A
Action versus movement
There is a difference between action and movement. Movement is gross and less conscious, mainly using the big muscle groups. It is a visible change of the body’s position. Actions are invisible forces we apply to create movements.
Here’s an example: If you raise your arms that is movement. In contrast, if your arms are already raised and then you firm your upper arms, that is action.
Adho Mukha Svanasana
Adho Mukha Svanasana / Downward Facing Dog Pose
Benefits
- Strengthens the upper body, arms, shoulders, chest and legs
- Stretches chest, shoulders
- Stretches the whole back of the body, ankles, calves, hamstrings and spine
- Calms the mind
- Energizes the body overall
Please find an image and a step-by-step description of the Downward Facing Dog Pose.
Advaita
Advaita means nondual or “not two.” It is the teaching found in the Upanishads that reality is one.
Agni
The word “agni” is Sanskrit for the word “fire.” Agni is part of the five elements, of which the physical universe is composed off. Fire is related to the transformational force and used in Yoga it usually refers to the “digestive fire.” Fire burns; it changes one thing into another. Think of the metabolism of food, thoughts and breathe. A healthy digestive system, a healthy “change engine,” enhances your Yoga practice greatly. The sense organ of Agni is the eyes.
Ahamkara
Ahamkara is a Sanskrit word. Aham means “self” or “I” and Kara means “making” or “to do”. So you could say Ahamkara is the “I maker”. It is active when the mind has identified itself with an external object or thing. Like I am my car, or I am what I believe in. It creates an illusion.
Ahimsa
Ahimsa means nonviolence. It applies to physical violence but also applies to causing violence through words and thoughts. It means to do no harm to yourself, others and the environment. The idea is to increase your awareness and to develop universal love.
To find out more read our article on Ahimsa
Akasha
Akasha means ether or space and is part of the five elements, of which the physical universe is composed off. It is the subtlest in the material world. You can see it as the background, the space in/against which everything else becomes perceptible. Akasha is related to the sense of hearing.
Alignment
Alignment is the way you hold your body. For example, in the basic standing pose Tadasana/Mountain Pose, it is important to align:
- The ankles over the heels
- The knees over the ankles
- The hips over the knees
- The shoulders over the hips
- The ears with the shoulders
- Proper alignment means that you are holding a pose with the least amount of effort and in a healthy way for your body. When your posture is bad, it costs you unnecessary energy. Certain muscles will work too hard; bones or joints will be under pressure and imbalanced; and problems in the body will occur over time.
- That is why there is a lot of focus on alignment in Yoga classes.
Anusara yoga
Anusara Yoga is a modern-day Hatha Yoga system founded by John Friend. Anusara means “flowing with grace,” “going with the flow,” “following your heart.”
Anusara Yoga, based on a Tantric philosophy with universal principles of alignment, is a popular and fast-growing style. It focuses on experiencing bliss and joy in your Yoga practice and your daily life. Aparigraha is the Yama of non-grasping, non-possessiveness, non-holding through the senses, non-greed, non-indulgence, non-acquisitiveness.
Ardha Bhekasana
Ardha Bhekasana / Half Frog Pose
Benefits
- Releases the thigh muscles, quadriceps
- Increases the flexibility in the back
- Opens the chest and shoulders
- Stimulates energy
- Prepares the body for back bending
Ardga Matsyendrasana
Ardha Matsyendrasana / Half Lord of The Fishes Pose
Benefits:
- Helps to restore the spines natural range of motion
- Cleanses your organs
- Stretches your hips, shoulders and neck
- Improves digestion
- Relieves backache and sciatica
Asanas/ yoga posture
The translation most widely used for asana is “posture.” The various postures used in yoga are called asanas. Besides stretching the body, asanas open the energy channels and purify and strengthen the body.
Ashram
An ashram is usually a secluded place or retreat. In an ashram people traditionally take part in spiritual practices like yoga and meditation. The spiritual teacher / leader is often called the “Guru.”
Ashtanga Vinyasa yoga
Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga has become popular in the West through Sri K. Pattabhi Jois. This form of Yoga is very physical and athletic and originally developed for prepubescent boys in India. It is a prescribed series of asanas linked with the breath. There are different series, for beginners up through very advanced students. Practiced diligently, this form of Yoga will strengthen, stretch, and cleanse the body, mind, and spirit.
Asteya
Asteya is the yama non-stealing.
B
Backbends
Backbends are a classification of Yoga poses that work on opening the heart/chest. They are strengthening and invigorating, stretching the hip flexors.
Baddha konansana
Baddha Konasana / Bound Angle Pose or Butterfly Pose.
Benefits
- Helps in opening your hips
- Stretches groins, inner thighs and ankles
- Uplifts mood
- Stimulates abdominal organs
- Beneficial for menstrual pains
- Stimulates the circulation in the pelvic area
- You can stay in this pose anywhere between 1-5 minutes
- To come out you lift your knees and straighten you legs again
View an image and a step-by-step description of this this Yoga Pose.
Bakasana
Bakasana / Crow Po se
Benefits
- Increases the strength in the wrists, arms, shoulders
- Strengthens the inner thighs, abdominals and core
- Stretches the upper back
- Opens the groin
- Over time, this pose will make you feel strong and confident
Bhakti yoga
Bhakti Yoga is devotional yoga. Bhakti is love for love s sake. When you practice Bhakti Yoga you want god and god alone, without any expectation for the “self.”
Bhujanagasana
Bhujangasana / Cobra Pose.
Benefits
- Strengthens legs, upper back, arms, and shoulders
- Stretches the front of the body
- Energizes
- Relieves mild depression
C
Chakra
Chakras are referred to as centers or wheels of energies in the body. They are located between the base of the spine and the crown of the head. It is said that we have seven chakras. How we feel and where we are in life (mind, body, and spirit) is reflected in these energy centers, and the other way around. So keeping these energy centers balanced has a positive effect on our well-being.
Chaturanga Dandasana
Chaturanga Dandasana / Four Limbed Staff Pose
Benefits
- Strengthens wrists, arms, legs, and core
Core stability/ core strength
The body’s core muscles are the deeper muscles that stabilize the spine and provide good postural alignment. You need proper core strength and stability to exercise your body safely.
- Read more about the anatomy of the core
- Find out more about core strength in yoga read “Core strength in your Yoga practice”
- To learn about using the core in your asana read “Getting to the core of the pose”
Core strength vinyasa
Core Strength Vinyasa Yoga is a dynamic practice which focuses on accessing and activating the core during yoga poses. It goes beyond the core in a purely physical sense by also working on the energetic core of the pose.
Corpse pose, also called savasana is the final relaxation pose in yoga. You lie on your back, in a fully relaxed position. This pose is usually used at the end of a yoga practice, but sometimes also in between poses or even at the beginning.
D
Dandasana
Dandasana / Staff Pose
Benefits
- Strengthens the quads
- Improves core stability
- Strengthens the muscles of the back
Dharana
Dharana can be translated as “holding,” “concentration,” or “one pointed focus.” Dharana is the first step in meditation. You concentrate deeply, with single, pointed focus on an object, keeping the mind steady without wavering. You are yourself consious of the act of meditation.
Dhyana
You can compare Dhyana with meditation or contemplation. It means consciousness of being. You are not conscious of the act of meditation anymore; you are just aware that you are, and you have become one with the object of meditation. The duality in experiencing is gone.
Dristhi
Drishti is the point of focus of the eyes during your Yoga asana practice. It is meant to focus the mind and to prevent distractions &emdash; to keep your eyes from wandering around the room. During your yoga practice it helps to bring your awareness inward rather then outward. There are different drishti points: for example in downward facing dog we gaze at the navel centre, in Upward Facing Dog Pose we gaze at the third eye centre.
E
Expansion
Expansion on a spiritual level means that you have let go of enough unconscious contraction to be present to the here and now.
F
Femur bone
The femur is the thigh bone.
Teachers may say, “Femurs move back” in the mountain pose or “Press the top of the femur back” in the extended side angle pose. They are talking about your thigh bone.
