Andasanas — Egg Postures
Monday, November 14th, 2011
“Intellectuals tend to be arrogant. Intelligence, like money, is a good servant but a bad master. When practicing pranayama, the yogi [makes] himself humble and without pride in his intellectual attainments.”—B.K.S. Iyengar, Light on Life
Where To
- Under sitting bones — Lotus Booty or Reverse Lotus Booty (V-shape Eggs)
- Under knees, thighs or calves (rounded side up)
- Between shins –(upper leg supported by an Egg resting on lower leg)
Why To
- Many people find it difficult to maintain a straight spine when crossing their legs. Sitting on the Eggs in Lotus Booty raises your pelvis so that your hips are higher than your knees, alleviating a posterior tilt, making extension possible.
- Ultimately we want to find spinal-extension from our tailbone to base of the skull, while simultaneously allowing the thighs to soften and release.
- Unlike a blanket (which can be too soft to offer sufficient support) the Eggs provide the right combination of comfort and resistance to allow you to ground through your sitting-bones while maintaining a straight spine.
- Using Eggs to support the legs allows the inner thighs and hip flexors to release without fear of straining the knee.
Tags: back pain, beginner yoga, ergonomic yoga blocks, hip opener, hip pain, knee pain, Pranayama, seated meditation, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Monday, November 14th, 2011
“If your right leg is stretching and your left leg is not, you believe that the left leg is in ahimsa and the right leg in himsa…. You think that the stretching is himsa and non-stretching is ahimsa. In both cases, you are creating himsa. If one is a deliberate aggression, the other is non-deliberate. At the moment when both legs are equally stretch or equally relaxed, there is neither violence nor non-violence. This is how you have to study the ethics in asana.”—B.K.S. Iyengar, Yoga Wisdom & Practice
Where To
- Under the sitting-bones
- Behind the knees
- Under the hands
- Under the forehead (optional passive posture)
Why To
- Placing Eggs under the sitting-bones facilitates freedom of movement and better rotation of the pelvis, minimizing strain on the hamstrings.
- Placing the Eggs behind the knees protects them from hyper-extension.
- Supporting the knees with Eggs, even when hips are still grounded on the floor, makes hinging from the hips easier.
- Using the Eggs under your hands encourages you to lengthen through all four sides of your torso. This will help you move deeper into the pose while maintaining a flat back.
How To
- Sit on the Eggs in Lotus Booty (you can sit on more Eggs if you need more height, but be mindful of how this impacts the Egg-placement under your knees).
- Place 1-2 Eggs under each knee.
- Engage your quads, to draw your kneecaps toward your groin.
- Internally rotate your thighs.
- Toes and knees should be pointed up toward the ceiling.
- Press your thigh bones down toward the ground.
- Inhale to find space between your pubic bone and naval.
- Take an Egg in each hand, and leading with your heart, maintain that space as you walk your hands forward, folding from the hip-crease.
- Utilize the shape of the Eggs to roll back and lift out of your lower spine. This will help you move your shoulder blades down the back.
- Remain here for several breaths.
- On an exhalation, step the Eggs forward, deepening the posture slightly.
- Try this in three phases each time you do the pose. If you find your spine rounding, take a step back, lift out of your lower spine, and focus on extending the torso and lifting out of the lower back. Maintaining a flat back is more important than going deep into the pose.
- If you want to experience a more passive forward fold, try stacking one or more Eggs on your legs. Gently allow your back to round, and rest your head on the Egg in your lap. Bring your hands to your shins, ankles, or feet and enjoy this restorative variation.
When Not To
- If back pain persists even after elevating the sitting-bones, return to an upright position, and approach the forward fold pausing when you begin to feel pain.
- If you have a hamstring injury consult a physician before engaging in forward folds.
Tags: anxiety calming, back strengthener, ergonomic yoga blocks, hamstring stretch, headache reducing, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Thursday, November 10th, 2011
“Sometimes, legs may ache, and the mind might say, ‘Skip yoga!’ But an intelligent mind has to find out why they are paining and work out how to remove that pain. One finds a means to escape, but to persist and pursue needs a strong mind. Practice is like using a pin to remove a splinter in the hand. In the same way, one has to learn to use the intelligence to practice to remove the so-called pains and reform the practices so that these pricks do not occur at all.”—B.K.S. Iyengar, Yoga Wisdom & Practice

