
TURN IT AROUND
Reverse the effects of aging with this twisting
practice for a supple spine.
Master Class, Spinal Twist instruction by Ganga White
Written by Mark Schlenz
From Yoga Journal, August, 2008
Many yogis measure aging or youthfulness by the
flexibility and health of the spine. Ganga White
remembers yogis in his early studies who would say
“very young man” when they found an
older person with a pliant, limber backbone in their
classes. “Conversely,” he recalls, “when
they saw a young but stiff person, the might say,
‘And here is an old man!'”
Normal loss of circulation and general effects
of gravity stiffen the spine with age. Veins that
supply our spinal disks atrophy as we mature. Gravity
compresses the spongy, fibrous disks that separate
our spine’s vertebrae each day of our lives
as we sit, stand, or walk. Nerve trunks from the
spine to many parts of the body can be impinged
when the back is compressed or out of alignment
with worn disks and causing loss of sensation or
function in limbs and extremities. Uneven muscular
development, accumulated throughout our lives, can
further aggravate these misalignments and impingements.
Spinal twists bring circulation to aging spines
by squeezing and massaging nutrients and wastes
into and from vertebral disks. The twisting series
and suggestions for practice that White offers here
can also help rebalance long-term muscular and structural
effects that accumulate when one side of the body
dominates much of our movement.
Ideally, muscle sets on both sides of the body
would develop equally for uniform support, especially
along the spinal column where uneven muscle balance
can result in serious misalignment and painful back
problems. Our habitual movement patterns, however,
usually cause one side to become so dominant it
imbalances the body’s entire structure. In
the following twist sequence, become aware of structural
imbalances caused by right- or left-side dominance
in your usual posture and movement. As you learn
to rebalance strength, energy, and rotational motion
with therapeutic twisting in both directions, you
increase vital spinal flexibility, enhance circulation
to vertebral disks, and restore healthy nerve flow
throughout the entire body. Nature is full of spiraling
energy as seen in vines and whirlpools and which
have been symbolically represented in the caduceus
and the winding energy of the Ida (moon) and Pingala
(sun) nadis along the spine. Twisting the spine
improves the flow of nerve energy and lengthens
the spine similarly to wringing out a wet towel.
Notice your particular physical tendencies when
you practice these postures. Give some extra time
and attention to your weaker, stiffer sides rather
than unconsciously favoring the stronger or easier
direction. Remember, body tensions set to hold in
habitual positions and attitudes. When you start
restructuring and repositioning the body to better
alignments, you may initially feel awkward and experience
some muscle resistance until the dynamics reset
to hold at new levels of balance. Go slowly. Use
twists as tools to restore alignment and become
more aware of balanced biomechanics throughout the
day.
Before you begin these twists, loosen shoulders
and hips and awaken your spine with gentle sun salutations.
Between twists, add symmetrical poses that emphasize
spinal flexion, extension, and side stretching—such
as seated staff pose and reverse staff pose, forward
folds, squats, toe balances with lifted arms, and
gentle backbends such as cobra—to complement
your practice. Notice how energy flows through the
spine before and after every pose. End with a thorough
Savasana to observe and absorb even muscular relaxation
along both sides of the spine.
LYING SPINAL TWIST
This first pose develops awareness and helps you
establish “baseline” observations of
spinal balance and health. Pay close attention to
impingements that restrict sensation, activation,
and movement on one side or the other. Which side
does your body consistently favor?
Prepare for Lying Twist by relaxing in Savasana.
Become sensitive to the connection of your back
with the floor. Do muscles on both sides of the
spine connect evenly with the floor through relaxation?
Can you release stored tensions created by habitual
dominance of one side your body? Listen carefully
so you can make comparisons with changes that may
occur as you return here between poses. Then, with
inhalation, place your right foot just above the
left knee. You may adjust your left hip slightly
to the right so the left leg extends in alignment
with your spine when you twist. Reach your arms
to either side with palms contacting the floor.
Exhale and carefully lower your right knee to the
left. Let your left hand rest upon it for ballast.
Prop the right knee from the floor with a blanket
or block if the opposite shoulder begins to lift
or if tension in the hips prevents relaxation. Hold
the twist anywhere from five to fifteen breaths;
then return to center and take several breaths in
Savasana before repeating on the opposite side
In the twists, sense the floor supporting your
entire body, and feel gravity drawing your knee
earthward. Surrender the relaxed weight of your
hand and arm resting on the knee to gravitational
pull. Relax completely and explore passive approaches
to the pose that will cultivate deeper sensitivity
and awareness. Notice how the twist and other stretches
in the pose increase as you consciously bring relaxation
to different body areas.
Emphasize relaxation in your shoulders—imagine
tension melting from them through your mat into
the floor—and observe energy flows or blockages
in other body areas. Observe shifts in sensation
and intensity when you emphasize relaxation in your
hips. Experiment with different combinations of
conscious relaxation in both the upper and lower
body until you experience greatest overall ease
and energetic opening throughout the pose. In passive
twists, facets of the lumbar vertebrae align with
one another to create a natural lengthening effect
as they turn. When you return to Savasana, notice
how the gentle “wringing” you give your
spine in this way releases compression and opens
space.
