Tadasana
(2016-10-07 16:55:58)Tadasana
"You want to stand on your head and you don't even
know
how to stand on your feet." -- B.K.S. Iyengar
Give your attention to mastering Tadasana from the very
beginning of your practice. Practice Tadasana in
every line you have to wait in, at the grocery store, in the ticket
line at the theater, etc. All the points learned
from Tadasana should be applied in each of the other asanas.
In each pose, keep asking yourself, "Is there
Tadasana in this body part, in this body part," and so on.
Occasionally precede Tadasana with a thorough foot massage.
You have to do this to understand its benefit.
Practice interlacing the fingers of one hand
with the toes of your opposite foot all the way up to the webs of
your fingers and toes. If this is difficult at
first, practice it often.
The Tadasana of the feet and ankles
Always begin Tadasana by placing your feet.
Place your feet so that your great toes and inner heels are
touching. You can also do the pose with your
feet hip width apart if balance is difficult.
Pull your ankles together so that your inner ankles touch if your
anatomy permits. Your second toes should be
pointing forward and be parallel.
Lift and lengthen the soles of your feet from the middle of
the arch of your foot forward on the floor or sticky mat.
As you do this, spread all of your toes wide.
Lengthen your toes forward as you spread them
apart. Never scrunch up or grip the floor with
your toes in any of the standing poses.
Then lengthen each foot from the middle of the arch back
through your heels.
After lengthening the soles of your feet both forward and
back, broaden them side to side, even though this may be more of a
feeling than a movement. Try to feel your feet
widen as much as possible from the centers outward.
Maximize the contact of your feet with the floor
or sticky mat. Notice that this is not the same
as gripping the floor with your feet or toes.
Allow your feet to be soft. Lengthening and
broadening them does not mean tensing them.
Cut the outer ankles in. Lift the inner
arches of your feet. If that action is
difficult, you can get the flavor of it by raising your toes up and
spreading them which will also lift the inner arches.
Then try to maintain that feeling even as you
place your toes back on the mat. Another useful
exercise to get the feeling of lifting the inner arches is to loop
a belt across the dorsum (tops) of your feet and then bring it
under both feet and up along the insides of the feet.
You then pull it upward with your hands.
Press through the four corners of your feet and
feel the lift of your inner arches.
Bring equal weight to all four corners of each of your feet.
Feel the weight of your body sink into your feet
to flatten them and make them heavy. Feel the
skin of the soles of your feet. Is each part of
that skin touching the ground equally? In Mr.
Iyengar's language, your feet should be "stamping."
Instead of the "four corners" of the feet, we also sometimes
use the analogy of a tripod, taking our weight evenly to each of
the three places:
In Tadasana our tendency is often to shift our weight more
into the balls of our feet and we need to bring it back into the
heels with conscious effort. Our weight should
fall around the anterior part of our heels and not in the frontal
feet hardly at all. Feel the weight of your body
in the bones of your legs (right down through your heels), not in
your groins and not in the front of your thighs.
With your weight mainly on your heels see how the skin on the
bottom of your foot, near the mound of your toes is free to open
more. Geeta Iyengar says if the bottoms of the
feet go even a little wrong the spinal muscles and the muscles of
the pubic region also go wrong. Stand with as
little movement as possible, watch the skin on the bottom of your
feet, and see how much knowledge it can give you throughout your
body.
In general, try to bring your weight a little more into your
heels in all of your standing poses to draw yourself a little more
into the back of your body since we usually tend to work too much
from the front of our body. This is true even in
daily life while standing in a line -- ask yourself are you more on
the balls of your feet with your hips out in front of your feet and
your torso sagging? Or can you draw your weight
back a little more into your heels and be in the back of your body
as much as you are in the front and lift your torso evenly from the
front, back, and both sides? Try this and
observe how other people stand in daily life.
There is a tendency to allow our weight to fall to the
outsides of our feet and let them roll outward.
Resist this by a strong inward action of your inner ankles, lifting
the outer ankles to achieve this. Don't be on
the outer or inner foot, bring yourself as much as possible to be
centralized on the bottom of each foot. As much
as you lift your outer ankles, lift your inner ankles upward
equally. As you lift your ankles, lift the
arches of your feet as well.
