Natarajasana (Dancer's Pose)
Nata means dancer and raja is the word for lord or king. Below described
sequence will guide on how to perform this asana.
Sequence
of Steps:
1. Stand in Tadasana (Mountain Pose). Inhale, shift
your weight onto your right foot, and lift your left heel toward your left
buttock as you bend the knee. Press the head of your right thigh bone back,
deep into the hip joint, and pull the knee cap up to keep the standing leg
straight and strong.
2. There are two variations you might try here with your arms
and hands. In either case, try to keep your torso relatively upright. The first
is to reach back with your left hand and grasp the outside of your left foot or
ankle. To avoid compression in your lower back, actively lift your pubis toward
your navel, and at the same time, press your tailbone toward the floor.
3. Begin to lift your left foot up, away from the floor, and
back, away from your torso. Extend the left thigh behind you and parallel to
the floor. Stretch your right arm forward, in front of your torso, parallel to
the floor.
4. The second option with the hands is to sweep your right
hand around behind your back and catch hold of the inner left foot. Then sweep
the left hand back and grab the outside of the left foot. This variation will
challenge your balance even more. Then raise the thigh as described in step 3.
This second variation will increase the lift of your chest and the stretch of
your shoulders.
5. Stay in the pose for 20 to 30 seconds. Then release the
grasp on the foot, place the left foot back onto the floor, and repeat for the
same length of time on the other side.
Full Pose
For the full pose, perform step 1
as described above. Then turn your left arm actively outward (so the palm faces
away from the side of the torso), bend the elbow, and grip the outside of the
left foot. (You can also grab the big toe with the first two fingers and the
thumb.) The fingers will cross the top of the foot, the thumb will press
against the sole. Inhale, lift the left leg up, and bring the thigh parallel to
the floor. As you do this, rotate the left shoulder in such a way that the bent
elbow swings around and up, so that it points toward the ceiling. It requires
extreme flexibility to externally rotate and flex the shoulder joint in this
way. Reach the right arm straight forward, in front of the torso and parallel
to the floor. Hold for 20 to 30 seconds, release, and repeat on the second side
for the same length of time.
Benefits:
Strengthens legs,
improves balance, stretches the shoulders
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