Quantcast
NOT A MEMBER YET?

Experience Unlimited Yoga, Pilates, and Meditation Videos Online

My Yoga Online
MYO Newsletter - FREE!

Subscribe to our FREE Health and Wellness Newsletter full of inspirational articles on Yoga, Nutrition, Meditation, Healthy Recipes, Natural Body Care, and more....

View a
FREE YOGA VIDEO
when you sign up.

My Yoga Online

Archive for August, 2007

Protecting Wrists in Downward Facing Dog and Yoga Poses

Thursday, August 30th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

I teach Hatha Yoga classes at a variety of Yoga studios, some with carpet and some with hardwood flooring. Regardless of the flooring type, I often see common hand-placement errors in wrist-loading Yoga poses like Downward Facing Dog that can chronically lead to compression injuries in the wrists. Having the proper placement and understanding of how to manipulate the surface area of the hands can significantly reduce the incidence of wrist injuries in your Yoga practice.

The first issue to address is the floor type that we practice Yoga on. Most people find practicing on hardwood floors hard for the knees and other pressure points on the body. To create cushioning, many people practice in studios on two Yoga mats. This doubling of mats creates a similar problem to practicing with a Yoga mat on a carpet.

The thickness of two mats or of a mat on carpet causes the hands to sink into the soft support. When hand positions are even slightly off-balance, body weight is shifted even more into those sinking points. The wrists are next to fall into this compression and take this uneven energy.

What causes this uneven compression? Notice what happens to the connection points in the hands the next time you do Downward Facing Dog, Cat pose, Plank pose, Cobra pose or any other pose that positions your hands forward of the shoulders and applies pressure. As you move away from your hands in Downward Facing Dog or in the exhaled phase of Cat pose, do the inner regions of the hands (proximal index finger and knuckle) lift off the ground? Is there space flowing from the inner hand into the palm?

DownWard Facing Dog yoga pose Yoga Meditation and Inner Bliss Oneness with Yoga

When the inner hand lifts in these loaded poses and when we practice on thick surfaces, body weight transfers heavily to the outer wrist joints. These outer joints become easily compressed and, for some, result in acute or prolonged pain. Considering how static pressure increases when we decrease the surface area that the pressure is being applied to, we can easily decrease this damaging pressure by bringing attention to how we apply energy into the hands.

Before loading the hands in Yoga poses, align the wrists so the middle and index fingers roughly point forward or parallel with your mat. Send a gentle spread across the fingers without tension going into the wrists and arms. Allow a pause to lightly ground the proximal end of the index fingers and the index knuckles. Feel that you are already distributing your body forward out of the wrists and more evenly over the hands. Rather than the weight going into a small portion of the hands (high pressure), the weight is fanned out over a greater area (less pressure).

As you set up the rest of the pose, keep applying this gentle, inner grounding of the index region. You may feel as though you are slightly spiraling the forearm inwards. In Downward Facing Dog and Plank poses, this inwards spiral of the forearms, may draw the upper arm bones and shoulder blades forward. Therefore, a countering motion is required. A slight outwards spiral of the upper arms should be applied along with a light hugging of the shoulder blades back and down into the upper ribs.

There are various Yoga equipment products that can aid in reducing wrist compression as well. But I first recommend exploring how you can change hand placement and energy applications. If possible, practice with only one mat and thinner cushioning under the hands. Be more aware of the surfaces you practice on and add additional care to protecting the wrists in loading Yoga poses. As our practice is life-long, we need to perform Yoga poses mindfully to sustain the vitality of joints.

Popularity: 57% [?]

Green Garment Care

Thursday, August 30th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina

• Beware of Dry Cleaning. Though the industry is much-improved since 1992, there is still a high likelihood that your trusty corner cleaner uses tetrachloroethylene, a known carcinogen. See if there is a local green cleaner employing “wet cleaning” or liquid CO2 techniques. Many articles whose tags ask for the dry clean treatment can actually be hand washed, especially silk, wool and linen.

• Approach new fabrics with skeptical enthusiasm. Bamboo, for instance, sounds great: It’s a fast-growing plant, not reliant on chemicals, and beautifully drapes the human form. The trouble is, bamboo plantations can displace native forests, and harvesting and fiber processing are often polluting and unregulated.

