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Extended Side Angle Pose

Utthita Parsvakonasana

HP_220_Parsvakonasana_248.jpg
It might be better, then, to think of Utthita Parsvakonasana as the "Extended Sides Angle Pose."

(oo-TEE-tah parsh-vah-cone-AHS-anna)
utthita = extended
parsva = side, flank
kona = angle

Step by Step

Stand in Tadasana. On an exhalation, step or lightly jump your feet 3.5 to 4 feet apart. Raise your arms parallel to the floor and reach them actively out to the sides, shoulder blades wide, palms down. Turn your left foot in slightly to the right and your right foot out to the right 90 degrees. Align the right heel with the left heel. Firm your thighs and turn your right thigh outward, so that the center of the kneecap is in line with the center of the right ankle. Roll the left hip slightly forward, toward the right, but rotate your upper torso back to the left.

Anchor the left (back) heel to the floor by lifting the inner left groin deep into the pelvis. Then exhale and bend your right knee over the right ankle, so that the shin is perpendicular to the floor. As you bend the knee aim the inner knee toward the little-toe side of the foot. If possible, bring the right thigh parallel to the floor.

Firm your shoulder blades against the back ribs. Extend your left arm straight up toward the ceiling, then turn the left palm to face toward your head and with an inhalation reach the arm over the back of your left ear, palm facing the floor. Stretch from your left heel through your left fingertips, lengthening the entire left side of your body. Turn your head to look at the left arm. Release your right shoulder away from the ear. Try to create as much length along the right side of your torso as you do along the left.

As you continue to ground your left heel to the floor, exhale and lay the right side of your torso down onto (or bring it as close as possible to) the top of the right thigh. Press your right fingertips (or palm) on the floor just outside of your right foot. Actively push the right knee back against the inner arm; counter this by burrowing your tail bone into the back of your pelvis, toward the pubis. The inside of your right thigh should be parallel with the long edge of your sticky mat.

Stay for 30 seconds to 1 minute. Inhale to come up. Push both heels strongly into the floor and reach the left arm forcefully toward the ceiling to lighten the upward movement. Reverse the feet and repeat for the same length of time to the left. Then come up and return to Tadasana.


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Reader Comments

emily

No2-Depends on what school of yoga you come from. I practice Vinyasa, and my teachers teach us to place the arm inside the leg, as it helps to both externally rotate the upper arm, as well as find stability by pressing the arm into the leg. I am told that in Mysore Ashtanga they place the palm on the outside of the leg.

Julie Poplawski

How is this pose similar or different than the Triangle of the Bikram series?

no2cat

The written directions about what to do with the arm that goes down do not agree with the photo. The directions say put the fingers on the floor OUTSIDE the foot and press the knee against the inner arm; the photo clearly shows the arm INSIDE the bent leg. Which is correct?

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