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Yoga: where you can find yourself

Check out this relaxing yoga pose that can be practiced by both adults and kids, Here it is.

Hero Pose

Virasana is a balm for tired legs at the end of the day, as well as an alternative to Lotus for seated meditation.

(veer-AHS-anna)

vira = man, hero, chief

Hero Pose: Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1

Kneel on the floor (use a folded blanket or bolster to wedge between your calves and thighs if necessary), with your thighs perpendicular to the floor, and touch your inner knees together. Slide your feet apart, slightly wider than your hips, with the tops of the feet flat on the floor. Angle your big toes slightly in toward each other and press the top of each foot evenly on the floor.

Step 2

Exhale and sit back halfway, with your torso leaning slightly forward. Wedge your thumbs into the backs of your knees and draw the skin and flesh of the calf muscles toward the heels. Then sit down between your feet.

Step 3

If your buttocks don’t comfortably rest on the floor, raise them on a block or thick book placed between the feet. Make sure both sitting bones are evenly supported. Allow a thumb’s-width space between the inner heels and the outer hips. Turn your thighs inward and press the heads of the thigh bones into the floor with the bases of your palms. Then lay your hands in your lap, one on the other, palms up, or on your thighs, palms down.

Step 4

Firm your shoulder blades against the back ribs and lift the top of your sternum like a proud warrior. Widen the collarbones and release the shoulder blades away from the ears. Lengthen the tailbone into the floor to anchor the back torso.

Step 5

At first stay in this pose from 30 seconds to 1 minute. Gradually extend your stay up to 5 minutes. To come out, press your hands against the floor and lift your buttocks up, slightly higher than the heels. Cross your ankles underneath your buttocks, sit back over the feet and onto the floor, then stretch your legs out in front of you. It may feel good to bounce your knees up and down a few times on the floor.

Pose Information

Sanskrit Name

Virasana

Pose Level: 1

Contraindications and Cautions

Heart problems

Headache: Practice this pose lying back on a bolster.

Knee or ankle injury: Avoid this pose unless you have the assistance of an experienced instructor.

Modifications and Props

If your ankles are painful in this pose, roll up a towel and place it underneath them before you sit back.

Deepen the Pose

Cup your hands around the knees, straighten the arms fully, and pull on the knees. Firm your shoulder blades against your back, lift the top sternum and release your chin down onto the chest without straining the back of your neck. Hold for 10 to 20 seconds. Then let go of the knees and raise your head back to neutral without losing the lift of the sternum.

Preparatory Poses

Balasana

Baddha Konasana

Follow-up Poses

Padmasana

Bakasana

Inversions, backbends, and standing poses

Beginner’s Tip

Often the inner top feet press more heavily into the floor than the outer top feet. Press the bases of your palms along the outer edges of the feet and gently push the pinky-toe sides of the feet to the floor.

Benefits

Stretches the thighs, knees, and ankles

Strengthens the arches

Improves digestion and relieves gas

Helps relieve the symptoms of menopause

Reduces swelling of the legs during pregnancy (through the second trimester)

Therapeutic for high blood pressure and asthma

Partnering

A partner can help you learn to lengthen the spine in this pose. Perform Virasana. Have your partner sit behind you and firmly grasp the base of your skull with the thumb and index finger of one hand. As you lengthen the tailbone into the floor, have your partner tug up on the skull base, lengthening the back spine between its two “poles.” Release the crease of your neck into this space between the base of the skull and the back of the neck.

Variations

Clasp your hands, extend your arms forward (perpendicular to your torso and parallel to the floor), turn the palms away from your torso (so the thumbs point to the floor), then raise the arms on an inhalation perpendicular to the floor, with the palms facing the ceiling. Stretch actively through the bases of the index fingers.

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