Flexibility and yoga
Finding balance between our stability/strength (Sthira) and flexibility/ease (Sukha) is one of the most important aspects of our yoga practice. This applies not just to our physical practice but to our mental state and attitude as well.
In this article we focus on flexibility and take a look at some of the factors that influence it.
Foundation
The foundation in a Yoga pose is what is in contact with the floor. If a house is built on a poor foundation, it will be out of alignment, with crooked floors, cracked walls and a sagging roof. It is the same with Yoga.
In a Yoga pose, when the foundation is strong and solid, the rest of your body will be safe and properly aligned. It will also feel lighter, since you need less muscle energy to maintain the pose.
When the foundation isn’t right – for example, if your ankles and arches collapse in the Mountain Pose -everything above them will be at risk. In this case, the knees, the hips and the spine will all be affected.
So, the first thing to check in a pose is your foundation.
H
Halasana
Halasana / Plow Pose
Benefits
- Stretches the spine, shoulders and back of the legs
- Opens the upper back and chest
- Balances the thyroid gland
- Stimulates the abdominal organs
- Calms the mind and reduces stress and fatigue
- Therapeutic for sinusitis, infertility and insomnia
- Relieves backpain and headaches
Hatha yoga
Hatha Yoga is known as the Yoga for the physical body. In Sanskrit, “Ha” represents sun and “tha” represents moon, alluding to the opposites in our lives, such as yin and yang, light and dark, hard and soft, vigorous and gentle.
Hatha Yoga is about finding balance. Through working with the physical body, releasing tensions and traumas stored in the body, you create space in yourself and, through that space and balance, the opportunity for spiritual growth.
Health centre
The term heart centre refers to the centre of the chest.
High chaturanga
High Chaturanga / Plank Pose
Benefits
- Strengthens upper body, arms, wrist, spine
- When done correctly; strengthens abdomen, core, legs
- Prepares the body for more challenging arm balances
Hipbones
When we talk about hipbones, we’re talking about them in relation to core stability. If you place your hands on your hips, the hipbones are the ones you can feel pointing to the front of you.
If an instructor says, “Move your hipbones toward each other,” try using your stomach muscles as if drawing them into your core.
I
Inversions
Inversions are a classification of a group of asanas. Inversions include shoulder stands, headstands, handstands etc. To find out more about Inversions read Esther Ekhart’s article “All about Yoga Inversions”
J
Jala
Jala means water and is part of the five elements, of which the physical universe is composed off. Water relates to all the fluids/ liquids in our body, such as urine, plasma and lymph. It sense organ is the tongue.
Janu sirsasana
Janu Sirsasana / Head to Knee Pose
Benefits
- Calms the mind and is therapeutic for mild depression
- Stimulates digestion
- Stretches the hips, back of the body and groins
- Relieves menstrual discomfort, headache, anxiety and fatigue
- Relieves insomnia and high blood pressure
- Stimulates the kidneys and liver
K
Krounchasana
Krounchasana / Heron Pose
Benefits:
- Stretches the top of the bent leg’s thigh, ankle and shin
- Stretches the back of the straight leg, including the Achilles tendon
- Stimulates the abdominal organs and the heart
- Relieves flatulence
M
Malas
Malas comes from Tantric yoga scriptures. We all have moments in our lives when we feel connected and we have moments in our lives when we feel sepereate, different, disconnected. This experience of defferentiation comes from a power called Maya which operates via The Three Malas
Meditation
Through focusing the mind on something specific -your breathing, for example- depending on the technique you want to use, you quiet the busy, worrying part of your mind (the chatter), called the subconscious.
The result could be that your subconscious mind calms down enough for you to relax into a state of heightened awareness of the present.
Midline
Midline is a term frequently used in yoga to refer to the centre line of the body. It is used to bring awareness to an imagined line running down one’s centre -a vertical axis that runs down the spine, the pelvis, and down between the legs into the ground- that can increase stability and support.
