Arm-Free Yoga: Give Your Shoulders a Well-Deserved Break

Young sporty woman practicing yoga, doing Revolved Easy Pose or Parivrtta Sukhasana pose. One pose used to practice arm-free yoga poses to help rest your arms and shoulders.

Our arms are our instruments of doing. We use them to accomplish almost everything we do in our daily lives. We use them to chop veggies, to type on our keyboards, to eat, to drink, to lug objects from one place to another, plus many, many more things, all day long. We carry this habit into our yoga practice. We use our arms to support our bodies and to increase intensity in our asanas. For example, in Revolved Easy Pose (Parvrtta Sukhasana), we use our arms to pull us into the twist. In Triangle Pose (Trikonasana), we often extend our top arm back to help open the chest, and we support ourselves in our lower arm. But using our arms to intensify our poses can often lead to shoulder tension. It sounds weird, but arm-free yoga might sometimes be a shoulder-nurturing way to play with your practice.

Practicing arm-free yoga doesn’t mean that you have to lose your arms altogether. We need to use them for a multitude of poses. Think Downward Facing Dog Pose (Adho Mukha Svanasana), Plank Pose (Phalakasana), etc. But there are some asanas, like the two mentioned above, where we tend to create stress in the shoulders by overusing our arms. This is a natural tendency because “doing” is the role our arms play in our lives. Sometimes it might even feel as if you are using your arms to inflict the pose on your body. Can we instead use them as a support to our practice rather than to intensify it?

Why Practice Arm-Free Yoga?

Savasana to give your arms a supported rest

The benefits of practicing arm-free yoga go beyond simply relieving shoulder stress. Not that relieving shoulder stress is insignificant. Most of us carry some measure of stress in our shoulders and neck. When I take requests from students for what they’d like to practice in a class, the shoulders and neck are almost always first on the list. (Savasana with supported rest for the arms in the image above.)

In standing poses, in particular, when we overuse our arms, our core, and legs can disengage. This decreases the stabilizing qualities of standing poses and makes our arms do the work that the legs and core should be doing.

But there’s more to it. The physical benefits of asana practice go deeper than stretching muscles. Our yoga practice can promote physiological health as well. Stretching and strengthening are really side benefits to the main target—the nervous system.

When we practice with aggression, using our arms to force ourselves further into poses, we can stimulate the sympathetic (fight-or-flight) nervous system. Asana was cultivated over centuries to do the opposite—to suppress the sympathetic nervous system and to allow us to rest in the parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) side of the autonomic nervous system. This creates the physiological environment that best supports meditation—the heart of yoga.

How To Practice Yoga’s Revolved Easy Pose Sans Arms

 In this article and with this image the focus is on arm-free yoga poses in order to give your arms a healthy rest.
Image courtesy of Hugger Mugger Yoga Products

 

I’ll use a simple example to demonstrate how to practice arm-free yoga. You can take this instruction into all rotated poses.

  1. Sit in Easy Pose (Sukhasana) on a folded yoga blanket. If you find that your lumbar spine is rounded back in this position, feel free to practice this pose sitting in a chair.
  2. Rotate your torso to the right, scooting your right hip back so that your pelvis is in agreement with the twist. This helps to keep your sacroiliac (SI) joint in a neutral position.
  3. Place your left hand on your right knee or thigh. Simply place your hand there without pulling your torso further into the twist.
  4. Instead of using your arm to “complete” the twist, imagine you could invite your core into the pose. By the core, I mean the internal structures of your body, mainly your abdominal and thoracic organs. Here’s how it works. Imagine drawing your right lung and kidney back into your back body. Simultaneously draw your left lung and kidney and your heart forward. Then draw your liver (on the right) back and your stomach (on the left) forward. Now invite your ascending and descending colon into the twist. Draw the ascending (just inside the right side of your pelvis) back and the descending colon (just inside the left side of your pelvis) forward. Imagine the core (organs) and shell (muscles, bones, and skin) of your body rotating together.
  5. Stay for 5 to 10 breaths, moving from your core and keeping your left arm relaxed.
  6. Return to the center. Take a few breaths to feel the residue from the pose, and then rotate to the left.

Energize And Stabilize: Arm-Free Yoga In Standing Poses

Practicing standing poses without using your arms can show you areas where your body is not participating as much as it might. It’s common to overstretch the shoulder of your top arm in Triangle Pose and to disengage your legs and lean on your bottom hand. I’ll instruct Triangle Pose here, but you can practice other standing poses this way as well.

  1. Stand on a nonskid yoga mat with your feet parallel and 2 to 3 feet apart.
  2. Turn your right leg out 90 degrees and turn your left leg—including the pelvis—in 30 degrees. Do not try to square your hips. (Despite its enduring popularity, the alignment cue to “square your hips” in asymmetrical standing poses does not make anatomical sense. Over time, it can cause SI joint dysfunction and can damage knees and hip joints.)
  3. Draw your arms into your sides with your hands pointing downward.
  4. Now begin to bend to the right into Triangle Pose, stopping at whatever point you feel a stretch but can maintain easy breathing. The two sides of your torso should both be long, and your chest should face forward.
  5. Notice your legs. Are they working a bit harder than usual? How about your core muscles? If either or both of these areas are working harder than you’re used to, it’s likely because you’ve been disengaging your legs and leaning on your bottom hand.
  6. Now imagine opening the ribcage—not the pelvis—toward the front using your organs in the same way as in Revolved Easy Pose. In this case that means that the right lung will be gently drawing forward, and the left lung and heart will be gently drawing back.
  7. Take 3 to 5 deep breaths here and then return to an upright position. Rotate your legs so that your feet are parallel.
  8. Take a few breaths in this neutral position before practicing the pose on the left side.

Practicing Arm-Free Yoga

Arm-free yoga allows the practitioner to focus on other parts of their anatomy( like leg and core strengthening) in yoga poses.

You don’t have to practice your standing poses this way all the time, of course. But when you do practice with the traditional arm position, make sure you’re not overusing your arms. Your legs and core should be your primary support, and the orientation of your ribcage should come from your core also, rather than your top arm.

And particularly when you twist or forward bend, check to see if your arms are inflicting the pose on your body rather than simply supporting the trajectory of the pose. Relax your shoulders and allow your poses to unfold naturally.

Reprinted with permission from Charlotte Bell/Hugger Mugger Yoga Products.
Charlotte Bell writer

Charlotte Bell began practicing yoga in 1982 and began teaching in 1986. She was certified by B.K.S. Iyengar in 1989 following a trip to Pune. In 1986, she began practicing Insight Meditation with her mentors Pujari and Abhilasha Keays. Her asana classes blend mindfulness with physical movement. Charlotte writes a column for Catalyst Magazine and serves as editor for Yoga U Online. She is the author of two books: Mindful Yoga, Mindful Life, and Yoga for Meditators, both published by Rodmell Press. She also edits Hugger Mugger Yoga Products’ blog and is a founding board member for GreenTREE Yoga, a non-profit that brings yoga to underserved populations. A lifelong musician, she plays oboe and English horn in the Salt Lake Symphony and the folk sextet Red Rock Rondo whose 2010 PBS music special won two Emmys.

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