Basic Yoga Postures and their Variations
1. THE COBRA Do this in easy stages. Lie
down, face prone, legs tightly together and stretched back,
forehead on the floor. Put your hands, palm down, just
under your shoulders. Inhale and raise your head, pressing
your neck back, now use your hands to push your trunk up
until you are bending in a beautiful arc from your lower
spine to the back of your neck.
You need go no further than this. However, if you are supple
enough, you can now straighten your arms completely, bend the
legs at the knees and drop your head back to touch your feet.
Even if your head goes nowhere near your feet, drop it back as
far as possible and hold the posture with deep breathing. Come
out of the posture very slowly, returning to the face prone
posture. Relax with your head to one side. Repeat.
2. THE BOW This is also an extreme version
of the simple bow. It is surprising how many children can do it
immediately. Take it, once again, in easy stages. Lie face
prone on your mat. If you are very slim have a nice thick,
padded mat for this one. Inhale and bend your knees up. Stretch
back with your arms and catch hold of your ankles, keeping
fingers and thumbs all together on the outside. Inhale and at
the same time raise your head and chest, pulling at your ankles
and lifting knees and thighs off the floor.
Breathe normally, trying to kick up your legs higher and
lifting your head up. You are now bent like a bow, balancing
the weight of your body on your abdomen. You can stop right
here but if you can still stretch further, then slide your
hands down your legs, lift them higher, keep the knees together
and pull back as much as you can. Hold for a few normal deep
breaths, then relax back to the face-prone position, head to
one side.
3. THE SHOOTING BOW In Sanskrit this is
known as Akarna Dhanurasana and one leg is drawn up like a
shooting bow. Sit with both legs stretched out in front and
back straight. Reach forward with both hands and clasp your
feet, catching the right foot with the left hand and the left
foot with the right hand. Inhale, bend the left knee and pull
the foot across the body, close to your chest, pointing the
elbow up and twisting the body slightly to the right.
The left hand stays firm and tight, holding the right foot.
Hold posture with normal breathing, release slowly, and relax.
Repeat on other side. In the beginning it is enough to hold the
bent left leg with the right hand. When this is easy, stretch
down and hold the left foot with the right hand. Continue to
pull on the left foot, lifting it higher on each
exhalation.
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