Modification
You can modify a pose in yoga to make it more suitable for your body. Everybody is different, and what works for one person might not work for another.
You can use Yoga blocks or straps to do this, or just do a simpler version of the pose.
Take, for example, sitting on the floor with your legs stretched out in front of you. It is not possible for everybody to sit like this with a straight back. If you cannot, the pose will have to be modified. You are better off sitting on a block to raise your hips so that you can straighten your back, rather than compromising your posture.
Monkey mind
Monkey mind describes a mind that jumps from one thought to another, like a monkey jumps from one branch to another.During Yoga, you calm the mind, or tame the monkey mind. When the mind is calm, you can achieve a state of meditation.
Moon salutations
To create equilibrium in our yoga practice and in our lives, it’s helpful to observe the power of opposites. Yin and Yang, ebb and flow, contraction and expansion, effort and surrender – it’s important that we recognize the qualities and benefits on each side of the spectrum so that we can find balance and unity between them.
N
Namaste
Namaste is an Indian greeting. It means the higher consciousness in me greets the higher consciousness in you. “Nama” in Sanskrit means “bow” in English, “as” means “I” and “te” means “you.”
The greeting is performed by bringing your palms together in front of your heart, bowing your head a little and closing your eyes if you like. It is also performed by bringing your palms together in front of your forehead. You can say Namaste with the hand gesture.
It is common to start and end a Yoga class with Namaste, performed with your hands in front of your heart. It is a nice way to set the tone at the beginning of the class; for a moment, you acknowledge the existence of something much bigger than you, which you can call the divine if you like.
At the end of a Yoga class, Namaste is a nice way to express gratitude; to say “I am grateful that I’m able to practice Yoga, grateful to the teachers who have taught me, grateful for the people whom I teach or practice. Namaste.”
Natarajasana
Natarajasana / Lord of the Dance Pose
Benefits
- Strengthens the ankles, legs, core, and arms.
- Stretches the chest, shoulders, groin, and abdomen.
- Improves balance and concentration.
Nauli kriya
Nauli Kryia is a yogic cleansing exercise. Nauli cleanses the internal organs and tones the abdominal region via a side-to-side rolling motion of the abdominal muscles. For Andrew’s take on this Read his article “Nauli Kryia, my explanation and practice”
Navasana
Navasana/ boat pose
Benefits
- Improves core strength
- Strengthens the hip flexors and spine
- Helps to relieve stress
- Improves digestion
P
Padanghustasana
Padanghustasana / Foot to Fingers Forward Bend
Benefits
- Stretches the back of the legs, the hips and spine
- Balances the nervous system and calms the mind
- Improves digestion
- Relieves tension in the lower back
- Restores your energy
Parighasana
Benefits
- Stretches the calves, hamstrings, spine
- Opens the side body, chest and shoulders
- Stimulates the lungs and the abdominal organs
Parivrtta Trikonasana
Benefits
- Improves balance
- Strengthens and stretches the legs, hips, spine, chest and upper back
- Stimulates abdominal organs, and detoxes them
- Relieves back pain
Parsvottanasana
Parsvottanasana / Intense Side Stretch or Pyramid Pose
Benefits
- Stretches the legs, hips, spine, shoulders and wrists
- Strengthens the legs and knees
- Improves balance and digestion
- Stimulates the abdominal organs and digestion
- Calms the mind
Paschimottanasana
Benefits:
- Stretches the spine, hamstrings, and shoulders
- Calms the mind, prepares it for meditation
- Relieves mild depression
- Stimulates internal organs like ovaries and uterus, liver, and kidneys
- Good for digestion
- Therapeutic for high blood pressure, insomnia, and sinusitis
Pelvis
Pelvis means “basin.”
The pelvic bones are:
- Ilium
- ischium
- pubis
Yoga teachers may refer to the pelvis as a basin to help explain how they want you to move or align the pelvis. In a forward bend, for example, you tilt the pelvis so that, if the pelvis were a basin, water would flow out of the front.
Power yoga
The practice of Hatha Yoga knows many different styles and intensity levels. Vinyasa Yoga is a more general term for a dynamic and flowing Yoga practice that within the style, also knows many different intensity levels. The term Power Yoga refers mostly to the level of physical intensity; it is a vigorous practice that can be used as a “work-out.”
Pranayama
“Prana” means life force, breath. Pranayama is freeing the flow of breath through various breathing exercises.
Prasarita padottanasana
Benefits
- Stretches the back and inside of the legs
- Opens the hips
- Stretches the spine
- Grounds and calms the mind
- Can relieve mild backache
Prasarita padottanasana
- Stretches the back and inside of the legs Opens the hips
- Stretches the spine, shoulders and chest
- Grounds and calms the mind
- Can relieve mild backache
Prasarita padottanasana
Benefits
- Stretches the back and inside of the legs
- Opens the hips
- Stretches the spine
- Grounds you and calms the mind
- Can relieve mild backache
Prithvi
Prithvi is a Sanskrit term and means earth. Earth is part of the five elements, of which the physical universe is composed off. Earth in our body represents everything that is dense and solid. Think of bones, teeth, muscles and fat. Earth is related to the sense of smell.
Purvottanasana
Benefits
- Stretches the front of the shoulders, the chest and the front of the ankles
- Strengthens the arms, core, legs and back
- Excellent counterpose for chaturanga dandasana
Q
Quadriceps
The quadriceps is the large muscle at the front of your thigh.
The function of the quadriceps is to extend the knee.
In yoga, you’ll hear these phrases a lot: “lift the quadriceps up” or “engage your quadriceps.” This helps to:
- Keep the kneecap in alignment.
- Bring the pelvis into the right position.
- Strengthen the legs, because strong legs mean a healthy back.
Try this: When you stand in the mountain pose firm and then pull the quadriceps up with your hands, toward your hips. When yoga teachers say, “Engage your quadriceps,” “lift your quadriceps up” or “engage your thighs,” this is the feeling to aim for, only without using your hands.
R
Restorative yoga
In restorative Yoga, the idea is to promote deep relaxation while holding the poses for longer periods of time, commonly with the help of props (blankets, blocks, bolsters, pillows).
The parasympathetic nervous system is stimulated, promoting relaxation, which helps balance and heal the body.
This practice is great to balance an active yoga schedule or to give yourself a break when you feel under the weather.
S
Sacrum
Your sacrum is situated at the base of your spine. It is triangular, and attached to the bottom of it is your tailbone, or coccyx.
Salabhasana
Benefits
- Strengthens the back muscles
- Stretches the front of the body
- mproves stamina
- Opens the chest
- Stimulates abdominal organs
Salamba sarvangasana
Benefits
- Queen of the Yoga-asanas
- Stretches the shoulders and neck
- Cooling, calming, quiets the nervous system
- Reduces fluid retention in the legs and feet
- Regulates and normalizes elimination
- Nourishes the thyroid and parathyroid with blood
- Reduces fatigue and can help improve sleep
- Improves digestion
Salamba sirsasana
Benefits
- Draws fresh blood into the upper body while stimulating drainage and circulation to the legs
- When properly practiced, effectively counters upper back and neck problems
- Quiets the mind and so prepares you for meditation
- Strengthens the arms, legs and back
- Strengthens the core
- Heats up the upper back; you can do headstand as a preparation for back bends
- Relieves mild depression
Samavritti Ratio
Samavritti Ratio is a pranayama technique used to equalize the four components of the breath.
Sanskrit
Sanskrit is an ancient Indic language of India, in which the Hindu scriptures and classical Indian epic poems are written, it is also the language of yoga and Ayurveda.
Savasana
Mind and body are related. So when your body relaxes so does the mind and vice versa.
Before the body can relax it often needs to move, that is where the asanas come in. After the body is worked out, stretched and opened, the body is more than happy to let go. Compare it to a child, a child is also happier to relax after it’s burned away its nervous energy.
