Urdhva Mukha Svanasana (Upward-Facing Dog) is an
invigorating backbend that opens the chest and shoulders and strengthens the
arms and legs. It’s central to Sun Salutations and is practiced repeatedly
between other postures in flow classes. Linking breath to movement is important
when you’re practicing Up Dog, because the breath animates and illuminates the
pose and opens the heart.
Typically, you enter Up Dog on an inhalation. Take a deep
inhalation now and notice how it feels: Your heart lifts, your collarbones
spread, your pectoral muscles broaden and expand—movements you’ll want to
accentuate in Up Dog—and you feel energized. Of course, recreating those same
expansions in the pose is challenging. Students sometimes find Up Dog
uncomfortable, especially in the lower back and wrists. Before trying the pose,
get clear on the basic setup and then work on easing tightness in your
shoulders and thoracic spine (upper and middle back). The following variations
will help you find the essential actions and alignment of the pose so you can
enjoy it to its fullest.
Pose Benefits:
·
Strengthens the arms
·
Opens the shoulders and upper back
·
Expands the chest
·
Tones the legs
Contraindications:
·
Lower-back injury
·
Wrist issues or carpal tunnel syndrome
·
Shoulder vulnerability
·
Pregnancy (and possible pregnancy)
Pull
If you feel achy in the lower back during Up Dog, it
probably means that your upper back is stiff and your lower back is
overcompensating by bending too much. With backbends the aim is to have all
areas of the spine participate, not just the parts that are easy to move. If
either your lower back or your neck extends too much, your backbend will not be
even. If you continue these imbalances over time, you’ll put undue stress on
the bendier parts. To remedy this, you’ll need to learn to open the thoracic
vertebrae. To access your thoracic spine while limiting the movement in your
neck and lower back, practice a modified Bhujangasana (Cobra
Pose).
Begin lying on your belly with your forehead on the floor
and your feet hip-width apart and parallel, toes extended straight back from
your heels. Place your hands on the floor next to your lower ribs, with your
elbows stacked over your wrists and the creases of your wrists parallel to the
front of your mat. Draw your elbows back and in toward the midline of your body
so that your shoulders lift away from the floor and your pectoral muscles
spread. Firmly press all 10 toes into the floor, especially your pinkie toes,
so that your quadriceps engage and your kneecaps pull up. Active legs are
crucial to a happy Up Dog. When the legs are lazy, you tend to sit in your
lower back rather than lengthen out of it, so really practice pressing down
with the tops of your feet and lifting your thighs. Rotate the inner thighs to
the ceiling (this broadens your lower back) and release the flesh of your
buttocks toward the floor. Doing this decreases the arch in your lower back and
creates more length. Both elements—active legs and the downward release of the
buttocks—are critical to creating a backbend in which your lower back is
spacious and protected.
Now extend your sternum (breastbone) forward and up. Make
this happen by pulling your hands back (still squeezing your elbows in), as if
you were on a scooter or skateboard trying to drag your body forward. Your
hands won’t actually move back on the mat, but this pulling action will help
you find the correct alignment. The heads of your shoulders will draw back and
away from the floor, the trapezius (the thick muscles at the base of your neck)
will release away from your ears, and the shoulder blades will press forward
and into your chest, helping to open your upper back. Continue to direct your
tailbone down, and see that your chin is level to the floor so that you don’t
overbend in your neck. Hold for 8 to 10 breaths and then release your forehead
back to the floor.
Push

For the next variation, place blocks beneath your hands
alongside your lower ribs. Putting blocks under your hands gives your torso
more vertical space, which helps distribute the curve of the backbend more
evenly. Again, make sure that the creases of your wrists are parallel to the
front of your mat. Now activate your legs and open your upper back. On your
next inhalation, maintain the pulling action with your hands but now also push
down so that your elbows straighten and your chest and legs lift.
