Posts in Backbends
Open Chest Strong Back

50 Mins

Open Chest Strong Back

In a lot of Yoga poses we over use our arms and shoulders to do the hard work. If we take the arms away and focus on the strength of the legs and the paraspinals muscles in our back we can develop muscles else where and share the load throughout the body. Ultimately this level of work also supports and strengthens the abdominals, all contributing to healthier movement through the whole spine and stronger backs free from discomfort.

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Open Heart Clear Head

45 Mins

Open Heart Clear Head

An open heart and a clear head indicate a good practice. Mood elevation and the capacity to see clearly are the benefits of practicing yoga through all stages of life. Here we open the chest with some accessible back bends that open the chest and shoulders but also integrate with poses that lengthen the psoas and open the hip flexors and quads, cue pigeon and splits prep :-)

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Back bending - What's behind us?

60 Mins

Backbending - What’s behind us?

When we start to open the chest and front body we often do this with movements that place our attention behind us, where we cannot see what is going on. Whether this is with practices that open the shoulders, arch our spines or contract our glutes to effectively and safely master back bends, big and/or small. The primary focus here is actually the legs and the glutes, leading to ustrasana (camel), but the fun is on the journey, not the destination as we bring awareness to the unseen parts of our bodies.

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Palms - Connecting the palm to the shoulders

50 Mins

Palms - Connecting the Palm to the Shoulders

We often take for granted how much what we do with our hands has to do with the movements in our shoulders. Here we practice (with the the bricks as a learning tool) how to open the palms and access a route in to opening the armpits, shoulders and upper back. An open chest helps our posture, elevates our mood and can tip toe us towards fun back bends and arm balance play. As well as helping us strengthen our arms and shoulder joint.

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Strong Abs - Core Centric

60 Mins

Strong Abs - Core Centric

Good movement through the body and a healthy spine is reliant on a strong and flexible core. The beauty of many Yoga poses, practiced carefully and consciously at the appropriate time, both occur together. The beauty of this class is we include, hip stretches, arm strength, balance, backbends as well as direct abdominal work to really stabilise the core of the body so we can move our limbs in all directions and across different planes without bucking in the middle.

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Backbends - Mobilising Our Open & Lifted Ribcage

60 Mins

Backbends - Mobilising Our Open & Lifted Ribcage

This is not a deep backbends class, it combines well with forward bends and focusing us on moving the torso in different directions. Posturally we underuse the spine’s movement in this direction and it is super important to counter the effects of dropping in the chest and rounding the shoulders. All these methods are accessible to everyone and vital to maintain healthy functional movement of the spine.

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Anahata the Heart Chakra - Opening In All Directions

60 Mins

Anahata The Heart Chakra - Reaching In All Directions

The 4th Chakra is our heart chakra, considered the intersection between the upper and lower chakras. The element associated with this energy centre is air, like air, love is all around us and can disperse. We need to keep this area open to keep love flowing, it keeps us open to experience and helps us connect to our true selves, our loved ones and the natural world. When blocked on a physical level can cause issues with circulation, blood pressure and lung conditions and on an emotional level issues with unworthiness, loneliness and an inability to trust :( The colour associated with Anahata chakra is Green. Here we explore movement, mudra and mantra that lifts and opens the chest with arms reaching in all directions.

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Vertical Spine

60 Mins

Vertical Spine

I would say this was Part 2 to last week’s class entitled Up Up and Away but of course can be practiced alone. From teaching this in person I learnt that the vertical spine and being able to lift up out of the armpits is fundamental to balancing safely upside down. It’s also key to ease, I never felt as though it was strength alone that kept me balancing in inversions, it’s about strong fundamentals, foundations and a lightness that comes with practice and letting go of fear and knowing where and when to prop. This is preparatory, you absolutely do not have to do the full inversions, but can enjoy the process and the preparation along the way. Shoulder and upper back opening and side body lengthening in all it’s glory.