Setu bandha sarvangasana
Benefits
- Stretches neck, chest, and spine
- Strengthens legs, upper back
- Improves digestion
- Reduces backache and headache
- Calms the mind, relieves mild depression
- Can help to open the sinuses
Shala
Shala is a Sanskrit word meaning ‘house’ or ‘home’. The term is used in Ashtanga yoga to mean a house of yoga, that is, a yoga studio.
Sitali
We love it here in Holland when the sun finally makes an appearance. However when your dosha is Pitta and the heat turns up you may notice some imbalances too. It’s good to be aware of these so you can do something about it.
Sitting bones
These are the two bones that extend out of the pelvis in your buttocks. If you sit straight on a firm surface and rock forward and backward or from side to side, your sitting bones are the two knobby bones you feel sticking out.
Somatics and yoga
You’ll see that some of our videos include somatic exercises and techniques. Somatics is not a different style of yoga but rather a movement therapy, a way of re-educating the way our brain senses and moves the muscles. It is an incredibly subtle but effective way of working with the body. We have yoga classes which are influenced by somatics as well as somatic exercises you can use alongside your yoga practice.
Stress
Stress is the emotional and physical strain caused by our response to pressure from our reality. Whether it’s from an outside source or caused by or own behaviours or attitudes.
To read more about this neurological response read “Fight or Flight Versus Rest and Digest”
Sun salutations
Sun Salutations / Surya Namaskara is a sequence of asanas. This invigorating yang sequence is a very popular sequence used by teachers all over the world. To learn more about Surya Namaskara and its origions read “The Origin of the Sun Salutation”
Supta padangustasana
Benefits
* Stretches the back of the legs, the hips, and lower spine
* Balances the nervous system and calms the mind
* Improves digestion
* Relieves lower back ache, menstrual pains, and sciatica
* Restores energy
* Strengthens the muscles around the knees
T
Tadasana
Benefits
* Helps to strengthen the legs
* you can easily identify imbalances in the body
* Helps easily identify imbalances in the body: An imbalance in the body disrupts the flow of energy (prana), causing muscular and postural compensation
* Improves posture
* Prepares the body for all other standing poses
Tailbone
The little bone at the end of your spine. Pointing your tailbone down helps to align the pelvis.
Tapas
Tapas is a Sanskrit term that translates as ‘discipline’ or ‘heat’
To understand the concept of Tapas a little better read Irina’s article on “Stability Leads to Freedom”
Thai massage
Thai Massage was created long ago to help relieve the feelings of stuck energy from hours of seated meditation and has since evolved into many lineages, techniques and forms that support mobility of joints, flexibility of muscles and the movement of energy through the various energy lines in the body.
U
Upavishta Konasana
Benefits
* Stretches the back and the insides of the legs
* Opens the hips and back of the body
* Stimulates the abdominal organs
* Makes you happy and relaxed!
* Strengthens the spine
Urdhva Dhanurasana
Benefits
* Strengthens arms, wrists, upper back, spine, and thighs
* Opens the shoulders, chest/lungs, groins, front of the thighs
* Increases energy and counteracts depression
* Therapeutic for backpain, depression, low energy, asthma, osteoporosis, infertility
Urdhva mukha svanasana
Benefits
* Opens the heart, chest and lungs
* Stretches your upper back and the whole front of the body
* Strengthens wrists, arms, shoulders, spine
* Can relieve sciatica, mild depression, and fatigue
* Can be very therapeutic for asthma because it stretches the lungs and chest
* Counteracts bad posture
Ustrasana
Benefits:
• Opens the belly, chest, heart, shoulders and upper back.
• Stretches the whole front of the body including ankles, thighs and groin.
• Strengthens the legs and back.
• Improves your posture.
