Friday, December 16, 2011

Pose of the Month (December 2011)

Simhasana (Lion Pose)


How to:
Kneel on the floor and cross the front of the right ankle over the back of the left. The feet will point out to the sides. Sit back so the perineum snuggles down onto the on the top (right) heel.

Press your palms firmly against your knees. Fan the palms and splay your fingers like the sharpened claws of a large feline.

Take a deep inhalation through the nose. Then simultaneously open your mouth wide and stretch your tongue out, curling its tip down toward the chin, open your eyes wide, contract the muscles on the front of your throat, and exhale the breath slowly out through your mouth with a distinct "ha" sound. The breath should pass over the back of the throat.

Set your gaze (drishti) at the spot between the eyebrows. This is called "mid-brow gazing" or bhru-madhya-drishti; (bhru = the brow; madhya = middle). Or direct your eyes to the tip of the nose (nasa-agra-drishti; nasa = nose; agra = foremost point).

You can roar two or three times. Then change the cross of the legs and repeat for the same number of times. You may feel goofy doing this pose, but the benefits are great from it.

Benefits:
- Relieves tension in the chest and face.
- Stimulates the platysma, a flat, thin, rectangular-shaped muscle on the front of the throat.
The platysma, when contracted, pulls down on the corners of the mouth and wrinkles the skin
of the neck.
- Helps keep the platysma firm as we age.
- Destroys disease and facilitates the three major bandhas: (Mula, Jalandhara, Uddiyana).