*Please note we had problems with WiFi when we recorded this so my phone had to do the Zooming and the recording.

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Up up and Away

60 Mins

Up Up and Away

Elevating the chest lifts the rib cage, expands the lungs and is key to a backbend practice that utilises the whole length of the spine. Here we start moving towards deeper backbends by practicing poses and sequences that open the chest and expand the heart but through the connection with the legs and pelvis like navasana (boat pose), . I love this practice!!

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Heart Leading The Brain

60 Mins

Heart Leading the Brain

We don’t often think of our yoga practice in terms of it’s coherence and integration. Or maybe you do, sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t. What is key as we start to switch on to the fact that everything is connected, is that we do not move in isolation and we do not exist in isolation. Most of the movements in this practice focus on us leading with the heart, opening and lifting the chest whilst remaining stable and strong in the legs and lower back/abdomen. One action doesn’t over take everything else, even if it is a focal point, the whole body needs to integrate to make the asanas feel coherent and so we don’t injure ourselves in the process too ;-)

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Spiralling Arms

60 Mins

Spiralling Arms

This is like daily flossing for your shoulders. Our shoulders are connected down to our finger tips, to our collar bones and sternum at the front and to our ribs at the back. There are so many ways in which range of movement can be limited, whilst we often over do some movements and under do others we find ease and restriction sometimes in different directions. Take this practice easy and keep coming back to it, or take certain movements from the practice, little pieces and see if you can do a different one every day to keep the shoulders moving healthily in all directions.

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Up and Over - Backbends

60 Mins

Up and Over - Backbends

I neglect my backbend practice and it shows up when you go to do shoulder opening work or inversions. This is a varied practice, we have inversions, going upside down which may or may not be possible. BUT it’s the journey that matters most and attempting to embody each and every asana no matter it’s accessibility. Some of the simplest poses can be the most complex and be build towards some persons so there is always a place to be in the practice. With backbends the secret is not to focus on the parts that don’t move much but in stabilising the ones that do. You will always feel taller after back ‘bending"‘, they focus on really opening our front body that shortens up over the course of daily life.

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Lifting The Pelvic Abdomen

65 Mins

Lifting the Pelvic Abdomen

Focusing on the lowest part of the abdominal muscles and where they connect to the pubic bone can at first feel illusive. But through clever sequencing and use of props we soon learn how to connect to this part of our body and in doing so we create more space for the abdominal organs, more lift in the chest and a stronger lower back. We test are balance, how much mobility we have in our rib cage to tip back, forward and side to side as well as developing length and strength in our arms. Enjoy this sequence, it’s super engaging, fun and most importantly, enlightening :-)

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Organising Ourselves - Moving Directions

65 Mins

Organising Ourselves - Moving Directions

A lot of poses that make up our yoga practice involve us moving in different directions. Not only up and down or left and right, but sending different parts of ourselves in different directions. We are often asking the legs to move in one direction whilst our arms move in another. With backbends this is especially true and especially complex. For me one of the biggest illuminators was the direction I move my pelvis and how I work my legs. There are also lots of surprise ways to move in to a backbend or experience one in many different ways … from many different directions.

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Royal Posing - An Ode to the Queen

70 Mins

Royal Yoga Posing - An Ode to the Queen

When this practice was recorded it was during the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee in the UK. So I thought it only fitting that we explored postures that reference Royalty, including the asanas named after Hindu gods and deities. We have the ‘raja’s’, King Cobra (raja - bhujangasana), King Pigeon (eka pada raja-kapotasana), King Dancer (nata - raga - asana) - or at least the working towards of these more extreme (let’s call it that rather than advanced). And of course the King and Queen of all the asanas, named so for the sheer number of healing qualities they are said to possess if practiced correctly; headstand (sirsasana) and shoulder stand (sarvangasana). In essence we are also practicing how to build up arm and leg strength with upper back flexibility in order to support these inversions and arm balances. Working towards vashitasana and ashtavakrasana. Have fun exploring :-)

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Hip Huggers

65 Mins

Hip Huggers

As well as having a love for adding belts in to a practice I also love using the brick between my thighs. It completely revolutionised my practice. It switched on a way of activating sleepy muscles in the legs that lift us out of our pelvis, stop the outward migration of the hip socket, strengthens the legs and actually makes us taller with greater control and stability being increased at the most central parts of our body, the pelvis. We use the block between the thighs a lot in this practice, then we take it away having woken up the muscles to work without the block, educating feeling and sensation in the body to work and function where we otherwise may have left these muscles laying dormant and relied on familial patterns to move from.

