Same stretch. Less discomfort.
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]]>Ask most yoga students what they鈥檇 like to focus on during class and they鈥檒l likely say hip openers. More specifically, they usually request the forward-folding version of that鈥檚 commonly known as Pigeon Pose.
Pigeon Pose certainly has its benefits. The intense stretch can offer a satisfying鈥攕ome might say grimace-inducing鈥攅xperience. The forward-folding nature of the pose also creates an opportunity for turning inward and downregulating thoughts and emotions.
But for some, those benefits come at a price.
The intensity that some of us experience during Pigeon Pose is a reminder that the popularity of a pose doesn鈥檛 make it appropriate for all bodies. In fact, the commonly accepted alignment for the pose requires a range of motion in the front hip that鈥檚 unrealistic for many of us.
If you experience difficulty in Pigeon it doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean that you need to try harder or breathe into it. It鈥檚 not you that鈥檚 the problem. It鈥檚 the pose.
The first issue is the shape of Pigeon Pose. One commonly taught version of the pose is hips squared forward, front knee bent at a 90-degree angle, with the front shin roughly parallel with the front edge of the mat. Many teachers no longer insist on this alignment, thanks to an understanding that bodies vary in joint positioning and range of motion. Yet this shape is still perceived by many students as the preferred expression.
Bringing the front shin almost parallel to the front of the mat demands almost 90 degrees of external rotation in the front hip. The average range of motion in that plane is 40 to 50 degrees. Attempting to force yourself into this right angle can cause your front knee to rotate slightly as compensation for the hip. But knees allow for very little rotation, especially when bent at 90 degrees. Attempting to go past your natural limits can be problematic for the ligaments and internal structures of the knee, including the meniscus.
A more commonly taught alternative of Pigeon is to deeply bend the front knee and bring the front heel toward the opposite hip. While that reduces the degree of hip rotation to within a normal range, it now demands the full normal range of knee flexion. For some students, shifting a significant amount of body weight onto a knee this deeply flexed can be uncomfortable, especially for those with less range of motion in knee flexion, knee osteoarthritis or bursitis, or a knee replacement.
The second structural concern with Pigeon Pose is that it involves significant pelvic asymmetry. We think of the pelvis as being completely rigid and the hip socket as the moving part in yoga poses. In reality, our pelvis has slightly moveable ligamentous joints, including the sacroiliac joints on both sides of the posterior pelvis. The joints only allow for very slight movement between the pelvis and sacrum, but for some students, even this small discrepancy between the tension on one side of the sacrum and the other can be uncomfortable or destabilizing.
Finally, there鈥檚 no such thing as 鈥渙ne size fits all鈥� when it comes to Pigeon or any part of the physical practice of yoga. We vary in our joint shapes and positions, in our proportions, in our movement habits, in our postural patterns, and, frankly, in our preferences. The days of believing in rigid alignment in a pose or the fact that the pose you hate the most is the one you need the most are (hopefully) over.
Regardless of what you do or do not experience in your knees, sacrum, or spirit, there are bound to be days when you鈥檇 prefer to be somewhere鈥攁nywhere鈥攐ther than Pigeon Pose. What if you listened to that?
Fortunately, there are other options than suffering through a pose that, for whatever reason, is uncomfortable. Which alternative you choose depends on what works for your body聽and what aspect of Pigeon Pose you want to experience.
If you prefer a posterior hip stretch, you want a pose that takes one or both hips into flexion (folding forward at the hips) and external rotation (the thigh moving away from your body), such as Deer Pose, Easy Pose, Bound Angle, and Reclining Figure 4.
If you seek an adductor stretch, you want a pose with the knees wide, such as Bound Angle.
If you want to release physical tension, there鈥檚 potential for you to turn inward and experience the energetic shift that many students associate with Pigeon Pose in any of these poses, as long as you find a version that鈥檚 not overly intense.