Where To
- Under the sitting-bones
- Under or between the hands
Why To
- For people with discomfort in the knees, or difficulty finding lift in the spine, using an Egg under the hands can both relieve some of the tension in the knees and encourage a sense of lightness from lifting out of the lower back.
- If there is strain in the knees due to flexion, sitting on Eggs creates space behind the knee joint, alleviating discomfort.
- Pressure or discomfort on the tops of the feet can be an issue for many people. This is often due to tightness in the quadriceps or insufficient mobility in the foot. Sitting up on Eggs adds space between the sitting-bones and the floor, thus alleviating some, if not all, of this pressure.
- Placing an Egg between the hands encourages broadening across the collar bones and protects the wrists.
How To
- Come to hands and knees and place 2 Eggs flat or round side up between your calves. If you need more height you can stack the Eggs, Lego Style, under your sitting-bones.
- Keeping your knees hip-distance apart, sit back on the Eggs.
- Bring the ankles as close to the hips as possible, tops of the feet pressing into the floor, to help reduce torque in the knee.
- Press your sitting-bones into the Eggs to encourage the heads of your femurs to descend towards the ground.
- Gently rotate your thighs inward.
- Inhale, and lift up out of your lower back as you lengthen your front body.
- Encourage your lower back ribs to move away from your pelvis as you extend through all four sides of your torso.
- Pressing your hands into the Egg, allow your shoulder blades to be drawn down the back as you broaden across the collarbones.
- Keep the lower front ribs soft.
- Bringing your gaze forward, draw your chin slightly in toward the spine and up, lengthening the cervical spine.
When Not To
- If knee pain persists in spite of the elevated sitting position, consult a physician before continuing kneeling poses.
- If you are suffering from an ankle injury, avoid this pose.
- If you experience mild pain in the top of your foot, place a rolled up hand towel between the top of your foot or front of your ankle and the floor.
Eggsperiments
- If you are sitting on a tall stack of Eggs, and still feel pressure in your knees, try placing an Egg in each hand and grounding into the Eggs on either side of your hips. Lift out of your lower back.
Tags: beginner yoga, ergonomic yoga blocks, hyperextension, intermediate yoga, knee discomfort, lower back lift, meditation, wrist protection, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Tuesday, November 1st, 2011
“The gateways for human health are the respiratory and circulatory systems. When you do Setubandha Sarvangasana the lungs expand automatically. In this asana, the breathing process increases indirectly even without the knowledge of pranayama. That is why patients find relief as there is no strain. The chemicals of the blood change, which gives them health.”—B.K.S. Iyengar, Yoga Wisdom & Practice

Where To
- Between the thighs
- Between the feet
- Under the tailbone
Why To
- To maintain the knees hip distance apart placing an Egg between the thighs .
- To maintain alignment and engage the arches of the feet place an Egg between the feet
- To release tension in the lower back use an Egg under the tailbone to make bridge a passive posture
Tags: alignment, back pain relief, back strengthener, engage feet arches, leg strengthener, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Monday, October 31st, 2011
“Like all forward bending asanas, Triang Mukhaikapada Paschimottanasana is quieting to the mind and body. It does not require the strength of an arm balance but rather the inner strength of will to hold the pose even when it is difficult for the legs and hips. This strength of will must not be confused with an aggressive pushing of the body beyond its limits… Instead, inner strength of will means a fine balance between letting go of the rigidity that keeps one from expressing the beauty of the pose, while maintaining the one-pointed concentration necessary to refuse to move in the face of discomfort.” – Judith Lasater, Yoga Journal September/October 1983

Where To
- Under Sitz bones
- Behind knee of straight leg
- Under hands
Why To
- To allow the pelvis to move freely and alleviate tension on the hamstring of the straight leg raise the Sitz Bones on Eggs
- Lifting the Sitz Bones up on Eggs decreases the strain in the bent-leg knee, allowing you to press the top of the bent leg foot into the floor, keeping the knee in proper alignment.
- To protect the knee of the straight leg from hyper-extension bring an Egg behind it
- Placing your hands on Eggs encourages extension of the front body as well as lifting and strengthening of the lower back.
How To
(more…)
Tags: alignment, back strengthening, hamstring stretch, knee pain, quadricep stretch, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Sunday, October 30th, 2011
“With this asana, the hamstring muscles are fully developed, while blood is made to flow to the trunk and head. Those who cannot do Sirsasana (headstand) can benefit from this pose, which increases digestive powers.” – B.K.S. Iyengar

