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Today's Daily Tip

Practice Patience

The goal of yoga is enlightenment . That's it. Yoga was originally developed to lead the practitioner to freedom from suffering ... (continued)

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Corpse Pose

Savasana

savasana_248

(shah-VAHS-anna)
sava = corpse

This pose is also called Mrtasana (pronounced mrit-TAHS-anna, mrta = death)

Step by Step

In Savasana it's essential that the body be placed in a neutral position. Sit on the floor with your knees bent, feet on the floor, and lean back onto your forearms. Lift your pelvis slightly off the floor and, with your hands, push the back of the pelvis toward the tailbone, then return the pelvis to the floor. Inhale and slowly extend the right leg, then the left, pushing through the heels. Release both legs, softening the groins, and see that the legs are angled evenly relative to the mid-line of the torso, and that the feet turn out equally. Narrow the front pelvis and soften (but don't flatten) the lower back.

With your hands lift the base of the skull away from the back of the neck and release the back of the neck down toward the tailbone. If you have any difficulty doing this, support the back of the head and neck on a folded blanket. Broaden the base of the skull too, and lift the crease of the neck diagonally into the center of the head. Make sure your ears are equidistant from your shoulders.

Reach your arms toward the ceiling, perpendicular to the floor. Rock slightly from side to side and broaden the back ribs and the shoulder blades away from the spine. Then release the arms to the floor, angled evenly relative to the mid-line of torso. Turn the arms outward and stretch them away from the space between the shoulder blades. Rest the backs of the hands on the floor as close as you comfortably can to the index finger knuckles. Make sure the shoulder blades are resting evenly on the floor. Imagine the lower tips of the shoulder blades are lifting diagonally into your back toward the top of the sternum. From here, spread the collarbones.

In addition to quieting the physical body in Savasana, it's also necessary to pacify the sense organs. Soften the root of the tongue, the wings of the nose, the channels of the inner ears, and the skin of the forehead, especially around the bridge of the nose between the eyebrows. Let the eyes sink to the back of the head, then turn them downward to gaze at the heart. Release your brain to the back of the head.

Stay in this pose for 5 minutes for every 30 minutes of practice. To exit, first roll gently with an exhalation onto one side, preferably the right. Take 2 or 3 breaths. With another exhalation press your hands against the floor and lift your torso, dragging your head slowly after. The head should always come up last.


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Reader Comments

Nick

A few things:
most yoga classes I take, vinyasa and hatha, leave students in savasana for just a few minutes. The avg class length is 60 minutes, and according to part 5 of the savasana description, one should stay in the pose for 5 min per every 30 min of practice. Thus a 10 min savasana should be the norm, but this is seldom the case. Wassup wit dat?

On a different note, when I stay in savasana for an extended amount of time, I sometimes feel a heavy pressure on the back of my head where it meets the floor or mat. After coming out of the pose I sometimes experience blurred vision for 10-20 minutes thereafter. I wonder if a prolonged savasana puts undue pressure on the back of the head, near the occipital lobe, the part your brain that regulates site. Is this dangerous? Should I look to support my head more with a blanket rolled under the neck and head?

Joni

What is natural stress for life?

KM

This site is a great resource from the perspective of images and classification of asanas.

However, the instructions are REALLY REALLY badly written. Hard to make sense of most of them. Either consider putting up videos for each asana or write clearer instructions.

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