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Shoulder Blade Slides

70 Mins

Shoulder Blade Slides

Creating stability in the shoulder blades and the ability to allow them to move up and down so our arms can move over our heads or support us should we go upside down is pivotal to a healthy joint and movement practice. Here we look at a range of shoulder ‘opening’ practices, both isolating movements and exploring ranges of motion in different poses such as binds, spinx, reverse namaskar, gormuktasana (eagle), forearm balance and handstand. Of course there are many stages along the way to build towards the weight baring poses, all practices that stand alone without the need to progress necessarily today, but building blocks along the way.

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Quads and Hip Flexors for a Happy Dancer

70 Mins

Quads and Hip Flexors for a Happy Dancer

It is really easy to over look certain aspects of your practice, lots of opening of the back body for instance and neglecting the front body. Lots of active, not enough rest, lots of yin style practices, not enough active for example. I’m guilty of this when it comes to my quads and hip flexors, in comparison to my hamstrings their movement and flexibility is more limited. Which in turn influences how much we can lift and arch in backbends. Here we look at practices which help us lengthen our quads, hip flexors, psoas and also shoulders so we can work towards the “dancer poses”. For which I have an image of the dancer touching her toes to the back of her head when in reality mine only reach my lower ribs even on a good day!!

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Shape and motion

70 Mins

Shape and Motion

When we look at shape and motion we can start to see that there is a reciprocal effect of one part moving on another. Spreading your palm for instance doesn’t just open your hand, it brings life to a pose, opens the chest and lengthens the side waist. This can change the whole landscape of your practice, once you start to experience the wholeness of an action rather than seeing it as separate from everything else. Here we look at the backbend family of poses that rely on strength in our backs and length in our hip flexors. Not my personal favourites but interesting in that the body as a whole really does come together to create the shape and the motion.

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Integration - The Back

70 Mins

Integration - Backbends

I have mentioned before that what we have with a back bend is that we are moving in a direction where we can’t see where we are going. Not only do the poses and movements require almost every part of the body to be involved we also have to have awareness and the proprioception to feel where we are going. For Instance in Camel (ustrasana) we go back and then try and find our feet, without knowing for sure where they are. This class integrates lots of movements that not only increase flexibility in the back but strengthen it too, not forgetting how important the glutes and the legs are in the whole process of integrating backbends for their healthiest benefits.

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Going backwards

75 Mins

Going Backwards

When we go backwards we are heading in a direction where we cannot see where we are going. We reach back in to the unknown but we take with us what we do know. We also trust. We know how to extend, arch, lift and lengthen. We know where the earth is or where our toes are even if we can’t see them. We know how our body feels moving in space, so as we go backwards we trust our body to take us there. Backbends also require us to open our chests and shoulders, lengthen our abdomen, hip flexors and quads. Opening each part of the spine evenly, not over using our flexible parts or under using our stiffer parts. It’s really a work of art, moving, breathing and backbending.

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Backbends and tracing the Lung Meridian

70 Mins

Backbends and Tracing the Lung Meridian

Each week I let the theme I am working with come to me intuitively. This week it started with a seed that started looking in to the month of September and it’s place in Chinese elemental philosophy, which lead me to reading about the element associated with Autumn, which is metal and how this relates to the lung meridian. I also wanted to work towards Urdva Danurasana as this challenging back bend hadn’t been on our menu for quite some time. As it turns out backbends and the path towards urdva danurasana trace the lung meridian perfectly and increases our connection to opening, lifting and increasing range of movement in our upper torso and also our capacity for deeper and fuller breathing. The qualities associated with a balanced metal element are being flexible and malleable. If metal is deficient you can feel very rigid and stuck and experience restrictions with your respiratory system.

