Showing posts with label hamstrings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hamstrings. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Featured Pose: Reclined Leg Stretch Sequence

by Baxter and Nina

The Reclined Leg Stretch sequence (Supta Padangusthasana) opens your hips and stretches the backs of your legs. It’s a perfect starting pose for just about any practice, as we usually like to start low (on the ground, that is!) and work up to standing poses. But it also works as a great standalone mini practice, providing relief for lower back pain or release of leg muscle tension due to sitting, traveling, or walking. And if you tend to store stress in your body, it’s also a great anti-stress pose after any stressful event or simply at the end of your work day.

The three variations of the pose take you first through forward folding at your hip joint, then, with your top leg out to the side, abduction of the femur, and finally, with your leg across the midline of your body, into a twist, adduction of the femur and rotation of the lower vertebrae of the spine, so you get overall opening of your hips and some twisting, too.

Baxter prescribes this pose for:
  • any musculoskeletal conditions that result in tightness in the hamstrings, hips and lower back
  • chronic back pain
  • general knee conditioning
  • stress relief
Instructions: Start by making a loop with the strap and have it ready off to your right side.
Now recline on your back, bend your right knee into your chest, place the loop over the arch of your right foot and straighten your leg toward the sky. Adjust the size of the loop so your arms can be comfortably straight. Press from both your hips to your heels. Stay in this version one for 14-16 breaths.

For the next variation, keep your bottom leg engaged and take the loop into your right hand and extend your left arm out to the side. Now slowly take your right leg out to the right side of the room until your foot is about 12 inches off the floor. If this feels painful or like too much effort is required to hold your leg in position, place a block or folded blanket under your right thigh for support. Stay for 14-16 breaths and on a exhale return to your leg to vertical.
Finally, take the loop into your left hand and extend your right arm out to the side. Then take your right leg across the midline of your body and over to your left side about 6-12 inches, keeping your lower back and pelvis on the floor.
Stay for 14-16 breaths, then release out of the pose, returning to a symmetrical position, either with legs straight or both knees bent, feet resting on the floor. Take a few moments to feel your body, and then repeat the series on your left side.

Cautions: Don’t pull your top leg aggressively toward your chest (although you can encourage it in that direction) as this could result in a strain to the origin of your hamstrings at your sitting bone, as well as aggravating a lower back condition if your lower back ends up flattening too firmly into the floor.

If you have weak wrists and fingers, you may need to modify the strap by making a loop and hooking your fingers over the loop to hold onto the strap—this makes it much gentler and easier for fingers and wrists.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

ACCEPTING RECLINED LEG STRETCH


by Nina

An excellent time to combine acceptance with active engagement (as Baxter discussed in his post yesterday) is when you are doing yoga poses. By far, the healthiest and most effective way to do yoga poses is to cultivate an awareness of your body’s current state while at the same time actively working toward making changes to it, such as stretching or strengthening. This is one of the best ways to protect yourself from injury. And it also helps you reap the most benefits from your poses.

When I was trying to think of a pose that epitomized this need for both acceptance and active engagement, Reclined Leg Stretch pose (Supta Padangusthasana) sprang to mind. To be honest, that’s because every time I've taught the pose, I’ve seen people “cheat” (yes, I’m talking about you with the bent leg over there), a sure sign that the “acceptance” side of the equation is lacking.

Reclined Leg Stretch (Supta Padangusthasana) is a very beneficial pose because it revitalizes your legs while it eases tension in your lower back. It stretches your hamstring muscles and your hip joints, which is important for maintaining physical health if you sit at a desk or walk a lot. It is also helpful for lower back pain and maintaining a healthy back. And it’s a great way to begin a yoga practice or even to do as a “single pose practice.” Plus, you get to do it lying down!
  
Baxter prescribes it for:

  • leg fatigue or weakness
  • lower back conditions
  • arthritis
  • knee pain
  • swelling of feet and ankles
  • maintaining flexibility of the legs and hip joints as you age

However, most people are too tight in their hamstrings to do the pose like their teachers or the pictures they’ve seen, so some (not naming any names here) cheat by bending the knee of their top leg or by lifting their pelvis off the floor in order to bring their toe closer to their head.

,Can you do it like this? (From "Moving Toward Balance," Rodney Yee with Nina Zolotow)
But while cheating may make you feel more flexible, bending your top knee means that you won’t be getting the full hamstring stretch that’s so beneficial. So the next time you do this pose (and it’s a great one to practice at home), use a strap or belt around the arch your foot and hold the right side of the strap in your right hand, the left in your left hand. Now be honest with yourself. Is your upper leg truly straight? And is your pelvis resting evenly on the ground? If not, let your leg go until your knee is straight, your pelvis is even, and your leg reaches its natural angle (90 degrees or less, even much less). 

Using a strap. (From "Moving Toward Balance," Rodney Yee with Nina Zolotow)
That’s the acceptance part. The active engagement part is to stay in the pose for 45 to 90 seconds and to practice regularly. Although we can’t promise it, there’s a very good chance that over time this pose will increase your flexibility, making many other poses more comfortable and enhancing your physical health.

Some helpful variations:

  1. If your head and shoulders aren’t resting comfortably on the floor, use a folded blanket under your head.
  2. If you are so tight that it’s hard to hold your leg with a strap, do the pose with the bottom leg extending through a doorway and your top foot resting on the wall next to the doorway.
  3. If you want to strengthen your bottom leg as your stretch the top one, you can practice with your bottom foot pressing against a wall.

Cautions: If you have lower back issues, you may need to keep your bottom leg bent. If you have wrist issues, you may need to change the way you hold the strap.