• Wash with care. Wait until you have a full load, turn the clothes inside out and use the lowest water temperature possible. Choose phosphate-free and biodegradable detergents READ MORE….

Popularity: 48% [?]

Sustainable Clothes Shopping

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina

• Think about where your clothes come from. Clothing made under fair-wage and labour practices will usually advertise it.

• Wear organic. Though cotton is marketed as clean, fresh, and natural, conventional varieties are anything but. It takes a third of a pound of chemical fertilizers and pesticides READ MORE…

Popularity: 52% [?]

New Yoga Video - Seaside Yoga Flow

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007 by Michelle Trantina

My Yoga Online introduces a new hatha yoga class “Seaside Yoga Flow” to its selection of outdoor yoga videos. This invigorating, flowing, hatha yoga practice will bring energy and inner stillness to your body, mind, and spirit.
Seaside Yoga Flow
Seaside Yoga Flow

Popularity: 50% [?]

Body Rolling Techniques - Caution in Yoga and Pilates Classes

Saturday, August 25th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

Body rolling techniques like Yamuna have grown in popularity and have worked their way into Yoga and Pilates classes. Body rolling incorporates gravity based body positions and movements along with various sized balls to massage blockages out of muscles, fascia and connective tissues.

When taught by qualified, knowledgable teachers, body rolling can help one explore great levels of release throughout the entire body. When performed without proper instruction, body rolling can lead to serious acute injuries. The first crucial element for body rolling is understanding what is the appropriate size ball for the technique being applied to specific areas of the body. Body rolling works on the simple principal of static pressure.

In physics, STATIC PRESSURE (P) = FORCE (F) / AREA (A)

*Static Pressure (P) is the application of the massage on the tissues
*Force (F) is the body weight motion generated by gravity and the technique of the rolling
*Area (A) is the surface area of the ball in contact with the body

Let’s throw in some arbitary numbers for simplicity:
*Image you are applying 100 units of Force (F) on a medium size ball with a surface area (A) of 10 units…
Pressure = 100 / 10 = 10
*What if you now decrease the size (A) of the ball to 5 units?…
Pressure = 100 / 5 = 20

By decreasing the ball size, we can dramatically increase the amount of pressure going into the tissues. Without experience, one may mistakenly choose balls too small and too hard resulting in harmful pressure to tissues. This becomes of greater concern when moving close to or onto the floating ribs and tailbone.

The majority of our ribs start from the spine and come around the chest to connect into the chest bone via cartillage. However, the last two set of ribs start at the spine, come around partially, and stop mid way with no second connection point - hence they are floating (click here to view the floating ribs). Due to the lack of this secondary support at the chestbone, the floating ribs can be readily damaged (dislocation or fracture) by the pressure of body rolling and should be avoided.

Purity of Yoga Balance

The same is true for the tailbone which floats in the pelvis. The tailbone (coccyx box) is the triangular structure composed of 3-5 bony segments located at the bottom of the vertebral column. Body rolling directly on the tailbone can cause injury (coccydynia) such as bruising, dislocation, or fracture. Women, in particular, need to be more cautious in avoiding the tailbone with body rolling since the female pelvis is broader and the coccyx is more exposed.

Therefore, unless you have taken a sufficient number of structured body rolling classes with an experienced body rolling teacher, do not perform body rolling on your own. Make certain that you are using the appropriate size ball for the specific body rolling technique, so the proper amount of pressure is being applied. If you are in a Yoga, Pilates, or fitness class and the teacher decides to enhance the practice with body rolling - make certain that the teacher is actually certified to perform these techniques. Always allow yourself to question the instruction of others and don’t be afraid to ask teachers about their qualifications. The deeper and more complex your teacher moves a practice into your body, the more experience they should have to safely and properly apply these techniques and principals.

Popularity: 50% [?]

Yoga Meditation - Deeper Connection with Jiva Bandha

Friday, August 24th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

As we explore our Yoga Meditation practice, we can learn various techniques and applications to bring us to places of greater connection. A useful tool to create this greater connection in our Meditation sessions is Jiva Bandha. Jiva means “soul or the consciousness of the living being” and Bandha means “internal lock“. Jiva Bandha is the subtle locking of the tongue to the palate.