Experiment with shifting your weight back and forth slightly
between each foot in order to feel more clearly the point where
your weight is equally distributed between them.
In any asana it sometimes helps to move deliberately out of
alignment or balance to feel more clearly what it feels like to be
in alignment or balance.
The Tadasana of the legs
Make sure each shinbone is exactly balancing over its heel.
Take your weight onto your heels by shifting the
weight of your body and taking your shins back and moving the front
of your thighs toward the backs of your thighs.
Especially move your inner thighs back, pulling your groins back a
little but having the feeling of softening or "hollowing" them.
Do not harden your groins.
Firm the muscles of your legs into your bones on all sides,
both in your lower legs and in your thighs. Have
the feeling of "hugging" your bones with your muscles strongly.
As you squeeze your muscles inward, also feel as
though you are squeezing them upward into your pelvis, particularly
on all side of your thighs. Lift your hamstrings
toward your buttocks. Lift your inner thighs
toward your inner groins (the place where your legs meet your
pelvis). Lift the front of your thighs toward
your front groins and draw them back into your femurs.
Lift your outer thighs toward your hips.
Lift not only your muscles but your skin as
well. Squeeze your inner thighs together.
Just keeping your inner thighs together and not
stretching your legs strongly as described is wrong Tadasana.
The action of firming and lifting your quadriceps (front
thigh) muscles should also raise your kneecaps.
Lift your kneecaps strongly upward and also feel as though you are
drawing the tops them into your knees somewhat.
Open the backs of your knees strongly so there would be no space
there if you put a block up against the skin.
Feel the skin at the back of your knees stretch both vertically and
horizontally. All vertical actions should be
accompanied by expanding horizontal intelligence as well.
In any pose where your legs are kept straight, you should lift
your kneecaps. You may find that you have to
keep "recharging" this action, pulling up your kneecaps each time
they fall. This is a good indication that you
are human. In all the standing poses, remember,
if you can wiggle your patella (kneecap) with your fingers, you are
not engaging your quadriceps. Raise the inside
and outside of your knees equally. Lifting your
kneecap is not the same as pushing your knee back and
hyperextending your knee. Hyperextension of the
knee is when the top of the shinbone moves back further than the
bottom of the thighbone. Lifting your kneecaps
and the front of your thighs (quadriceps) in fact helps to ensure
that you do not hyperextend your knees. Lifting
your kneecaps involves tightening your quadriceps, not squeezing
your kneecaps into your knees by tightening the muscles around your
kneecap. Get the feeling of both of these and
ingrain the former. The latter leads to
hyperextension.
Your upper calves should press forward toward your shinbones
rather than bowing back in order to move your shinbone slightly
forward away from your heels. You should
maintain enough weight in the area of the balls of your feet to
feel this forward moving action of your shins.
This action will also help prevent hyperextension of your knees.
Remember, while your thighs are drawing strongly
back, resist forward with your upper calves and upper front shins
to keep your legs straight. This type of leg
action may be called "Tadasana legs" or "Uttanasana legs" and is
also found in other poses like Trikonasana.
However, the leg/knee action of Adho Mukha Svanasana is quite
different.
To reiterate, there should be no heaviness in your calves.
Feel how easy it is to just press them back?
To just "rest on your calves" in Iyengar
parlance? Your calves and buttocks are partners
who both move forward while being resisted back by your knees and
internal thighs and groins moving back. The
movement of the calves forward is slight, but you must feel
it.
Take the tops of your thighs back somewhat so they are
directly above your ankles. Draw the front skin
of your thighs back into your quadriceps muscles, which draw back
into your thighbones, which draw back to press against your
hamstrings which are drawing forward.
In Tadasana, the tendency is for our thighs to roll lazily
outward. This is a common tendency in many
poses. You will probably need to roll your
thighs slightly inward to ensure that the front center line of each
thigh is facing directly forward. This involves
internally rotating your legs so that you are taking your inner
thighs back more than your outer thighs. Note
that rolling your front thighs inward and rolling your rear upper
hamstrings outward are part of the same action and augment each
other. Even though you're rolling your thighs
inward, take your inner calves toward each other but allow your
inner calf muscles to go back more. Move your
inner heel skin toward your outer heel skin and turn the back of
each calf to follow that movement.
