
(Photo: Andrew Clark)
Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana (Extended Hand-to-Big-Toe Pose) is a balancing posture in which you raise one leg at hip level and hold onto its big toe with your hand. It’s a pose that can make you feel powerful—and build on your strength and flexibility, particularly in the back of your legs and your ankles.
If you have tight hamstrings and can’t straighten your leg while keeping your spine straight, use a strap, practice with a bent lifted knee, or hold your knee instead of your toe. Find the variation that works best for you—and your body’s needs.
If you fall out of this pose, don’t be harsh on yourself. Falling out of postures is ok, says yoga teacher Noah Mazé, founder of The Mazé Method. “That’s why we call it yoga practice: Your practice on the mat is training you for your practice off the mat.”
Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana
utthita = extended
hasta = hand
pada = foot
angusta = big toe
asana = pose

The pose can be practiced with the lifted leg in a lateral position. From the original pose, maintain the lift and extension of your leg as you slowly sweep it out and away from the midline of your body. Bring it out to the side or as far as your hip flexibility will allow.

If your hamstrings are tight, you can practice the pose by keeping your lifted leg bent. Shift your weight into your standing leg, lift the opposite knee up high and hold it with one or both hands.

From Tasasana, loop a strap under the arch of your left foot, and hold both ends in your left hand. Shift your weight into your right leg and, finding balance, lift your left leg straight out and up, using the strap for support. Press your foot into the strap, rather than pulling the strap toward you.

Sit toward the front of a sturdy chair. (Place it on a mat and/or against the wall to make sure it does not slide.) Straighten and extend your right leg and flex your foot, keeping your heel on the ground. Fold forward at your hip and reach your right hand toward your foot. Grasp your big toe with your first two fingers.

Try this pose on your back so you can focus on your raised leg instead of balancing, and it prevents rounding forward of the spine (spinal flexion).
Pose Type: Standing balance
Targets: Lower body
Benefits: Extended Hand-to-Big Toe Pose improves balance, postural and body awareness, and can boost energy and fight fatigue. It can help build confidence and empowerment, improves posture, and counteracts the effects of prolonged sitting and doing computer work. On the lifted leg, the back of your thigh (hamstring), calf, and inner thigh (adductor) get stretched. On the standing leg, your thigh, buttock (glute), and around your ankle get strengthened.
You can hold this pose longer by supporting the raised-leg foot on the top edge of a chair back (padded with a blanket). Set the chair an inch or two from a wall and press your raised heel firmly to the wall.
These tips will help protect your students from injury and help them have the best experience of the pose: