ANAHATA CHAKRA BADDHA HASTA VIRABHADRASANA
ANAHATA CHAKRA BADDHA HASTA
VIRABHADRASANA
open Heart Chakra Hands Bound Warrior Pose from Sanskrit.
The
name of this pose comes from "Anahata Chakra" meaning "HeartChakra", "baddha" meaning "bound", "hasta"
meaning "hand", "virabhadra" in reference to a legendary
warrior, and "asanas" meaning "posture" or
"seat".
This
pose is a variation of the warrior poses, and is part of the warrior pose
sequesnce.
STEP 1
Stand
in Tadasana (Mountain Pose). With an exhale, step or lightly jump your
feet 31/2 to 4 feet apart. Raise your arms perpendicular to the floor (and
parallel to each other), and reach actively through the little-finger sides of
the hands toward the ceiling. Firm your scapulas against your back and draw
them down toward the coccyx.
STEP 2
Turn
your left foot in 45 to 60 degrees to the right and your right foot out 90
degrees to the right. Align the right heel with the left heel. Exhale and
rotate your torso to the right, squaring the front of your pelvis as much as
possible with the front edge of your mat. As the left hip point turns forward,
press the head of the left femur back to ground the heel. Lengthen your coccyx toward
the floor, and arch your upper torso back slightly.
STEP 3
With
your left heel firmly anchored to the floor, exhale and bend your right knee
over the right ankle so the shin is perpendicular to the floor. More flexible
students should align their right thigh parallel to the floor.
STEP 4
Reach
strongly through your arms, lifting the rib-cage away from the pelvis. As you
ground down through the back foot, feel a lift that runs up the back leg,
across the belly and chest, and up into the arms. If possible, bring the palms
together. Spread the palms against each other and reach a little higher through
the pinky-sides of the hands.
Keep your head in a neutral position, gazing forward, or tilt it back and look up at your thumbs.
Keep your head in a neutral position, gazing forward, or tilt it back and look up at your thumbs.
STEP 5
Stay
for 30 seconds to a minute. To come up, inhale, press the back heel firmly into
the floor and reach up through the arms, straightening the right knee. Turn the
feet forward and release the arms with an exhalation, or keep them extended
upward for more challenge. Take a few breaths, then turn the feet to the left
and repeat for the same length. When you’re finished return to Tadasana.
BENEFITS
·
This
pose has many benefits: it strengthens the leg muscles, stretches the chest and
front shoulders, promotes spinal flexibility and stimulates the internal organs
of the torso.
·
Be
careful while doing this pose if you have any knee or ankle injuries, shoulder
injuries, or spinal injuries
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