Flexors = quads, iliopsoas, tfl,
with a little help from your adductors
Are you tight or loose in the flexors?
Lie down and draw one knee in toward
your chest, allowing the extended leg to be completely relaxed. If
that extended leg pops up, you've got tight flexors.
Normal range of motion is 125 degrees
for flexion.
Now, if you don't have normal range of
motion, that may not be the fault of your flexors, but of your
extensors that are the antagonists to flexion.
Extensors = Hams, Gluteous Maximus
If you had trouble drawing your knee
toward your chest, you may have a tight gluteous maximus. It may
also be about your low back
How do you know if your hams are tight?
Stand up in Mountain Pose and put your hands on your low back,
notice the lumbar curve. With your knees straight but not locked,
begin to fold at the hip crease (what is this?). Stop when it feels
like you can go no further without bending your knees or rounding
your low back. Your flexors just made that happen! If your hams are
tight you will not have achieved the normal range of motion of 80
degrees flexion that your hams should allow for. As for extension,
normal extension for the hip is 10-15 degrees. If you are not able
to achieve this, its possible that your flexors are tight or your
extensors are weak (they are notorious for this).
In order to truly strengthen muscles,
they need a certain amount of flexibility. If they are too tight,
there won't be reasonable communication to the muscle fibers, as well
the muscle fibers will not be able to contract as they are already
tight. This is why the stretch is as important as the strength. We
will be starting our practices with yin yoga to provide this stretch.
Yin affects the ligaments, tendons, and fascia that surrounds the
muscles, as well as the muscles themselves. We begin with this
passive stretch before moving into stretch AND strengthen to build
strength and greater flexibility.
Practice
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Three Essential Yoga Poses
The other day, I told someone that I thought Supported Fish Pose was one of the three pose just about everyone should do every day. I was speaking off the cuff, just thinking that it was a great pose, almost all of us could really use it, and that it probably wasn't the only pose like this. Well, they called me on it and asked, "What are the other two poses?" I thought about it and this is what I came up with and why, in no particular order...
- Obviously, Supported Fish Pose. This is the restorative pose where you roll a blanket, put it down behind your seated self like a tail, and then lie down with the blanket the length of your spine. This puts the muscles in your upper back, in particular, in slack so they can FINALLY take a break. Its a great stretch for the front of your chest and shoulders and provides a lovely, gentle, supported backbend for your low back. This is an important pose for most of us because we generally spend alot of our day hunched forward or reaching forward - driving, typing, doing fine motor work, etc. I think a good 5-10 minutes here is time VERY well spent :-) and gives you the benefits of savasana at the same time. How's that for multi-tasking!?
- Tadasana, Samasthithi, Mountain Pose. These are essentially all the same pose. Each yoga tradition tends to describe it and name it a little differently. Essentially, you are standing with weight even on the 4 corners of your two feet, stacking your joints, lengthening your spine and strengthening your core gently. This is a great pose as it forces equilibrium in your body - hold this pose for a few minutes and you will notice the intelligence of your muscles adjusting to support your here in this alert, relatively relaxed position. It requires that you not slouch, not compensate. And this leads to better posture and support in all that you do, all day long. I recommend holding it for 5 minutes at a time.
- Active Reclined Bound Angle (Supta Baddha Konasana). For this pose, lie down on your back with the soles of your feet together, knees wide apart. Engage your belly just enough to keep a natural lumbar curve in your lower back. Begin by completely relaxing your inner thighs and groin. This may take some prop support under your bottom or legs. Then, move as slowly as you can, almost imperceptibly, to bring your knees together and the soles of you feet to the floor. Keep breathing as you do this, using the least amount of effort possible - that means no help from your shoulders :-). Moving the legs up and down in rhythm with your breath is a nice way to build strength and relaxing in this pose is a nice way to stretch. But by moving so slowly, not quite relaxing, not quite efforting, you begin to notice where you work unneccesarily and how to more effectively isolate essential effort. This is especially important for the inner thigh and pelvic region as its an are that we tend to hold emotional tension as well as physical tension. This focussed work helps to release both and leaves the body/self more flexible (and the back a whole lot happier). I recommend repeating this moving pose at least 5 times in a row, resting in between as you need to.
So, there you have it. The 3 yoga poses that I think most of us would benefit most from. Try doing them every day for a couple weeks and let me know what happens!