Jiva Bandha has many effects that transmit direct and indirect benefits into the Meditation practice. The first initial benefit is the tongue lock reduces the production of saliva, thus allowing you to maintain greater levels of stillness and reduces the distraction of needing to swallow.

Jiva Bandha is also an effective aid in reducing tension and pain stimuli in the neck and jaw. I have practiced with a physiotherapist who specializes in chronic pain therapy. She uses Jiva Bandha and other tongue techniques for some of her patients suffering from chronic neck and jaw conditions.

When we are experiencing physiological and emotional trauma, stress, pain, poor posture, respiratory disease, smoking, or muscle tension, we can be bombarded by a complex negative feedback system ultimately resulting in apical breathing (breathing only in the top of the lungs), which brings forward a flood of unwanted physiological conditions:
*poor posture, muscle tension and pain
*poor breathing mechanics and poor lung compliance
*increased ventilation rate and the sensation of being “out of breath”
*excess venting of carbon dioxide (often occurs with rapid, swallow breaths when stressed or experiencing tension) leading to respiratory alkalosis (high pH levels)
*increased urine production and reduced ability to buffer pH fluctuations
*constriction of blood levels leading to reduced flow of oxygen to cells
*increased state of anaerobic (lack of oxygen) respiration in the cells
*increased cortisol production
*poor sleep and increased states of arousal

Yoga and Drishti

When performed correctly, Jiva Bandha creates a cascade of healing benefits:
*encourages proper placement of the skull reducing tension on the neck and encourages breath to move more freely through the nose and not the mouth
*proper head positioning leads to proper spinal alignment and reduced stimuli from neck tension, thus transmitting freedom to the abdomen
*with freedom around the abdomen, we can more effectively breathe with the diaphragm leading to improved lung compliance
*in this deeper state of yogic breathing, we now move into a slower ventilation rate reducing the tendency of venting off carbon dioxide
*with reduced CO2 venting, pH levels in blood and urine production normalize, blood vessels relax allowing better flow of oxygen to the tissues, and cells enjoy improved metabolic reactions with oxygen (aerobic respiration)
*the body moves into a healthier, homeostatic level including reduced production of cortisol (stress hormone), which leads to better sleep and overall reduced arousal states

To perform Jiva Bandha properly, simply think of saying the letter “N” silently. Feel where the tongue softly touches the palate. If the tongue is pushed forward into the teeth, the jaw becomes pulled forward as well. This is counterproductive since the forward position of the jaw brings the head forward, posture is lost, tension develops, and the cascade of negative stimuli begins.

Yoga and Flow of Consciousness

The tongue should be slightly back from the teeth creating a very light “cupping” motion. With this proper placement of the tongue, the mouth can close, but the jaw can float sending release through out cheeks and neck.

Jiva Bandha does not need to be held for the entire length of your Yoga Meditation practice. Slowly develop the endurance of the tongue while focusing on sending release and freedom through the jaw, down the next, over the shoulders, and into the core. Aside from the physiological benefits, explore how this tongue lock can help create a new level of meditative connection to the consciousness of the living being.

Popularity: 65% [?]

First Annual No Stress Day

Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

Take part in the first No Stress Day on September 29, 2007.

Visit NoStressDay.com where you can take advantage of great deals on products and services that will help you relax and take in the moment on September 27.

Popularity: 27% [?]

Hatha Yoga Class - Neck Protection in Sarvangasana and Halasana

Friday, August 17th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

Sarvangasana (Shoulderstand Yoga Pose) and Halasana (Plow Yoga Pose) are the most common Yoga inversions that move the neck into a deep forward flexion. These inverted Yoga postures provide wonderful benefits in our Yoga classes:
* tones the legs, buttocks, back, and core muscles
* stretches the shoulders and improves flexibility of upper spine
* calms the brain / nervous system and helps relieve stress
* improves digestion
* massages and stimulates the thyroid and prostate glands
* massages abdominal organs and improves digestion
* helps relieve the symptoms of menopause
* flushes mucous from the lungs

Salamba Sarvangasana Yoga Pose

With the forward flexion of the neck, the movement of the chin towards the neck creates an energetic lock (bandha) or connection with the Vishuddha Chakra - the main energy center situated on the level of the throat and the nerve plexus of the pharynx region. This energetic connection invites balanced energy into this center leading to creative expression, constructive communication, positive self expression, and conscious listening as well as the feeling of being centered and content.

This deep forward flexion can have its’ challenges, though, for many yoga participants, especially beginner yoga students. Most people have limited flexibility in the posterior tissues of the neck (especially if one has excess tension due to poor posture or work ergonomics). One main tissue creating this limited flexibility is the Nuchal Ligament (ligamentum nuchae). The Nuchal Ligament is a fibrous membrane that starts from the external occipital protuberance (boney process on the very back of the skull) and the median nuchal line (boney line that runs from the occipital protuberance down and inwards toward the middle of the skull). It travels from these attachment points down the back of the vertebrae to the spinous process of the 7th cervical vertebrae. (Click Here to view the occipital protuberance and medial nuchal line. Note: this image is viewing the skull from underneath.)

The Nuchal Ligament limits the forward flexion of the cervical vertebrae and aids the posterior neck muscles in retaining a natural arch to the back of the neck. With this natural arch and posture, the weight of the skull can be effectively balanced over the vertebral column.

Realization with Yoga

In Sarvangasana, Halasana, and other inverted Yoga poses that place the neck in forward flexion, the posterior neck muscles and the Nuchal Ligament can undergo substantial stretching. For those with tense neck muscles and rigid Nuchal ligament tissues, this deep stretching can lead to chronic or acute damage to these important, supportive tissues.

For beginners and those with neck concerns, these types of yoga poses can be easily modified to reduce the forward flexion going into the neck and the Nuchal Ligament. Before inverting, place a support under your shoulders that can create more freedom and ease for your neck. Fold a firm blanket into a rectangle large enough to support the width and depth of your shoulders. A sticky mat then placed over the blanket will help the upper arms stay in place while inverting. As you lie on the blanket support, position your shoulders on the blanket so your neck and head drape and rest and on the floor (your 7th cervical vertebra, or the largest boney point on the back of the neck, should still be on the blanket).

The elevation of the shoulders will maintain a small amount of space under the neck and add freedom throughout the front of the neck. Another helpful tip is to not fully enter the inverted poses. You may also want to start in a half inverted variation by setting the pelvis so that it remains slightly away from the vertical line of the shoulders, thus reducing the weight on the shoulder and lower neck region. This often requires additional support from the hands and arms, though.

This support eliminates the benefits of the lock or bandha, but can alleviate the pressure and excess stretch going into the posterior neck tissues. As with all Yoga poses, enter inverted asanas with full awareness observing how the neck and the rest of the body responds. Also listen to the echoes remaining as we often feel later on if we have gone to far into the Yoga posture. Enjoy modifications to the fullest, so you are practicing to the needs of the body and not to the wants of the mind.

Popularity: 51% [?]

Hatha Yoga Class - Relieving Neck and Shoulder Pain

Thursday, August 16th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

We have a new article “Hatha Yoga as Physical Therapy for Neck and Shoulder Pain” that offers great insight into the likely cause of chronic neck and shoulder pain in most people. This Yoga anatomy article explores alignment cues for your Yoga exercises and aids in bringing awareness to your overall posture in helping alleviate these chronic conditions.

Of particular importance, and well explained in this article, is the poor positioning of the head in relation to the cervical (neck) vertebrae, and how this poor positioning results in a cascade of negative effects on muscles and bone structures.

Popularity: 54% [?]

Recommended Yoga Books - Erich Schiffman

Thursday, August 16th, 2007 by Kreg Weiss

If you are in search of inspirational readings on the foundation of Yoga practice, I recommend you try “Yoga: The Spirit and Practice of Moving Into Stillness” by Erich Schiffman.

Erich Shiffman offers a beautiful perspective of exploring the practice of Yoga with awareness and depth while creating a foundation of joy and contentment. This book wonderfully explains not just how we do yoga, but, more importantly, why we do yoga. Whether you are a beginner to yoga or well-experienced, this book helps instill a renewed intention of goodness and focus in your Yoga practice.

Clarity of Yoga Yoga and Stillness Vitality of Yoga

Popularity: 34% [?]