Where To
Why To
- Using the Eggs under the hands adds extension to the arms so that you can bring more attention to the rotation of the pelvis and the alignment of the spine.
Tags: alignment, pelvis rotation, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Monday, October 24th, 2011
“When you are ready to do Uttanasana, have you ever studied the movement of energy? You only know that you are bending forward and your hands are going down. But how do the energy and consciousness spread in the body?… Do you ever observe whether your consciousness expands from the back towards the sides, or do you only observe the vertical downward movement? When every asana is multi-petaled, why do you ever make it single-petaled?”—B.K.S. Iyengar, Yoga Wisdom & Practice
Where To
- Under hands
- Under feet
- Between the thighs
- Between the feet
Why To
- Using the Eggs under the hands allows you to find grounding and focus more on the actions of the pelvis. This encourages the lengthening of the spine from the tailbone to the base of the skull.
- Holding your Eggs in your hands in the high position allow less flexible people to maintain a flat back and more easily fold from the hip crease.
- With an Egg between the upper thighs it is easier to maintain the internal rotation of the thighs without collapsing in the knees. This affords more space around the sacrum for rotation of the pelvis.
- Keeping an Egg between the thighs also helps to maintain the hip-distance alignment.
- An Egg between the feet helps maintain hip-distance alignment of the legs and engage the inner arches of the feet.
- An Egg under the feet gives the benefit of added extension for those who are very flexible and want the release of gravity to deepen the pose.
Tags: back pain, back strengthening, hamstring stretch, hip alignment, three minute egg, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Sunday, October 16th, 2011
“I was doing too many backbends…; one day I made up my mind to do forward bends like Janu Sirsasana—I could not stay in it even for a few minutes. My spine and back muscles became sore and I couldn’t bear the soreness when I used to do forward bends. It was as if somebody was using a sledgehammer on my back. Then I determined that if I could do backbends, I should learn to do forward bends too. Since then, I keep a day for forward bends and my students follow the same routine.”—B.K.S. Iyengar, Yoga Wisdom & Practice
Where To
- Under sitz bones — Lotus Booty or Reverse Lotus Booty
- Under knee, thigh, or shin of bent knee (short stack)
- Under knee of extended leg (2 Eggs are better than 1)
- Under the hands
Why To
- If your hamstrings or lower back are tight sitting on lotus booty will make therotation of the pelvis more accessible.
- If the knee of the bent leg is supported then the inner thigh and hip flexor will be able to relax more easily, making pelvic rotation more accessible.
- To prevent hyper-extension place Eggs under your straight knee.
- For a more passive stretch (as in Yin Yoga, for example) place an Egg on top of your straight leg and rest your head on the Egg.
Tags: help with back pain, hip opener, three minute egg, tight hamstrings, tight hips
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Tuesday, October 11th, 2011
“If I turn my right foot out in Trikonasana, and left foot inward, I see whether the width and length of my right foot is equal to the left or whether to the left is affected to become short. This way I started adjusting my body, dividing the body from the center of the legs to understand clearly. At the early stage it seemed to be a limbering process, but later I found that I am not only digging into the body but my intelligence too. This penetration removed the weeds that were in my body and made my mind fertile to penetrate deeper.” — B.K.S. Iyengar, Yoga Wisdom & Practice
Where To
- Under the supporting hand
- In the lifted hand
- Behind the front calf
- Under the front foot
Why To
- In order to keep a straight spine an Egg under the supporting hand will provide a firm foundation to ground into. This will enable the opposing hand to raise up toward the ceiling in order to fully open the front body. (more…)
Tags: back strengthener, beginning yoga, hip opener, leg strengthener, spinal alignment, three minute egg, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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Monday, October 10th, 2011
“Sensory deprivation tanks operate on the premise that it is impossible to relax and to sustain relaxation if the nervous system is continually bombarded by stimuli. You can experience the same soothing effect…by the regular practice of [Supta Baddha Konasana].” – Judith Hanson Lasater; Ph.D., P.T., Relax & Renew

Where To
- Under thoracic spine
- Under head
- Under thighs or shins
- Between feet (optional)
Why To
- To allow the hip flexors to release and the inner thighs to soften place an Egg under each thigh. (more…)
Tags: back pain, hip opener, restorative yoga, spinal alignment, therapeutic yoga, three minute egg, yoga blocks, yoga eggs, yoga props
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