Full Name:

Address 1:

Address 2:

City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email (required):

If I like it 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!

Today's Daily Tip

Inversions for Beginners?

B.K.S. Iyengar, one of the most influential voices in Western yoga, calls Sirsasana (Headstand) and Sarvangasana (Shoulderstand) the king and queen ... (continued)

Multimedia

Video Channel:
From the Magazine

Behind the Scenes at a Yoga Journal Photoshoot

See the work and dedication of our editorial and art teams as we create the images to illustrate Chaturanga.

Watch Video



Print Print Email Email Comment Comment Add to Favorites
Log in to save to My Yoga Journal!
Add to Favorites
Bookmark Bookmark

Dizzy Spells

If you get dizzy when bending over backwards, you may need to relax from your core body.

By YJ Staff

First, you have to distinguish between dizziness and nausea. Nausea is the feeling of queasiness in the stomach, as if you are about to vomit, and can be caused by disturbances in the inner ear or incorrect pressure on the abdominal organs. Dizziness is most often experienced in the skull with a feeling of lightheadedness, ringing in the ears, difficulty focusing the eyes, and loss of balance. Dizziness can have many causes, from the serious (strokes and tumors) to the mundane (temporarily restricted blood flow from standing too quickly, commonly known as a headrush). If you experience one or both on a regular basis, you should consult your physician.

Nausea and/or dizziness in your yoga practice can also be red flags if experienced to a debilitating degree, says Robert Gray, director of the Park Boulevard Yoga Center in Oakland, California. "First, ensure you are not practicing at the wrong time with regard to your eating cycle," says Gray. "Don't be stuffed nor starving. Empty your bowels and bladder. Hydrate to a reasonable level before you begin, then refrain from drinking during your practice. For women, where you are in the cycle of your menses is significant too, and there may be days when backbends are just not for you."

But Gray also explains it this way: "Inside our body is a living mammalian core that extends from the anus to the top of the head and encompasses all our organs, glands, blood vessels, and nerves. It is woven together and to the spine with webs of connective tissue," he says. "All yoga postures are designed to effect this inner core. If our postures do not honor the integrity and intelligence of this core, we can experience symptoms like nausea and dizziness.

"To do a backbend, or any posture for that matter, we must use the strength of our arms and legs. If our shoulders and hips are restricted, the strength of our arms and legs will violate the integrity of this core body."

So what can you do to prevent nausea and dizziness? Gray offers these suggestions: Work at continuing to open the hips and shoulders with standing poses and seated twists. In the backbends themselves, concentrate on relaxing your neck. First, lie on you back with your legs relaxed and comfortable. Let the force of gravity soften your voice box and move it back into the neck vertebrae. The soft tissue from the upper lungs to the inner ears and brain should also be relaxed.

Lie very still and observe the quality of your breath. Feel and remember this relaxation in the neck and try to maintain it as you move into the backbend. Remember to move slowly and listen closely to what your core body is telling you.

See All Asana Columns Articles »

Print Print Email Email Comment Comment Add to Favorites
Log in to save to My Yoga Journal!
Add to Favorites
Bookmark Bookmark

Subscribe to Yoga Journal Magazine

Reader Comments

Mary Barwick

I find that I become dizzy because of orthostatic hypotension and if I take a deep breath and tense my muscles it raises my bloodpressure back up.

After teaching for over 10 years I have had 2 students pass out after rising from long extended forward bends, one student had not eaten the other had low blood pressure.
I am surprised this was not mentioned in the article.

Add a Comment »

Your Name:

Comment:

Join Yoga Journal's Benefits Plus

Liability insurance and benefits to support teachers and studios.

Learn More »

Enter to Win Great Prizes!

Enter to Win Great Prizes! Enter to Win Great Prizes! Prizes include a Yoga Journal conference pass, yoga mats, clothes, books, jewelry, energy bars, Yoga Journal DVDs, and more...

Enter Now »

Get 2 FREE Trial Issues and 2 FREE Gifts!

FREE Gifts! Your subscription includes
2 FREE GIFTS:

Yoga for Neck & Shoulders

A digital guide to 11 postures that relieve neck, back and shoulder tension.

Yoga Remedies for Everyday Ailments

A digital guide to 8 postures that relieve common health problems such as stress, backache, wrist strain, and insomnia.

Yes! Please send me 2 FREE trial issues
of Yoga Journal and my 2 FREE GIFTS

Full Name:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email (req):

If I like it 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!

Offer valid in US only.
Canadian subscriptions | International subscriptions

Save 62% off the cover price Pay Now and Get 2
Bonus Issues
Pay now and get
TWO EXTRA ISSUES FREE!
That's 10 issues for the
same low price!
Click Here to PAY NOW!