9 Grounding Yoga Poses for Post Travel

in #yoga6 years ago

Travel makes us feel stiff even if it is to join a yoga retreat. You arrive at your destination feeling tense and eager to get into your first yoga class. But be wary of jumping straight into a high-intensity activity because the dehydration and lack of movement can make you more vulnerable to injury. Here are a few tips on how to reconnect back into your body.

Flow Yoga: How to Approach Your Poses

The tightness is dehydration of your fascia. Fascia is a connective tissue that wraps around the entire of your body including muscles, bones, and organs. It responds to a light buoyant quality in your movement to help it rehydrate (as well as drinking water). Your body needs at least 30-40 minutes from a fixed shape (sitting) to rehydrate the fascia. So, ease into movement mindfully after long periods of travel.

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How to move it key for fascia rehydration. You want to find a fluidity in your movements, easing into poses from various angles and moving around within the pose – gentle and small. You can bounce with a ‘gliding’ quality with the goal to create smooth and flowing movements.

Focus on Grounding

To ground, draw your attention to the point of your body contacting the ground. Notice it’s connection and see if you can feel a stronger pull of energy from the earth as you press down more firmly into the ground. Be aware of your feet, legs and base of the pelvis into the groin area that both open and activate to bring it back to balance.

Grounding Yoga Poses

  1. Tadasana (mountain pose) – Get back to feeling the earth! Bring your feet hip distance for this variation as it is more grounding. Check-in with your feet and their connection to the ground tracing up into your pelvis. Can you feel the arches of your feet suck energy from the earth giving you strength? If you’re unsure how to engage your feet properly check our blog post “The 3 Keys to Your Feet” {DAN INSERT HYPERLINK}.
    OPTION: Add a side stretch if you need to open the side body, and perhaps gentle rotate the chest forward and back as you reach taller.

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  1. Standing Root Meditation – Stand in Tadasana with feet hip distance. Visualise your feet growing roots into the earth. Let the roots connect deep down to the core of the earth. Once your roots are planted begin to draw the energy from the earth into your legs and up through your body. Visualise yourself a tall tree strong and stable with your crown reaching towards the heavens.

  2. Ardha Upanasana (wind relieving pose) – Sitting tightens our hip flexors. This pose does both actions of the hip flexors in one! The bent knee shortens and softens the hip flexor, whilst the straight leg lengthens and opens the hip flexor. Actively reach through the straight leg, grounding down through the foot as though standing on it. Press the straight thigh into the ground whilst keeping the tailbone down to the earth. Soften the belly as you exhale to release the bent leg closer to your chest.
    OPTION: Add a twist to the spine by spinning the bent knee towards the ground, if you feel that you need to open the spine to release. Keep the opposite shoulder on the ground throughout.

Nid Ardha Uppanasana

  1. Baddha Konasana (bound angle) – It is great to open the groins, the area of our root chakra that is key to our feeling grounded. The external rotation at the hip joint helps release the hip flexors and softens the abductors of the hip. Sit with a tall spine, keep the souls of the feet connected and draw the knees towards the floor with the muscles in your hip to strengthen and lengthen them in one hit.
    OPTION: Add a supported backbend with a bolster or block to open the chest. Be careful of your lower back and keep the tailbone reaching towards your heels.

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  1. Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (bridge) – Reawaken and strengthen your back body as you drive your feet and shoulders into the ground to lift the hips up. This lengthens the hip flexors counter to sitting. To mobilize your spine, roll up and down focusing on each vertebra placing sequentially as you lift the hips up.
    OPTION: At the top of the pose, lift one foot at a time keeping the hips level to test how grounded you are. Keep the foot connection strong on your standing base.

How to practice yoga - http://YogiAaron.com

  1. Utkatasana (chair) – How we get out of our seat is often forgotten about. Activate your glutes, quadriceps, and hamstrings from sitting to stand with this pose. Keep the feet hip distance to reinforce the ‘grounding’ message to your body, press down through the whole foot evenly, keep the knees over the ankles and in line with the second toe, and drive from your backside upwards to halfway. Ensure the low belly pulls in towards the spine to protect the low back.
    OPTIONS: With prayer hands, lengthen and twist your chest to the side for spinal mobilisation and abdominal activation.

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  1. Anjaneyasana (low lunge) – Separation of the legs adds a new balance challenge to getting grounded. Keep the hips square by scissoring the inner thighs to strengthen the pelvis and legs. Lift the pubic bone towards your hip bones to deepen the hip flexor stretch. Bend your front knee over the ankle in line with the second toe and draw the thigh bone back into the hip socket to work the abductors (side hip). Straighten and bend your back leg to add to the balance challenge.
    OPTION: Add a twist towards the front leg to lengthen and invigorate the thoracic spine.

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  1. Virabhadrasana 2 (warrior 2) – Feel strong and prepared for your new adventure by using hip abductors to open your pelvis to the side. Turn your front foot forward and back foot to 45 degrees, open the hips to the side. Press the front knee to the outside of your foot and your back outside foot into the ground to work the hip muscles. Mindfully play with moving your torso around whilst keeping the legs still. It will challenge your balance, grounding and core suppleness.
    OPTION: Go into and explore Utthita Parsvakonasana (extended side angle pose) to further rotate and side lengthen the waist and spine.

DSC_1685

  1. Vriksasana (Tree) – A one leg standing balance is a great test of how grounded you feel. Vriksasana opens the hip without twisting the pelvis and allows you to focus on stabilizing each leg one at a time whilst keeping your spine and torso square. Keep hands in prayer at heart center. If your balance is challenged, then keep a toe on the ground.
    OPTION: Lift hands up into a V shape above your head and change your gaze upwards.

DSC_1762

About the Author

Nid loves all her incarnations as an energy healer and coach, massage therapist, teacher of mind-body movement through yoga and Pilates, and blog writer. She is a passionate messenger on how to find your truth and live in alignment with your soul. Her work attracts people going through major life changes, long-term pain or health issues to discover how to live life with joy in mind, body, and spirit. She can be found working on retreats and online worldwide at http://www.omegamovement.org/.

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This is a great post @omegamovement. First I want to call your attention to an editing note that slipped through your fingers before publishing the post - If you’re unsure how to engage your feet properly check our blog post “The 3 Keys to Your Feet” {DAN INSERT HYPERLINK}.
I believe you intended to insert a link to this post, so I will leave it here for future readers LOL:
https://steemit.com/yoga/@omegamovement/the-3-keys-to-your-feet-grounded-compassionate-and-buoyant

I love the clear instructions and explanations of the benefits of each pose. Really wonderful.

I do have one suggestion - if you own the rights to these pictures, and I believe you to own the rights to at least most of them as they are not turning up in reverse Google image search and looking at your website I believe I recognize a few of the yogis here as part of your network of professionals - it would be best practice here on Steem to mention that they are your own original photography at the bottom of the post. If an image is not your own of course you should provide a source link, and best practice would be to only use such images if they are from an open use source such as pixabay or wikicommons. I see at least one picture appears to be Yogi Aaron (yogiaaron.com) - is he part of your team?

Cheers and thanks for the wonderful post!

Much love - Carl

Thanks so much for the link add in! I write some articles for Blue Osa and some just for myself. This article has images from Blue Osa (owned by Yogi Aaron), so I followed his instructions to link back to his flickr page. If they're not pulling the credits, maybe there is another way to get the credits from the flickr data? Do you know how to do this? Many thanks, Nid

Typically just providing a note RE image sourcing at the bottom of the post would be sufficient here e.g. a note that you have permission to use these images from Blue Osa and a link to flickr or someting like that.

Not sure how you were attempting to provide sourcing but the post editor here is a little... lacking in functionality (to put it kindly) and a lot of HTML doesn't work in particular. I didn't look at your source code to see what you were trying to do.

Cheers - Carl

Congratulations @omegamovement, this post is the most rewarded post (based on pending payouts) in the last 12 hours written by a Dust account holder (accounts that hold between 0 and 0.01 Mega Vests). The total number of posts by Dust account holders during this period was 6305 and the total pending payments to posts in this category was $1179.53. To see the full list of highest paid posts across all accounts categories, click here.

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Congratulations!
Following you!
Please do check out my latest post as well and follow me back @timesedge

https://steemit.com/poetry/@timesedge/faith-an-original-poem

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I couldn't have read this at a better time! I was just scrolling through steemit after a day of traveling. I will definitely check these out.

I love your page and your vibe! I gave you a follow and would appreciate the same! I think you would like my content - I post high quality photos, videos, and blogs about yoga, mindfulness, and life.

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