Remember that these leg actions are performed (with some
variation) consistently in all of the standing asanas.
The Tadasana of the pelvis, hips, and torso
As you are drawing your thigh bones backward, draw your
tailbone (sacrum) underneath and forward. Lift
your pubic bone upward toward your chest. You
want your coccyx bone moving both downward and forward, but the
heads of your thighbones (femurs) moving back.
This tucking of the tailbone also applies to poses such as plank
pose (where it is resisted by the rising thighs) and Caturanga
Dandasana -- both of which are just variations of Tadasana
really.
The buttocks in Tadasana and any other pose do not squeeze
together toward each other. Instead, they engage
forward into the sacrum. Tucking your tailbone
under is a spinal action that begins by lengthening your lumbar
spine. It is not a buttocks-squeezing action.
You tighten and engage the top half of your
buttocks, but not the lower half -- do not contract your anus.
Again, do not squeeze your buttocks together.
The tucking-under pelvis of Tadasana is
everywhere in yoga. It is used in Trikonasana,
Parsvakonasana, Virabhadrasana, and other poses.
Lengthening your lower back helps you to move your sit bones
toward your heels, your sacrum forward, and your hip points upward.
Note these are three parts of the same
action.
A good summary of the three primary actions of the pelvis,
hips, and thighs in this pose would be:
So, after you have established the pelvic actions, compact
your hips, draw them toward each other. Draw
them and your outer thighs together and hold it all in one place.
But do not let that cause you to squeeze your
buttocks together.
Level your pelvis in all three possible planes: front to back
(so that your pelvis is neither tipping forward into the "swayback"
position nor tipping back and allowing your low back to round),
side to side (so that one hip is not higher than the other), and
rotationally (so that your hips are square to the front).
This action is also particularly important in
Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana and other standing poses where the
extension of the legs in various directions tends to pull the
pelvis away from its neutral position.
Lengthen both sides of your torso from your hips upward toward
your armpits. Feel as though your torso is
lifting upward off your hips, out of your pelvis.
Lift your side ribs both forward and upward.
If you look at a skeleton, you observe that most
of your ribcage is in the front of your body.
Only the spine belongs to the back of the body.
Show that in your posture.
Lift your sternum toward the ceiling and expand it side to
side. Whenever we lift or open the chest, we
actually want to lift the manubrium (bone above the sternum) upward
while we lower the xiphoid process (bone below the sternum)
downward toward the navel. Draw the skin
overlying your front ribs away from your sternum.
Broaden your chest and collar bones.
Press the skin of your back in toward your
sternum to assist these actions. Project your
shoulder blades through the front of your chest.
Opening your chest is always an action that is done primarily with
the muscles of your upper back. However, do not
make the common mistake of squeezing your shoulder blades toward
each other to open your chest. You must broaden
your upper back as much as you broaden your chest and collar
bones.
One direction given in Iyengar parlance to help establish the
proper movement in the chest is to "Circularize the armpit chest."
The "armpit chest" refers to the sides of the
chest just underneath the armpits. The image of
circularization is used to explain that this area of the chest
should be moving forward while the front of the chest should be
moving upward while the shoulder itself is moving backward and the
back skin of the shoulder is moving downward in a circle to lift
and expand the chest. Make this action strong,
but don't let it cause your front ribs to jut forward or arch your
low back. This action should make the nook off
your front armpits and the nook of your rear armpits level with
each other. Open the backs of your armpits to
the front. The "circularize the armpit chest"
action also incorporates taking the shoulder blades forward into
chest.
Pull the skin up the front of your torso to lengthen it.
Extend up the back of your body as much as the
front. Also elongate through the inner core of
your body up through the crown of your head.
Elongate internally as well as externally. These
movements create maximal space within your body.
That's what Tadasana is about.
We work on lengthening the front of our torso a lot in yoga,
especially in forward bends. But in actuality,
in almost all poses the goal is to lengthen all sides of the torso,
especially including the area from the bottom of the ribs to the
tops of the pelvis on the sides of the torso and the lumbar area.
Do not neglect these areas.
You should not deliberately firm your abdomen, although it
does retain a degree of firmness naturally from the uplifting
action in your torso. Do not have it
soldier-like tensed.
