If you
are looking for a yoga pose for detoxification, then Setu Bandha Sarvangasana is
a great place to start. Also known as “Bridge Pose,” Setu Bandha has many
benefits. It soaks the lymph glands in the neck and throat with blood. It
also suppresses the “fight or flight” (sympathetic) side of your autonomic
nervous system, restoring energy and supporting healing.
When
your head is below your heart and your neck is flexed, the “baro reflex” is
activated. This sets off a chain of events that facilitates a parasympathetic
response.
Bridge
Pose and Purification & Detoxification in the Yogic Tradition
Purification
is central to the yogic path. The second chapter of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras
begins with this aphorism (translated by Alistair Shearer):
“Purification, refinement, surrender. These are the practical steps on the path
of yoga.” Over the millennia, Hatha Yoga has developed many purification tools,
including breathing practices and neti nasal washing.
While
studying in
When
to Do Bridge Pose (Setu Bandha Sarvagasana)
Setu
Bandha can be practiced either actively or passively.
Both
versions of Bridge Pose expand the front body, helping dispel the effects of
daily forward bending over computers, counters and steering wheels. They also
stretch the back of your neck and strengthen your legs and hips. (Note:
Because your hips are the highest point in the body in Setu Bandha, it is best
not to practice this pose when you’re on your menstrual period. It can reverse
the natural flow and might interrupt your period.)
How to Practice Setu Bandha Sarvangasana
1.
Begin by lying on your back on a nonskid yoga
mat with your knees bent and the soles of your feet resting on the floor.
Lengthen your arms alongside your torso and turn your palms up. Take time to
let your body and breath settle.
2.
Feel the contact points between your back body
and the floor softening and expanding as you breathe. Feel the breath moving
your ribcage, abdomen and pelvis. Relax here for several breaths, enjoying the
support of the floor beneath you.
3.
When you feel completely relaxed, bend your
elbows to 90 degrees and press the elbows and upper arms into the floor,
arching your ribcage up off the floor. Then straighten your arms out alongside
your body.
4.
Press the soles of your feet into the floor and
then extend your knees out from the pelvis, away from the body, to begin
lifting your back body off the floor. Clasp your hands underneath you and rock
side to side on your shoulders until you come to rest on the tops of your
shoulders.
5.
Keep extending your knees out away from the
pelvis and avoid the tendency to push up through your hip joints.
Simultaneously, lengthen your throat to move the chin away from your chest.
6.
Be aware of how the weight is distributed across
your feet, making sure that the weight is equal on these four
points: inside and outside balls of your feet, and insides and outsides of
your heels.
7.
Ground your arms and feet, letting the rest of
the body rise up. Take 5 to 10 deep breaths.
8.
When you are ready to let the pose go, release
the clasp of your hands and extend your arms out overhead along the floor.
Stretch through your arms as you lower your spine slowly to the floor, one
vertebra at a time, lengthening your spine as you lower it.
9.
Return your arms to your sides or allow them to
continue extending overhead, whichever is most comfortable.
10.
Relax and check in with your body/mind. What has
changed since you first lay down on the floor?
11.
Repeat the entire process at least two more
times. It’s helpful to practice back bends more than one time to allow your
body to acclimate to them.
Weave
Setu Bandha Sarvangasana into your regular yoga practice, or practice it on its
own. Practice it for purification, restoration of energy, or just because it
feels good.
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