Learn the Sun Salute

By Kristen Dollard

What if one yoga sequence could pump up your circulation, increase the amount of oxygen to the brain and muscles, and boost your central nervous system? You¿d want to learn that sequence, right? Then greet the Sun Salutation. http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1225901431http://www.brightcove.com/channel.jsp?channel=1078627964

Get results fast with this perfect pose

What if one yoga sequence could pump up your circulation, increase the amount of oxygen to the brain and muscles, and boost your central nervous system? You’d want to learn that sequence, right? Then greet the Sun Salutation. Simply a series of fundamental poses, it’s the only sequence you really need to build core strength, as well as strength throughout the entire body. Once you know this sequence you can make it through practically any class. It’s also a great workout for home. When done with proper alignment, called “integrity” in most yoga classes, Sun Salute will help you grow strong and limber, not to mention relaxed.

So go ahead and get your flow on with the following steps. Don’t be intimated by the number of movements. Watch the video until you get the hang of it.

1. Start in Mountain pose, or tadasana. With your big toes together, your thighs will spiral outward, tailbone drops down, shoulder blades relax down the back, belly pulls in, and ribcage closes. Your spine is completely erect and your body is floating, free of tension and muscular contraction.

2. Inhale as you bring the hands down and around the body. At the very top of the inhale,  bring the palms to touch about your head and slightly arch the upper back.

3. Exhale and dive forward, hinging at the waist, knees bending only when you can no longer keep the back flat. Fingertips come to the sides of the feet, crown reaches toward the ground, chin toward the shins.

4. Inhale to "prepare pose"—bend like a hinge at the waist again but keep a flat back. Simultaneously lift the sternum toward the sky, arching the upper back only, lengthening the neck in line with the spine, as far away from the tailbone as possible and tipping the chin skyward. Do not rise up off the legs any more than 45 degrees off the floor.

5. Exhale and fold toward the shins again, bending the knees deeply if this strains your back.

6. Then step or jump the feet back to Plank pose. Shoulders in line with the wrists, lift your butt and abdomen and press the underside of the thighs toward the sky. Your heels should reach away from the crown of the head.

7. Exhale and lower into Low Push-Up or Chaturanga. Squeezing the elbows into the body, lower yourself to the floor like a slow alligator, bringing the body slightly forward to keep the weight balanced.

7a. For many newbies the muscles required to ease into Low Push-Up will not be there at first. Instead place the knees down, point the toes, and use the arm strength to lower the body toward the floor with the elbows squeezing inward (just like above).

8. Hover inches above the floor or bring the body all the way to the floor.

9. Slide the hands 7 inches back so they are directly in line with the nipples. Inhale and stretch the arms straight, lifting the upper body and thighs off the floor. Do not clench the buttocks or pinch the low back. This is Upward Facing Dog. Roll the shoulders way back, lift the sternum, lengthen out the tailbone so the arch happens in the mid- and upper back, not the lower back. Then look skyward.

9a. If lifting the legs is too intense or the arms feel wobbly, turn this pose into Baby Cobra by keeping the legs and navel on the ground but lifting the upper chest off the floor.

10. From Upward Facing Dog or Baby Cobra, exhale and float back into Downward Facing Dog. To do so lift the hips skyward, then send them way back, bending the knees if your back begins to round. Spread the fingers wide. Plug the index finger into the mat, make sure the wrists are parallel to the front of the mat and the middle finger is perpendicular to the mat. Lift up under the armpits and work the shoulders away from the ears. Close the ribcage and draw the abdomen toward the spine. Even if your heels are not touching the ground, you are thoroughly stretching the back, arms, and legs.

The most strenuous part of this vinyasa or flow involves Plank pose, followed by an exhale and moving into a Low Push-Up. From there you inhale and move into Upward Facing Dog, ending with an exhalation in Downward Facing Dog.



Comments

Kimberly
27 Feb 2008, 09:54
I love ur website!I am surely going to try this sun salute pose.


Nina
23 Mar 2008, 11:35
Hello, I am member of a really nice fitness center and I was dared to try yoga about 2years ago; now I don't know what I would do without it. I had a very long host of illnesses and majority are now gone and the others, I am dealing with because of yoga and taking better care of myself and surgery is no longer needed especially for my back. I have no problem telling my weight of 270 pounds, but I was well over 450 pounds approx. 7 years ago. Yes I tried every diet made to man and other alternatives, but I still have 100 pounds to loose for health reasons. I now know that it is not just about loosing the weight, your mental and emotional state must also be in order and when that happens the weight comes off. This is the miracle and beauty of yoga has helped me. I may not be able to get to the fitness center everyday, but you best believe I do my sun salutations, angle poses, and warriors (30min), and balancing poses (15-20 min.) everyday, sometimes several times a day if I should feel my back getting a little stiff. I am now doing my warriors and balancing poses in the pool, great resistance and has strengthen all of my poses on the floor. I am in my 40's and Yes as you can see, I LOVE what yoga has given me and I tell my doctors, "Yoga is my medicine first and then I will come to see you if I need you". I only have to now for my annual physical. I get great strength and motivation from this site and I am truly sorry that there is no longer a magazine. As you can see your site is very helpful to us all.
Thank you and many blessings,

Nina Frederick


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