Perhaps the most outwardly similar alternative to Pigeon is the Yin Yoga posture known as Deer Pose, which can be more comfortable for your front knee. As in the most intense version of Pigeon, the front leg takes a right angle but the pose allows the pelvis to tilt to the side and rests on the mat. The back knee bends and slides out to the side, with the thigh roughly at a right angle from the front leg, lifting the back leg sit bone. As you lean forward onto your hands, forearms or a prop, the back leg carries a little more of your body weight than it would if extended behind you in Pigeon.
The adjustment in pelvic position decreases the level of external rotation required by the front leg. The more you tilt the pelvis, the less external rotation you experience in the front hip.
How to: You can move into Deer Pose the same way you would enter Pigeon Pose, either from all fours or Downward-Facing Dog. Bring your right knee forward to the mat near your right wrist. Lower your left knee to the mat if it isn鈥檛 already. Ground your right sit bone as you bring your right shin roughly parallel to the front of the mat. Slide your bent left knee forward until your left thigh is roughly at a right angle to your right thigh. Lean your torso forward toward your right knee until you feel a gentle stretch along your right outer hip, then either prop yourself with straight arms, rest on your forearms, or use a prop to support your hands or chest. Breathe here. When you are ready, repeat on the other side.
This cross-legged sitting position engages the same front-leg action of Pigeon and Deer while bringing the back leg all the way forward to a cross-legged seat. This significantly reduces pelvic asymmetry. Grounding through both sit bones shifts some of your body weight from your knees toward your pelvis. If your knees are sensitive to load, wedge props underneath your outer thighs to help support the remaining weight.
How to: You can move toward Easy Pose the same way you would enter Pigeon, whether from all fours or Downward-Facing Dog. Bring your right knee forward to rest behind your right wrist and ground your right sit bone as you bring your right shin roughly parallel to the front of the mat. Swing your left leg forward and cross it in front of your right. Position your legs so that each knee aligns roughly with the sole of the opposite foot, and ground through the little toe side of both feet to slightly lift your outer ankles. Press evenly into both sit bones to lift and lengthen your back. Hinge forward until you feel a gentle stretch along your outer hips, then either brace yourself on straight arms, forearms, or a prop, and breathe. When you are ready, repeat with your other shin in front.
This seated forward bend offers the hip flexion and external rotation of Pigeon, but increases pelvic symmetry. The knees are positioned further away from the body than in Pigeon, which allows potential for an adductor stretch. Again, props wedged under the outer thighs can help support remaining body weight for sensitive knees.
How to: Set up for Bound Angle Pose as if you were coming into a cross-legged position but instead of crossing your legs, bring the soles of your feet together. Press evenly into both sit bones to lift and lengthen your back. Hinge forward until you feel a gentle stretch along your outer hips or inner thighs, then either brace yourself on straight arms, forearms, or a prop, and breathe.
This pose flips the script somewhat. It doesn鈥檛 look much like Pigeon, but the pose places both hips in flexion and external rotation, just like the front leg in Pigeon. Although bringing the legs close together offers less potential for an adductor stretch, resting the top knee on the bottom knee lifts the leg closer to the chest and front of the pelvis, providing an even better posterior hip stretch. You can accentuate that stretch by folding forward at the hips.
How to: Enter Cow-Face Pose from all fours or Downward-Facing Dog. Bring your right knee forward to the mat near your right wrist, then lower your right sit bone to the ground. Sweep your left leg forward to cross your inner left thigh on top of your right, bringing each heel may be close to the opposite hip. Your knees might even stack. Press evenly into both sit bones to lift and lengthen your torso. Hinge forward until you feel a gentle stretch along your outer hips, then either brace yourself on straight arms or lean your torso onto your top thigh or a prop, and breathe. When you are ready, retrace your steps and repeat on your other side.
