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Today's Daily Tip

Spotlight on Sivananda Yoga

At its core, Sivananda Yoga is geared toward helping students answer the age-old question, "Who am I?" This yoga practice is ... (continued)

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Yearning for Handstand

Ease your struggles with Handstand by way of a few strength- and confidence-building exercises.

By YJ Staff

Yearning for Handstand

For many yoga students, the struggles with Handstand are often not just physical. Fear holds many students back. Fortunately, the steps that build the skills, strength, and openness needed for Handstand should also increase confidence.

There are two basic challenges in Handstand: gaining strength in the arms and trusting in their ability to hold the body, and learning to swing the hips up over the head. Robert Gray, one of Yoga Journal's in-house yoga teachers and director of the Park Boulevard Yoga Center in Oakland, California, suggests this approach to the first challenge: Start in Downward-Facing Dog with your heels at a wall, hands and feet a little closer to each other than usual. Walk your feet up the wall, bringing more and more weight onto your arms.

If your arms can support you here, you should have the strength to do Handstand. Repeat this exercise to build both strength and confidence.

You have to make a real commitment to get your hips and legs up over your head. At first, practice with a wall just behind you so that you won't worry about falling over backward. Keeping your weight forward over your hands (toward the wall), push firmly off one foot, swing the other leg and your hips up toward the wall, and immediately scissor the other leg up. It may take much more oomph than you think! But if you've developed arm strength you can trust, it's time to go for it.

Alternately, you can keep both feet together, bend your knees, and bunny-hop your hips up above your head. This is a great method for learning the almost weightless feeling of balancing your hips over your hands.

Whichever method you choose, take Robert's advice: "Approach the pose with a spirit of play and adventure."

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Reader Comments

bettyp

I learned a trick for kicking up: Miss Karin Stephan suggested putting a bolster up the wall the long way, so when you are kicking up, you can look at the bolster, and move your head into it. I realized I had the fear of hitting my head on the wall, and the bolster navigates this.

Maria

I also love handstands. I often get the urge to go upside down when I am premenstrual amd during the first few days of my cycle. I've read that inversions should not be done during this time. Is it really harmful?

Aleka

I love doing handstand. It's very energizing and clears the head. I often have long professional meetings in hotel meeting rooms. If I get sleepy, I go into the handicap stall in the women's room and do handstand. It always makes me alert and awake. Handstand everyday for me!!

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If I like Yoga Journal and decide to continue, I'll pay just $16.95, and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 62% savings off the newsstand price! If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing.