
YogaLife's Yoga For Runners:
Post-Run Stretches
Presented by New Balance
Post-Run Poses
These three deep tissue stretches will immediately release built-up muscle stress so that you don't have a mountain of tension to untangle. Better than a daily massage, this yoga prescription will help your post-run muscles recover quicker.
For Tight hips and quads try Cow-Faced Pose
Begin on all fours, with your knees directly below your hips, and your hands slightly ahead of your shoulders. Cross your right knee in front of your left knee and walk your ankles away from your body. Sit back between your heels, keeping your feet equidistant from your hips. If this is too intense sit on a blanket, raising the hips until you can sit with your weight equally distributed right and left. Gently if possible walk the ankles forward until they are in line with your knees and the feet and flexed. This might not be possible until you gain flexibility in the hips. Placing the fingertips in front of your ankles inhale elongating the spine, exhale and fold forward slightly. Continue to fold forward or hold the pose for 10-15 breaths. Repeat on the other side.
For tender hamstrings try bound ankle pose
Sit with your legs straight out in front of you, sitting on a blanket
if you have tight hips. Pull one ankle into your groin followed by the
other. If you cannot grab hold of both ankles without rounding your
back hold onto the shins. Press the soles of your feet away from one
another so as to unfold the feet like an open book. Draw your heels as
far into the groin as is comfortable. Inhale and lengthen your spine
skyward, exhale and press your thighs toward the floor. If you are
comfortable you can lean forward keeping the spine long feeling the
sternum reach up and forward. Do not round the back, bounce the legs up
and down or press on the knees.
For tight legs, hips, back, shoulders and neck try Camel pose
Kneeling, with your body erect, check your alignment, making sure your
knees are directly beneath your hips and curling your toes under. Stack
your hips on top of your knees, your shoulders atop your hips, and your
ears atop your shoulders. Then place the palms of your hands on the
small of your back, fingertips facing up. If that is uncomfortable, the
fingertips can face the floor. As you inhale, inflate the chest and
feel your breastbone ride, floating the ribcage up and off the waist.
Then continue to lift the upper back up and neck over an imaginary ball
behind you until you begin to reach one hand and then the other toward
the heels. You should arrive in your deepest arch only in the upper
back when both hands rest comfortably on your heels or props. Take five
full, complete breaths, letting the head drop back; if that strains the
neck, tuck the chin and relax the face muscles. Keep the pelvis and
thighs moving forward so the legs are lengthening. Hold for 10-15
breaths. To come up, bring both hands to the low back and on one inhale
lift the body until it is erect using your core. Move into Child's pose
for five breaths to counteract this backbend.
Hint: If you cannot reach to your heels, put tall blocks or firm
pillows between your ankles, or curl the toes under in order to keep
the weight forward so that the backbend stays in the upper chest.
More videos for runners:
Pre-Run Poses
Injury Prevention
10-minute Flow
© Copyright 2006, Rodale Publishing. All Rights Reserved.