| Illustration
of Pose |
Setting
Up |
While You
Are In the Pose |
Benefits
|
| 1.
Supported Savasana
|
Use 2-3 Single-fold blankets
set up in a staircase. (Make the staircase more gradual if you
have back problems.)
Sit at one end with the blankets touching your sacrum.
Lie down with your back on the blankets, your arms out
to the sides, and your legs comfortably apart.
Position your forehead higher than your chin as if looking
into your heart. You may create an extra fold in the top blanket
to prop up your head.
An eyebag is optional. |
Direct your attention to your
breath.
Begin belly breathing.
Try practicing the Centering Breath:
1. Take a long, slow gentle inhalation through your nose.
2. Follow the inhalation with a long, slow, gentle exhalation
through your nose.
3. Take several normal cycles of breath through your nose until
you feel refreshed.
When you are ready to come up, gently roll to one side
off the blankets and use your arms to come up. |
By focusing on your breath,
you allow your mind to be still.
You learn to be more in tune with your body.
It lowers your blood pressure and heart rate. It releases
muscular tension, reduces fatigue, improves sleep, enhances
your immune system, and helps to manage chronic pain. |
| 2. Supported
Backbend
|
You need two Long-roll blankets.
One goes under your back just below your shoulder blades, and
the other is rolled open so it just supports your neck and cushions
your head. Put a Short-roll blanket under your knees.
Your arms rest out to the side. |
Tuck your shoulder blades under.
Let your body sink into the props. |
This helps reverse the effects
of bad posture (rounding forward).
It energizes the body. |
| 3. Supported
Bound-Angle
|
Set up a staircase stack of
blankets as in the first pose. Create an extra fold in the top
blanket to support your neck/head.
Sit at the end of the blankets and place the soles of
your feet together.
You need a strap with a buckle which you will loop around
your lower back (your sacrum) and around your feet. Put the
strap through the buckle.
Support your knees with blocks, blankets, or pillows.
Lie down on the staircase and let your arms rest out at
the sides (you can also prop them on Double-fold blankets).
|
Adjust the strap so your back
feels supported and comfortable.
Practice belly breathing and the centering breath.
When you are ready to come out, use your hands to help
your thighs come together so your knees are bent. Roll to one
side and use your arms to press yourself up. |
This pose reduces high blood
pressure.
It helps people with breathing problems and women during
menstruation and menopause. |
| 4. Mountain
Brook
|
Put a Short-roll blanket under
your knees.
Sit in front of two Single-fold blankets in a stack and
lie down, so they are just below your shoulder blades.
Place a Long-roll blanket under your neck.
Let your arms rest out to the sides between the stack
and the roll.
Your throat should feel open and relaxed with your head
tilted slightly back. |
Breathe normally.
Relax your body beginning with your face, jaw, and throat.
Bring your attention to your heart and feel the openness.
Relax your abdomen.
To come out, use your hands to gently lift your head and
move the stack and roll away from your upper body. Rest on the
floor and then roll to one side before coming up. |
This pose counteracts the slumped
posture of our body during the day.
It opens the chest to help you breathe more freely.
It improves digestion, reduces fatigue, and can lift your
mood. |
| 5. Supported
Bridge
|
Your head and shoulders rest
on the floor in this pose.
Place 2-3 Single-fold blankets in a stack that will support
your torso.
If you have enough blankets, you can set up another stack
for your legs, otherwise they can rest on a block. Your legs
and feet are even with your torso.
Let your arms rest out to the side in a comfortable position.
|
Do not jam your chin into your
chest. You can use a small rolled towel to support the curve
of your neck if needed.
Bring your attention to your breathing. Feel the lateral
expansion of your lungs.
To come out, slide off the stack in the direction of your
head. Rest on the floor and roll to one side when you are ready
to come up. |
This pose drains the blood
from your legs after long hours of standing and sitting. This
reduces soreness in the leg and hip muscles.
It reduces fatigue.
It helps get rid of headaches. |
| 6. Elevated
Legs-Up-The-Wall
|
Place a stack of two Double-fold
blankets with the long side several inches away from the wall.
Place a Single-fold blanket at a 90 degree angle to the
middle of the stack.
Sit on the stack with one of your shoulders against the
wall. Roll back and swing your legs up the wall.
Your body/head should be supported by the Single-fold
blanket, and your arms should rest out to the side.
Your tailbone should be off the stack and descending to
the floor. |
Take slow and steady breaths.
You will feel the blood draining from your legs.
To come out, bend your knees and roll off your support.
Press yourself up with your arms. |
It reduces the effects of stress.
It quiets the mind.
It refreshes the heart and lungs.
It is good for people who retain water and whose legs
swell easily.
It helps people with varicose veins.
It alleviates the effects of standing for long periods
of time.
It helps reduce the effects of jet lag. |