- Obviously, Supported Fish Pose. This is the restorative pose where you roll a blanket, put it down behind your seated self like a tail, and then lie down with the blanket the length of your spine. This puts the muscles in your upper back, in particular, in slack so they can FINALLY take a break. Its a great stretch for the front of your chest and shoulders and provides a lovely, gentle, supported backbend for your low back. This is an important pose for most of us because we generally spend alot of our day hunched forward or reaching forward - driving, typing, doing fine motor work, etc. I think a good 5-10 minutes here is time VERY well spent :-) and gives you the benefits of savasana at the same time. How's that for multi-tasking!?
- Tadasana, Samasthithi, Mountain Pose. These are essentially all the same pose. Each yoga tradition tends to describe it and name it a little differently. Essentially, you are standing with weight even on the 4 corners of your two feet, stacking your joints, lengthening your spine and strengthening your core gently. This is a great pose as it forces equilibrium in your body - hold this pose for a few minutes and you will notice the intelligence of your muscles adjusting to support your here in this alert, relatively relaxed position. It requires that you not slouch, not compensate. And this leads to better posture and support in all that you do, all day long. I recommend holding it for 5 minutes at a time.
- Active Reclined Bound Angle (Supta Baddha Konasana). For this pose, lie down on your back with the soles of your feet together, knees wide apart. Engage your belly just enough to keep a natural lumbar curve in your lower back. Begin by completely relaxing your inner thighs and groin. This may take some prop support under your bottom or legs. Then, move as slowly as you can, almost imperceptibly, to bring your knees together and the soles of you feet to the floor. Keep breathing as you do this, using the least amount of effort possible - that means no help from your shoulders :-). Moving the legs up and down in rhythm with your breath is a nice way to build strength and relaxing in this pose is a nice way to stretch. But by moving so slowly, not quite relaxing, not quite efforting, you begin to notice where you work unneccesarily and how to more effectively isolate essential effort. This is especially important for the inner thigh and pelvic region as its an are that we tend to hold emotional tension as well as physical tension. This focussed work helps to release both and leaves the body/self more flexible (and the back a whole lot happier). I recommend repeating this moving pose at least 5 times in a row, resting in between as you need to.
So, there you have it. The 3 yoga poses that I think most of us would benefit most from. Try doing them every day for a couple weeks and let me know what happens!
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Yoga for Tax Time
Trying my best to get all my tax stuff together, always a challenge, always confusing. Here's my release...
Try it out - Lion's Breath - Calm inhale, roar out your exhale as you stretch your tongue out from the root and look up. Ah, so much better!
Laughter is good stress relief, too :-)
Friday, January 31, 2014
Anatomy and Asana for WRISTS!
Last night at Yoga del Sol, I led a Asana and Anatomy workshop on Wrists. As promised, here are my notes from the class. Notes are never a complete class or explanation, so feel free to ask if you have questions....
ANATOMY - 8 carpals (PRACTICE - find a partner, see if you can feel
all 8 bones:-), they articular with each other, with the metacarpals
on your hand and with the radius, (The ulna articulates with a disc
rather than the bones themselves) No two of these bones have the
same movements! That’s one complicated joint! Actually almost
like many different joints. These bones are circled by a
retinaculum. This thick band of connective tissue is like a cuff
holding the bones and holding the long tendons that run elbow to
fingers in place close to the bone. That’s alot literally bound up
in there. PRACTICE - on one another, smooth out the flexor (palmar)
retinaculum.
There are NO muscles specific to the wrist! There are muscles that
pass through the wrist and the wrist itself is controlled by the
muscles of the forearms. So how do we support the wrist when we are
in poses that are weight bearing or creating force on the wrist? We
have to use the forearms, which are usually weak and tight from
everyday use. Its a funny thing, when we are weightbearing on our
feet in yoga, we get that we have to engage the feet and the legs,
its the only way to stand tall. But when we are weightbearing on the
hands, we tend to just let them be curled and soft. Initially, it
may be uncomfortable to support the hands as we develop strength and
flexibility in the muscles but it must be done if they are to do
their job.
PRACTICE – Lifting
the arch of the hand. Notice that there is an indentation in the
palm of your hand. With your hand flat, Increase the depth of that
indentation. You can do this looking at the palm of your hand and
seeing it happen. You should do this with every posture that is
weightbearing on your wrists. Try it in table, Down Dog, and Plank –
palms down, fingers wide, lifting the arch of the hand. You will feel
this in your hands and forearms.
The nerves that pass through the wrist mostly originate in the neck.
