home newtoyoga poses practice health health meditation health travel forteachers parenting





Categories





RSS Feed






Our free weekly email newsletter on all aspects of the practice.
Subscribe

For teachers: free exclusive articles on teaching, philosophy, and more each month.
Subscribe

Read the stuff we didn't have room for in the magazine!
Subscribe

yoga books, posters, art - yogalifestyle.com



Advertisement

Mr. Iyengar's latest instruction now available.
Order the full 2005 Estes Park Iyengar Workshop DVD set now.

« Senior Iyengar teacher Patricia Walden | Main | Iyengar on Depression »

Beginners' Wisdom by Kathryn Arnold

julie.jpgIn the process of creating each issue of Yoga Journal, I read Julie Gudmestad's (http://www.gudmestadyoga.com) column on anatomy. Each of her articles focuses on a specific part of the anatomy and how it moves in yoga poses and how certain poses effect parts of the anatomy. So over the years I've gotten an education in anatomy from reading Julie's articles. But it wasn't until I took her Yoga Anatomy 101 course in the Beginners' Conference that I got the whole picture. I hadn't realized how disjointed (no pun intended!) my view of the body was until I heard Julie describe the relationships between the various muscles, bones, and ligaments that constitute our skeletal bodies.

I'm someone who suffers from low back pain, so I practice Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (Bridge Pose) regularly. Today I learned from Julie that it's very common to overly contract the gluts in Bridge Pose, which inhibits movement of the tailbone in the pose. Splayed knees are a sign that this is happening. This is exactly my challenge. To correct Julie suggested pressing down through the big toes, which forces the inner thighs to work and the gluts to release. I often practice the pose with a belt around my thighs to keep my knees from splaying, but I never understood until now that I was improperly using this tool. I was using it as a crutch instead of an aid to help me find the action my inner thighs. Practicing Julie's way has helped me find much more space in the pose than ever before. Thank you Julie!

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blogs.yogajournal.com/blog/mt-tb.cgi/120









SUBSCRIBE TO
YOGA JOURNAL

GIVE A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION





WEEKLY POLL
What is your favorite time of day to practice?
  Morning
  Afternoon
  Evening


View results



To contact a staff member, please check out Contact YJ.

For editorial submission guidelines, please go to Editorial Guidelines.

Recent Press Releases

Receive RISK FREE Issues of Yoga Journal
and NEW FREE gifts!


Yes! Please send me my FREE trial issue of Yoga Journal and my ALL NEW FREE GIFTS: Better Posture 101 - a digital guide to assessing and improving your posture and Yoga Remedies - a digital guide to postures that relieve common health problems.

If I like it and decide to continue, I'll pay just $15.95, and receive a full one-year subscription (8 issues in all), a 60% savings off the newsstand price!

Otherwise, I'll write cancel on the invoice and owe nothing.


Risk-Free. Just fill out the form and click submit.

Full Name
Address
Address (line 2)
City
State
Zip
E-mail Address Required


Offer valid in US only

Canadian subscriptions    International subscriptions

BONUS ISSUES

Pay now and get 2 EXTRA ISSUES FREE!
That's 9 issues for the same low price!
Click here!

© Copyright 2002. Yoga Journal, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Read our privacy guidelines.
The editorial content of Yoga Journal should not be used as a substitute for professional health care. Talk to your doctor before starting any new exercise regime.