This is the most supported alternative to Pigeon. Although Reclining Figure 4 features the greatest deviation from it in appearance, it retains hip flexion and external rotation of Pigeon. Lying on your back with your knee at a right angle and your ankle resting on the opposite knee allows you to take a position that stretches the relevant tissues without burdening the joints with your weight. Although the spine is now neutral rather than bending forward, the payoff of allowing the floor to support you can feel even more restful and introspective than a seated forward fold.
How to: Lie on your back with your knees bent and your feet on the mat. Lift your right foot and cross your right ankle over your left knee, then let your right knee lean away from you toward the front of the mat. You might already feel a gentle stretch around your outer hip or inner thigh. If not, lift your left foot, reach your hands between your legs to clasp the back of your left thigh, and bring both legs toward your torso until you feel the sensation you鈥檙e seeking. You can also sway your lower body slightly to either side to shift the location and emphasis of the stretch. Find somewhere you can comfortably stay and breathe. When you are ready, release both feet back to the mat and repeat on your other side.
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About Our Contributor
聽is a聽聽offering group and one-on-one yoga sessions in Queenstown New Zealand, as well as on-demand at聽. Passionate about the real-world application of her studies in anatomy and alignment, Rachel uses yoga to help her students create strength, stability, and clarity of mind. Rachel also co-hosts the new聽.
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]]>A friendly reminder that there鈥檚 much more to a strong core than visible abs
The post 3 Common Misconceptions About Core Strength appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
]]>The burning sensation of building core strength can be incredibly satisfying,聽whether you鈥檙e holding a or struggling to finish your last set of crunches. That burn might bring you a sense of accomplishment, but it shouldn鈥檛 be your only measure of core strength.
The core is the literal center of your body, a key transition zone between your upper and lower limbs. When it is strong, it makes all of your movements more efficient.
But true core strength is not defined by tight, toned muscles and a flat belly.
The following misconceptions about core strength may be preventing you from fully developing your midsection. By learning how core strength is actually cultivated, you can develop your strength in ways that fully support your training and everyday life.
The formal name for the superficial 鈥渟ix pack鈥� muscle, which runs from the base of the sternum and the front ribs to the pubic bone, is the rectus abdominis. You can feel this muscle engage during crunches, in聽a , at the top of a push-up, and in yoga arm balances such as When it fully contracts, it causes you to scoop your belly and round your low back.
But there鈥檚 much more to core strength than the rectus abdominis. A number of muscles surround and support your midsection and enable you to move in all different directions, including the internal and external obliques, transverse abdominis, erector spinae, quadratus lumborum, and the respiratory diaphragm, as well as the pelvic diaphragm.
Explore core workouts that engage all of these muscles, which could be as simple as adding supermans and to your usual routine. While the results aren鈥檛 always visible, you will feel the difference in your ability to perform challenging exercises with less strain.
Concentric contraction, when you draw the two ends of a muscle closer to one another, might be the most common way to build strength. But it鈥檚 not the only way.
A muscle can also be strengthened with isometric contractions, which tense the muscle without changing its length. For example, when you stop and hold steady at any point during an ab crunch or maintain .
Strength also develops through eccentric contractions, which engage a muscle as it lengthens under load, such as when you lower your head and shoulders slowly back to the floor after that crunch.
A varied approach to core strength training is key to support your everyday movements.
A truly functional core is about more than strength alone. Developing your abdominal muscles also includes stretching them in a variety of ways for flexibility and mobility. Your capacity to twist or side bend requires flexibility in the obliques and quadratus lumborum. Your ability to come into backbends relies on elasticity in the rectus abdominis and the other anterior muscles of the core. It鈥檚 more important that your workout be thorough and well-rounded than exhausting.
By all means, savor that burn if you like. But don鈥檛 let your core strength workout end there.
is a offering group and one-on-one yoga sessions in Queenstown New Zealand, as well as on-demand at . Passionate about the real-world application of her studies in anatomy and alignment, Rachel uses yoga to help her students create strength, stability, and clarity of mind. Rachel also co-hosts the new
The post 3 Common Misconceptions About Core Strength appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.
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