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Elongation - Finding length in our hip flexors/quads/abdomen

75 Mins

Elongation - Finding Length in the hip flexors/quads/abdomen

For me I have spent so many years dedicated to lengthening my hamstrings I have relatively neglected to balance out the length in my front body. Here we look at a practice which requires us to lengthen and open the front side of our body. This is a significant component when back bending and using the curve through the entire spine and not just segmenting the spine or just using the most flexible parts (lower back and neck) to move in to a back bend. Most of these poses require us to lengthen the front of the thigh, strengthen the glutes and mobilise the upper back (dorsal). It also gives us some insight in to where we hold on and where we need to let go. A life long balance to seek and find.

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Opening and lifting - Focusing Our Attention

75 Mins

Opening and lifting - Focusing our attention

When we focus our attention on opening one place we can experience many asanas from a whole new perspective. We continue with our opening and lifting of the upper torso and see how this is not only applied to back bends but can also apply to forward folds, arm balances and inversions. All poses that require us to extend and lengthen our front body.

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Cause and Effect - Arching

75 Mins

Cause and effect

What does something we do with one part of our body do to affect another part? This is the constant see saw we explore in our Yoga practice. Everything is connected and we can see this when we feel that no movement we take is singular in it’s experience. What we do with one part of our body has an effect on another. Here we explore the act of back arching, principally by opening the upper back but in such a way we feel the movement all the way through the legs so the body as a whole comes in to the arch. Then we start to notice less the extent to which our back is bending but more the capacity we have for our front body to fully open and lengthen.

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Fundamentals - The Essentials Mix 3

45 Mins

Fundamentals - Backbends

In this fundamentals class we focus on sequencing together many of the standing and backbends we have covered so far in this series. Here we highlight the poses where we are twisting/revolving and stretching the front of the thigh/hip flexors. This particular family of backbends are more front body lengthening, bending in the back is a misnomer. The key to them is the strength and flexibility in the legs, particularly the hip flexors and the strength of the paraspinal muscles and glutes to give you stability and lift off.

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Lengthen to strengthen - The Abs

75 Mins

Lengthening to Strengthen - The Abs

The abdominals muscles are made up of the rectus abdominis, transversus abdominis and the internal and external obliques. In brief they provide support for the spine, support and protect our internal organs and help to regulate breathing. Muscles get stronger in the lengthening process (eccentric muscle contraction). Put simply it is when a muscle lengthens when it contracts rather than when it shortens and contracts. In this class we explore a huge variety of ways in which we lengthen and strengthen our abdominal muscles without a single sit up in sight. There’s lots of variety, movements in all directions and an exploration of all the abdominals muscles.

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Fundamentals - Back Bends (Extension)

45 Mins

Fundamentals - Backbends

In this fundamentals class we focus on poses that open, lift and lengthen the upper chest and back. The family of poses that require us to lengthen and lift the front of the chest and ‘curve’ the upper portion of the spine. We include looking at up dog and cobra, warrior 1 and parivritta trikonasana as well as tabletop and bridge pose. Combining what we know about the specific standing poses and the connection to the legs we will progress through the warming up of the chest for table top and bridge. In your own practice you could progress or add in camel and full wheel.

All these poses help us look at ways we can find more length in the front of body in order to more effectively backbend safely. Using the correct action in the glutes to gain lift off, and how the use of props can give us the momentum to get going, be more supportive and give greater depth and ease to our backbends. I would also have to argue a little with the term backward bends because it implies going backwards, which technically you are. BUT it is the extension, the lift and lengthening of the front body that is key to a smooth and fulfilling backbend practice and this takes you forwards so to speak.