The Tadasana of the shoulders
Your shoulders should fall naturally down away from your ears
and be aligned with your ears in the forward-to-back plane, neither
rounding forward, nor being pulled back too strongly in a
military-style position. Broaden and separate
your shoulders away from each other so you widen your shoulder
bones to the sides. Spread your collar bones to
the sides and move your shoulders back enough to ensure they are
aligned with your ears.
Draw your shoulder blades (scapulae) into your back and down
your back toward the top of your rear pelvis while still
maintaining space and breadth between them. Also
draw your floating ribs in the middle of your back downward toward
your rear pelvis. Do not allow these actions to
compromise the uplifting of your torso.
Draw the skin on the tops of your shoulders back and downward
toward your shoulder blades. Do not tense your
shoulders as you do this. Relax them as much as
possible. Drop your trapezius skin.
As your trapezius skin drops, lift the top of
your chest and "circularize your armpit chest" more.
To feel the correct Tadasana of the shoulder blades, sit on a
chair with your knees under a table, put your hands underneath the
table with your elbows at your sides, and pull the table gently
upward with your palms. Remember the shoulder
blades belong with the back. If you are lifting
your arms overhead (Urdhva Hastasana), though you may extend your
arms fully and strongly, do not let your shoulder blades be pulled
along out of their correct position down the back.
Another way of saying this is to keep your
shoulders lowered down away from your ears and the tops of your
shoulders and collar bones broad -- do not let your shoulders hug
your ears. This is especially important in such
poses as Adho Mukha Svanasana.
To understand the feeling of lifting your side ribs and
sternum and drawing your shoulder blades down and into your back,
extend your arms straight out to your sides and turn your palms
upward strongly toward the ceiling (more from the little finger
side of your palms than the thumb side). This
action will help you create the feeling in your chest and upper
back that you should have in virtually every yogasana.
This lifting creates space in the torso for
breathing deeply. Another good exercise for
feeling the correct action of the shoulder blades is to interlace
your fingers behind your back, palms up, knuckles toward the floor,
and stretch your arms firmly down toward the floor.
Feel your shoulder blades pull into and down
your back, and raise the top of your skull toward the ceiling to
elongate your neck and prevent your chin from jutting out.
Yet another exercise to work on the shoulders in Tadasana is
to place your hands on your hips with your elbows pointing straight
back to the wall behind you. Then broaden your
collar bones and feel how your shoulder blades press into your body
and your chest opens. Move your shoulder blades
away from each other. So, there are two
important actions in this exercise: (1) your shoulder blades move
inward by virtue of the actions you are doing, but (2) you still
maintain space between them.
The Tadasana of the arms
Learn to lengthen both your arms in a relaxed way, fully
extending them. As much as your chest moves
upward, extend your arms down strongly. Use the
resistance of your arms moving down to help lift your chest.
However, do not pull your arms down toward the
floor so strongly as to pull your shoulders down with tension.
Turn your biceps strongly outward in Tadasana,
but keep your forearms and palms turning inward so that your palms
face your thighs. Have your palms out about six
inches away from your thighs. Move your upper
arms slightly back.
The classical Tadasana is also done with your arms extended
overhead, a posture called Urdhva Hastasana.
When you extend your arms overhead and lift them strongly, it aids
in the feeling of your torso also lifting strongly.
Though you lift with your arms, do not lose the
Tadasana of the shoulder blade.
The Tadasana of the neck and head
Look outward at eye level. There is a
common tendency to look downward with the eyes in this pose, even
though the head is level. Maintain a neutral
head position. From a side view, your ear canals
should align with the center of your shoulders.
Have someone check this visually for you.
Gently press upward through the crown of your head.
Lengthen the line all the way up from your
sacrum to your head. Be as tall as you can be,
like a kid trying to get on a carnival ride he's just a little too
small for. As your cervical spine lengthens, you
will feel some stretch in your throat, but make sure there is no
tension there. Allow your neck and throat to
soften.
Lift the back of your head (the base of your skull) away from
your neck to lengthen your neck. Keep your neck
long on all sides without tension.
Your face, eyes, tongue, and throat areas should remain soft,
as in all asanas.
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