Unsolved:Vriksasana

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Vrikshasana

Vrikshasana (/vrɪkˈʃɑːsənə/ vrik-SHAH-sə-nə;[1] Sanskrit: वृक्षासन; IAST: vṛkṣāsana) or Tree Pose[2] is an asana.

Etymology

The name comes from the Sanskrit words vriksa or vriksha (वृक्ष, vṛkṣa) meaning "tree",[3] and asana (आसन) meaning "posture".[4]

Description

From Tadasana, weight is shifted to one leg, for example, starting with the left leg. The entire sole of the foot remains in contact with the floor. The right knee is bent and the right foot placed on the left inner thigh, or in half lotus position. In either foot placement, the hips should be open, with the right knee pointing towards the right, not forward. With the toes of the right foot pointing directly down, the left foot, center of the pelvis, shoulders and head are all vertically aligned. Hands are typically held above the head either pointed directly upwards and unclasped, or clasped together in anjali mudra.

The asana is typically held for 20 to 60 seconds to stretch the spine, returning to tadasana while exhaling, then repeating standing on the opposite leg.[5]

Benefits

This asana improves:

Beginner's tip

Focus the gaze on a small specific point, known in yoga as a drishti. This is ideally something directly ahead which does not move. Engage the standing foot by lifting the arch and pressing down through the lateral edge. Check that weight is distributed through the ball of the large toe, the ball of the small toe, and the heel. Draw in the navel to improve core stability and posture. Faults include leaning to one side, twisting, pushing one hip out; bending or rotating the supporting knee outwards; looking downwards and lacking concentration.[9][full citation needed]

See also

  • List of asanas

References

Sources

Further reading

External links