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Journeying towards hanumanasana (splits)

75mins

Hatha Flow 26th March

I haven’t taught a splits prep class in a while, so this is a first for the library. I have had dreams whereby I slide in to them effortlessly, sadly this is not my reality right now, but each year I do get closer to the ground. What is glorious about splits is actually the preparation, you have to open both the front of the body, mainly the hip flexors to allow the chest to lift and for the back leg to be able to extend away, and the back body, principally the hamstrings to extend the front leg forwards.

The pose, Hanumanasana is named after Hanuman, the monkey god, son of the wind (Vayu) who was known for his giant leaps, whereby he could stretch his legs incredible distances. The power of his back leg propelled him skywards whilst his front leg would reach and stretch towards his destination. Feel the powerfulness of this pose, be brave and experiment (safely) with what is possible. Most importantly, enjoy the journey.

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Fundamentals - Dancer

45 Mins

Fundamentals - Dancer

In this fundamentals class we focus on poses that open and lengthen the front of the thigh. Cosmic dancer is one of these poses but I would describe this as an accessible Eka Pada Rajakapotasana (King Pigeon). The family of poses that require us to lengthen the front of the thigh and hip flexors also have the backbend element, including virasana (kneeling), ustrasana (camel), danurasana (bow) and virabadrasana 1.

All these poses help us look at ways we can find more length in the front of body in order to more effectively backbend safely. Using the correct action in the glutes to gain lift off, also seeing how the clever use of props can get us going, be more supportive and give greater depth and ease to our backbends. I would describe this as a fun and uplifting classes, accessible to all.

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The Amazing Shalabhasana

75mins

Hatha Flow 11th March 2021

This class focuses on opening the chest and shoulders through a full range of different movements and actions. There is also an emphasis on core stability and strength to allow the arms as well as the legs to lengthen in all directions. With preparation we move towards Shalabhasana (locust pose) which resembles more sky divers pose in the beginning. It is a prone backbend that builds strength in the paraspinal muscles (3 muscle groups that support your back) and the legs. We finish off with right angled handstand and/or the preparation for weight baring on the arms before concluding in Setu Banda Sarvangasana. This can all be done without props but if you have a yoga belt and a bolster this would be super beneficial.

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Fundamentals - Utkatasana

45 Mins

Fundamentals - Utkatasana

In this fundamentals class we focus on Utkatasana and it’s related family poses. What movement patterns and key elements make up this pose and poses like it. It is one pose, alongside downward facing dog practiced regularly in every class that causes varying scales of discomfort. This is until you learn to love it, and you learn to love it the minute you experience it without discomfort and then the body and the brain celebrate as you practice it with ease. It’s deceptively hard because it requires flexibility in the shoulders, stability from your core and strength in your legs. In this class we look at creating flexibility in the ankles and lower leg, strength in the glutes and thighs, flexibility in the upper back and shoulders and an element of core strength to manage the correct alignment of the pelvis.

This is a pose, that when your crack it will increase your lung capacity (because of the stretch in the ribs when you take your arms over your head) and improve your posture. It will help support and strengthen the knees and strengthen the core to protect the back, which can tend to excessively arch in this pose if not practiced correctly. In this class there are tons of preparatory poses and variations of the pose to play with. The introduction of the actual full pose is from the wall so it gives you a feedback loop to know how it should feel. Then when practiced in space the angle of the pelvis, lift in the chest and extension of the arms will feel natural. Enjoy ;-)

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Fundamentals - Virabhadrasana 1

45 Mins

Fundamentals - Virabhadrasana One (Warrior 1)

In this fundamentals class we focus on Virabhadrasana 1 and it’s related family poses. What movement patterns and key elements make up this pose and poses like it. It is different to Warrior 2 and Trikonasana with the rotational elements in the hip joint where the pelvis angles forward. The front leg is bent like warrior 2 and parsvakonasana but the back leg is straight like parvottanasana. Lots of names for you to remember :-) But once you get used to the key standing poses you will see how all yoga poses have similar elements in common and you will be able to carry with you your awareness from one pose to another. It is true though that you will experience it differently in different planes. Here we explore variations of virabhadrasana 1, standing, on our back, kneeling and balancing on one leg. You will see how the normal imbalances of the pelvis influence this particular pose, it has elements of a back bend so tends to be the problematic standing posture. Here we work to open the hamstrings, as well as the hip flexors and focus on lifting and opening the chest and upper back to elevate the arms up and over our head.