Nerve pain felt in the wrist could be a result though of compression
anywhere from the neck to the wrist.
Common Wrist Syndromes:
Tendonitis, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Osteaoarthritis, Carpel Tunnel
Syndrome, Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
There is an arch in the carpals - the carpal tunnel - many tendons
pass through here as does a major nerve. If the retinaculum is
tight or the bones have shifted or there is inflammation in the
tendons, this will cause irritation of the nerve as it rubs against
its surroundings and becomes compressed.
PRACTICES for improving ROM and Strength in the Wrists:
moving each finger joint with the wrist in neutral. Can even use the
other hand to limit the movement of other joints. Work with both
flexion and extension. And work with moving one finger at a time.
Strengthen by bending first joint and pressing outward to lengthen
fingers to straight. This is done with the wrist bent. Can resist
with other palm or floor.
Hand in fist by side working with lateral flexion. Can also be done
with a weight in hand.
Hand in fist, elbow
flexed, flex and extend wrist. Can also be done with weights.
Losing ROM in larger
joints (i.e. shoulders) places greater strain on smaller joints (ie
elbows and wrists) we are very familiar with this of course in
relation to knees and hips, but also true in wrists esp for poses
that put pressure on the wrists. Opening your shoulders can make
your wrists happier :-)
Tightness in the muscles over your thoracic outlet can not just
impinger nerves creating pain in wrists, but can restrict
blood/oxygen flow further exacerbating the situation and making
healing challenging. Rounded upper back, hunched shoulders = bad
news for wrists.
Even a misalignment in your hip or spine can contribute to wrist pain
(see above). So, for the best possible comfort in a pose, esp a pose
with weighted hands, watch the alignment of your WHOLE body!
Practices for
encouraging full ROM in shoulders:
PRACTICE - Facing wall, pigeon toed to encourage lumbar curve - arms
up back of hands to wall, then quarter way down, then halfway down,
holding about 1 minute in each position. This encourages proper ROM
function and engagement in shoulders, elbows, and wrists. Don’t
strain but notice where you feel restriction, this gives you info as
to what to work on to gain greater everyday comfort.
PRACTICE –
Supported Fish
PRACTICES TO BRING
INTO YOUR ASANA TO ALLEVIATE STRAIN ON THE WRISTS:
PRACTICE - arm in front of you with palm down. Rotate your palm up.
You cannot do this without moving your whole arm - it requires proper
mobility in shoulder and elbow, not just wrist. We do this rotation
in the shoulder in Downward Dog to engage the shoulder and and
serratus anterior without compromising the thoracic outlet - this
also helps alleviate pressure on your wrist as you are no longer
“hanging out” in your joints. TRY IT in Down Dog, plank and
table pose.
Whenever your wrist rotates, the ulna and radius cross over each
other like crossing your fingers. This narrows your wrist,
particularly inhibiting if you have carpel tunnel syndrome. This
repetitive motion can cause pain and burning in the wrist. PRACTICE-
Down Dog, Plank and table without rotating the wrist. Anytime you
have a body part weighted on the floor, you always want the most
surface area possible! This can also be an eye-opening practice in
Side Plank. Just remember, Side Plank is an awesome pose for wrists
when your alignment is right on (lining up your wrist, elbow and
shoulder joints vertically) but its a TERRIBLE pose for your wrists
when your alignment is off.
PRACTICE - stand with elbow tucked in to side, bent to 90 and palm
up. Now, rotate your palm down keeping your elbow tucked in. If the
palm doesn’t turn all the way over, it may be because the elbow
doesn’t have its proper range of motion and is asking the wrist to
do more rotation than its built for. This limitation in the elbow
may be coming from elbow or shoulder. Working with this rotation
with both palm and Shoulder/Upper Arm fixed can really change your
Chataraga for the good!
*Basic reminders for
poses where the hands are weightbearing -
Press palms down
with fingers spread wide
Lift the arch of
your hand
Turn the eyes of
your elbows forward without locking your elbows.
*In Chataranga and
Plank – type poses, remember they are core poses NOT upper body
poses, reach back through your heels, engage your core!
*In Down Dog-type
poses, don't worry about getting your heels to the floor. Bend the
knees and take your weight back, chest toward knees and reduce the
angle of your wrists (they should be coming toward flat toward the
floor.
Good references:
Pain Free by Pete
Egoscue for whole body practices
Yoga Body by Judith
Hanson Lasater – text not practices.
Anatronica.com or
Gray's Anatomy for anatomy
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