Happy Fall! My favorite time of year. I love the brisk mornings and
the crunchy leaves. The brilliant colors on the trees never cease to
amaze.
Since we are now exactly halfway between the summer and winter solstices, now is a great time to take stock and consider balance once again.
In yoga asana, we often work on our physical balance, a worthwhile practice to keep us steady on our feet.
What about balance in other aspects of your life? Is your sleep cycle in balance with your activity level? Or could you add more movement to your day to balance a sedentary lifestyle?
For you science buffs, here's the meaning behind the equinox, from timeanddate.com:
On the equinox, night and day are nearly exactly the same length – 12
hours – all over the world. This is the reason it's called an
"equinox", derived from Latin, meaning "equal night".
The
September equinox occurs the moment the sun crosses the celestial
equator – the imaginary line in the sky above the Earth’s equator – from
north to south.
1. Imagine you could breathe in through one nostril then exhale
through the other. Picture your breath cycle as drawing the breath
up from base of your spine and up the left side of your body as you
inhale through your left nostril. Then picture the exhale leaving
your right nostril and traveling down the right side of your body
back down to the base of your spine, where is continues into the
next inhale up the left side again. Use this visualization for 3
cycles of breath then reverse direction: inhale up the right side
and exhale down the left.
2. Sitting up tall in your chair with the lower belly firm, inhale
your arms straight out to the sides. Exhale and bring your
fingertips to your shoulders. Continue this movement for 5 breath
cycles, bending at the elbow with upper arms parallel to the floor.
3. Bring hands to rest hands in your lap, still sitting up tall,
lift right foot off the floor as you straighten the knee. Ankle is
flexed with toes pointing up, lift the thigh right off the chair
just an inch or so, using the belly muscles and holding 3 breaths.
Repeat with left leg.
4. Camel: Slide a few inches forward away from the back of your
chair, bring the palms of your hands to your lower back. Look up at
the ceiling as you arch your back and come into a gentle, supported
back bend, hands on lower back, letting your head and neck relax and
drop back. Breathe for 3 breath cycles. Slowly use your hands to
come back up, then shift hands to your knees, folding at the hips to
rest your belly on your thighs in a forward fold. Take 3 breaths
then use your hands to push to sitting,
5. Eagle: Cross your right thigh over your left thigh. If you can,
wrap the right foot all the way around the left calf. Cross your
left arm over the right one at the elbow. Bend the elbows and bring
your palms to touch. Lift the elbows while dropping the shoulders
away from the ears. Hold three to five breaths. Repeat with left
thigh over right thigh this time.
6. Repeat #1 for 3 cycles each side, then rest for a few minutes
with your natural breathing.
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