Check to see that your shoulders are stacked directly over
your wrists; if they’re not, adjust your feet (not your hands) forward or back
so that they are. If your shoulders are in front of your wrists, the acute
angle will put too much pressure on the wrist joints. This also interferes with
your ability to open the thoracic area because, once your arms have passed 90
degrees, your chest collapses forward and down, causing your shoulders to
round. Conversely, if the shoulders are behind your wrists, you will not be
able to use your legs effectively and will end up sitting in your lower back
instead of lifting up out of it (which creates space between the vertebrae).
When your shoulders line up directly above your wrists with your arms
perpendicular to the floor, you will be in a position to both access your upper
back and lift out of your lower back.
The added height from the blocks will give you more room in
which to access your thoracic spine. Press your hands firmly and evenly into
the blocks, and lift your sternum toward the ceiling as you spread across your
collarbones and draw the heads of your shoulders back. Stabilize your lower
back by continuing to push off the tops of your feet and lift your thighs to
the ceiling, as you simultaneously release the flesh of the buttocks toward the
floor. Remember that the goal is to bend less in the neck and lower back; you
want the thoracic spine to step up and play a role. For now, look forward and
keep the back of your neck long. Use the leverage you get from the blocks to
draw yourself up and out of your lower back, directing the energy of the pose
into the upper back by moving your shoulder blades toward your chest to open
your heart. Hold for 8 to 10 breaths and then gently lower back onto your
belly.
Pull and Push

For the final pose, remove the blocks and return to your
belly with your hands beside your lower ribs. Press down with all 10 fingers
and all 10 toes. If your pinkie toes come off the floor, your inner thighs
drop, which creates compression across the lower back. Avoid this by giving
extra weight to the pinkie toes.
On an inhalation, pull your chest forward and up as you
simultaneously push off your hands and feet to lift your body away from the
floor. Stack your shoulders over your wrists and lift your sternum and thighs
to the ceiling as you release your tailbone toward your heels. Make sure your
toes extend straight back and that your feet are planted rather than being
dragged along when you pull your chest forward. You want to anchor the pose so
that you can explore your upper back.
Use your inhalation to make the pose blossom, take the
heads of your shoulders back, and spread your collarbones and pectorals.
Imagine your shoulder blades are a pair of friendly hands pressing into your
chest and opening your heart, and then carefully raise your gaze so that the
curve in your neck is a continuation of the curve in your upper back. Balancing
the bend in your Up Dog will protect your spine. Since asana lessons often
translate into life lessons, learning how to achieve this balance may also
teach you to cultivate a quality of equilibrium off the mat as well.
Dog
Stretch
The word vinyasa has become short-hand for the specific
sequence of poses moving from Chaturanga Dandasana (Four-Limbed Staff Pose) to
Up Dog and then back to Down Dog. (Vinyasa is also commonly used in two other
ways: to describe a step-by-step progression from one pose to the next or to
signify the concept of linking breath with movement.)
The specific three-pose sequence is common to Ashtanga,
flow, and Power yoga, and many students are both challenged and mystified by
it. It’s an important transition to practice and understand because, when done
incorrectly, it can compromise the alignment of the poses it connects, whereas
when mastered it tends to enhance and reinforce them.
The key to the transition is moving the chest and legs in
opposition, which keeps the center (abdomen and pelvis) from collapsing and
protects the shoulders and lower back.
When you move from Chaturanga to Up Dog, push your toes
back so that they move an inch or so toward the back of your mat as you roll
over them. Making your feet travel on a sticky mat requires some serious effort
in your legs, which is useful since active legs are crucial to both Chaturanga
and Up Dog.
As you slide your toes back, simultaneously pull with your
hands (they won’t actually move) while drawing your chest forward and up, so
that your upper body and lower body move in opposite directions.
Only your hands and feet touch the floor in this
transition. To keep your body from sagging toward the floor, use the strength
of your arms (pulling your sternum forward) and legs (pushing your toes back).
To vizualize how this works, imagine holding a piece of ribbon between your
hands. When your hands are closer together, the center of the ribbon droops.
When you pull your hands apart, it becomes taut. The latter image is the
blueprint for your transition.
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