• Stimulates the organs in the belly
Utkatasana
Benefits
* Strengthens the muscles of the legs
* Strengthens the pelvis
* Strengthens the lower back
* Stabilizes the knee joints
* Opens and stretches the abdomen, diaphragm, and heart
* Stretches the shoulders
Uttanasana
Benefits
* Stretches the back of the legs, the hips and spine
* Strengthens the legs, thighs, and knees
* Balances the nervous system, calms the mind, relieves stress and mild depression
* Improves digestion, stimulates the liver and kidneys
* Relieves tension in the lower back
Utthita hasta padangustasana
Benefits
* Opens and strengthens the hips
* Strengthens the legs and ankles
* Increases flexibility in the legs
* Improves concentration
* Improves balance
Utthita parsvakonasana
Benefits
* Opens the hip joints, stretches the groins
* Releases the shoulders and neck
* Trims the waist
* Strengthens and stretches the legs, ankles and knees
* Opens the chest and lungs and increases stamina
Utthita trikonasana
Benefits
* Strengthens the legs and back
* Stretches inner thighs, hamstrings, calves, spine, shoulders, chest, and opens hips
* Helps to relieve back pain
* Energize, balances and focuses you
V
Vayu
Vayu means air and is part of the five elements, of which the physical universe is composed off. Air is about movement, all empty spaces are filled with air and air flows freely through the body. Air controls the breathing and fills the cells with oxygen. The skin is the related sense organ.
Vinyasa karma
Vinyasa Krama means a step by step progression into something, or to a certain goal. A goal in most cases being a complex or advanced asana (posture).
Vinyasa yoga
Vinyasa means “movement linked with breath.” Postures are strung together in a short or longer flow.
This style of Yoga is often quite dynamic, which requires the mind to stay focused in the present to be able to keep up.
This keeps you from drifting off and helps you to be present in your body rather than stuck in your head.
Viparita virabhadrasana
Benefits
* Stretches the side body
* Opens the chest
* Strengthens the legs
* Opens the hips, groin, and inner thighs
Virabhadrasana II
Benefits
* Opens hips
* Stretches inner thighs, groin, chest, lungs, and shoulders
* Strengthens legs
* Correct painful conditions around sacrum
* Increases stamina
Virasana
Benefits
* Stretches ankles, knees, and legs
* Stimulates digestion; great after a big meal!
* Calming
* Energizes the legs when they are tired
Vrksasana
Benefits
* Improves balance
* Opens the hips
* Strengthens the ankles, legs and spine
* Lengthens the spine
* Improves focus/ concentration
Y
Yin yoga
Yin Yoga targets the deeper tissues of the body – ligaments, joints and bones- rather than the muscles.
Yin Yoga uses specific poses that can be held for longer periods of time, from 3 to 10 minutes, depending on the pose. Because you’re holding the pose longer, it’s harder to stay present, to keep your mind alert.
This practice is challenging and almost like a meditation.
It’s very enjoyable, and it balances the yang yoga practices, which are focused more on muscle energy.
Yoga belts or yoga straps
Yoga belts or Yoga straps can help your body to be more comfortable in certain poses.
Yoga block
A Yoga block is mostly made from foam, which makes it comfortable and sturdy. It is useful in sitting postures to raise your hips, making it easier to sit with a straight back. Yoga blocks are also used for cushioning the body in inverted poses such as headstands or shoulder stands.
Yoga mat
A good Yoga mat is essential. When doing Yoga, your stability is important. Imagine doing exercises and having your hands or feet slip!
So, you need a mat with an anti-slip surface. For your Yoga mat to be comfortable, it needs to be big enough to allow you to move into a variety of poses (asanas) without needing to use the floor too much. The recommended width for a Yoga mat is 60 cm, or 2 feet. A standard length is 180 cm, or 6 feet.
The recommended thickness of a Yoga mat is between 3 mm and 6 mm. The thicker the mat, the more comfortable, but mats thicker than 6 mm will compromise stability for standing poses.
Yoga sutras
One of the most important collections of writings about Yoga, written by Patanjali. These writings consist of 196 sutras (aphorisms). The Sutras describe the philosophical basis of Yoga. A path to Enlightenment.
Yoga Therapy
Although yoga has been practised therapeutically for thousands of years, a more detailed form of yoga using therapeutic elements has now started to emerge as a discipline of its own. A yoga teacher will tailor practices for different health conditions, incorporating techniques from various different styles and branches of yoga. These conditions can range from physical ailments through to emotional distress.