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Elevating the chest for backbends

75mins

Hatha Flow 28th January

Sometimes you realise there are elements of your practice you are neglecting or ignoring. This can be consciously or unconsciously. It’s always nice to practice the things that come to us effortlessly and that we enjoy whilst resisting the things that make us uncomfortable or are practices that we don’t enjoy. Blockages can be physical, if we are injured or feeling poorly certain practices should be avoided, but it is deciphering if we are always avoiding the same things because of what we tell ourselves we feel about this certain movement or practice. Sometimes it’s about finding a different path, a different perspective and a new way of approaching or looking at something. Backbends are the perfect practice to explore this. When they come easy the practices are energising and fun and make you feel strong and alive. But when you you feel stuck, heavy or resistant they can leave the body and mind (ego) feeling depleted and deflated. This practice gives an accessible route in to back bending/front lengthening that can be kept very simple or advanced as your mood, body or practice decides. One thing to emphasise is that back bending shouldn’t cause you lower back pain. Once we learn to use our legs and open the upper back and chest properly the lower spine and pelvis are completely stable. Please discontinue practising any movements that cause pain or lasting discomfort.

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Lightening the load - Opening the chest and shoulders

75mins

Hatha Flow 21st January

One element that is hard to avoid in any style or level of Yoga class is shoulder mobility. Rarely is flexibility over strength or strength over flexility the solution, it is a happy interchange between the two. This class we focus on mobility and gaining greater range of motion in the shoulder area, which includes the connections to the chest (muscles and bones), the ribs and upper back. With repetition of certain actions and movements we see how this has a dynamic effect on the movement range of our upper torso and how our body has the potential to use this information to practice asanas that require more weight baring. Primarily because our body feels lighter, we are no longer over using and creating stress in the same and often the wrong muscles.

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Abdominals - Moving From Our Centre

75mins

Hatha Flow 3rd December

Moving from our centre helps us to balance, stops us from falling and enables us to move with increased awareness in all directions. In this class we investigate how a balanced “core” that is both strong and flexible can help us twist, open and lift our chest, backbend, forward fold, roll, invert, and of course do ab-centric asanas too. You can do just about anything and find healthy, pain free movement patterns that will strengthen your practice and help you prevent and/or observe imbalances in your body.

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Revolving palms to free the shoulders and open the chest

75mins

Hatha Flow 19th November

By changing the direction we place our palms we can change the experience of the arms, shoulder girdle and chest and completely transform some of our backbends. We also start to consider kumbaka as a moment, a pause at the top of our inhale that can reveal a profound stillness. Our practice culminates with an introduction to Maha Mudra.

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Opening the chest, creating freedom in the shoulders and extending forwards

75mins

Hatha Flow 5th November

It is too simplistic to say you can open the shoulders without opening the chest, and you can’t open the chest without opening the back and none of these areas are unconnected to the hips or legs. But we have isolated shoulder movements that open the chest and chest openers that open the shoulders. With forward extensions to lengthen the hamstrings to further elongate and lift the upper body.

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Twists - 360 Tour of the ribcage to lengthen, stretch and release the spine

75mins

Hatha Flow 15th October

We twist, we open, we lengthen, we release. Like a 360degree tour around the ribcage to lengthen, stretch and release the chest, upper back and side body for optimal lift and preparation for shoulder stand. Strengthening the legs and twists prepare the body perfectly for all lifts, backbends and inversions.

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