The gentlest Lying Twist has profound benefits
to practitioners at any level who, listening deeply,
relax tensions that accumulate daily around the
spine from gravitational pulls and habitual body
movements. Fully extend both arms and also the crossing
leg for stronger stretches in the lower back and
hamstrings and for deeper shoulder opening, You
can also experiment with activating, instead of
relaxing, upper and lower body areas to create dynamic
leverages through your contacts with the floor.
Notice, though, whether these expressions of the
pose focus tensions in particular areas. If so,
you may gain more long-term progress toward more
challenging postures—and achieve greater healing
insight—by returning to the place where you
can be most sensitive and aware throughout your
body.
Easy SEATED TWIST—SUKHASANA
Use some version of Sukhasana, Easy Seated Twist,
just about any time or anywhere to relieve spinal
tensions. It is both accessible and beneficial to
all levels of practitioners. In this pose, you can
activate leverages with one part of the body working
with or against another—your front hand on
the front knee—and by working energetically
against external surfaces—the hand behind
you pressing into the floor.
Come to an easy, comfortable sitting position.
Start with simple crossed legs, or you may prefer
crossed-ankles in Siddasana, a half-lotus, or even
full lotus—as long as you can sit comfortably!
Notice which leg you have crossed in front of the
other here and start paying attention over time
to how habitual this movement pattern is for you
in daily life. Change the pattern back and forth
a couple of times and note differences in fluidity,
ease, and comfort with the movements and positions.
At first, you may even find that while you instinctively
cross your legs easily on one side, you must use
assistance from the hands to cross the other way.
You should also notice which knee typically hovers
higher from the floor and slowly work to balance
both sides.
Some traditions may dictate specific sequences
of patterns and directions for poses, always placing
the right foot on top or twisting first to the right
for instance. Instead of following external dictates,
White encourages students to develop their personal
inner-guidance. He advises students to rebalance
effects of their side-dominance by occasionally
beginning poses with their less habitual and less
accessible— their “off side”—pattern
or direction. Unconsciously, we tend to work more
attentively and even hold poses longer with fresher
energy and interest on the first side we practice.
Therefore, White cautions, “if you always
begin with your ‘on side,’ you may even
be discouraged or impatient with limitations of
the ‘off side’ and just keep playing
to your strengths.” And why be limited to
even-numbered repetitions? “Begin on your
‘off side’ with your best intention,”
White suggests, “and then you can even do
a third repetition of the ‘off side’
for further rebalancing.”
Inhale and lengthen your spine to prepare for
the twist. Make even contact through both sitting
bones into the floor, then exhale and rotate from
your abdomen. Build rotation from the waist up through
the thorax. Then gently turn the neck to gaze over
the back shoulder. Support spinal extension when
you come into the twist by placing the hand behind
you into the floor and pointing your fingers in
the direction of the rotation to open the shoulder
as you lift the chest. Pulling the chest up with
an arching lumbar causes hyperextension and compromises
healthy twisting, so White suggests using long inhalation
to lift your body’s central axis evenly along
the front, back, and both sides of the spine to
facilitate rotation. “Inhale, lift and lengthen:
exhale, rotate,” he says: “Whether you
hold this pose at the edge of your external mobility
or back off a bit for more internal inquiry, you
can regulate this pulsing breath to maintain energetic
stability.”
White notices many people tend to pull and tug
their knee with the front hand to twist deeper.
Instead, he recommends you “create internal
leverage through the front arm by both pressing
and pulling with the hand on the knee. At the same
time, create external leverage by pressing the hand
behind you into the floor. Integrating leverages
from these combined actions helps you to lift and
extend the front of the spine while increasing rotation.”
Initially twisting for five breaths on each side
may be sufficient; you can also work up to ten to
fifteen breaths or more as you become comfortable
with the poses. Experiment also with turning the
head and gazing over the forward shoulder as well
as over the rear shoulder for even counts of breaths;
observe the differing stretches and releases in
the upper shoulders and neck. Compare openings and
energy flows in every variation you experience.
“Students frequently ask which way to turn
with legs crossed one way or the other and they
especially seem to think there’s a particular
right way to do the Lotus,” White observes:
“But it’s important as you eventually
move into more challenging sitting bases, and especially
in Full Lotus, that you keep experimenting with
twists in both directions and with legs crossed
in both patterns.
WHEEL OF LIFE POSE/ AYURCHAKRASANA
The Wheel of Life pose teaches you to coordinate
complex alignments. Experimenting with this surprisingly
sophisticated pose can show you how to use external
leverages in opposition as you press parts of both
the upper and lower body into the floor. It also
lets you experience effects of deep core body twisting
deep from a very different physical orientation
and perspective. Strong openings in the hip sockets
will prepare you for Purna Matsyendrasana.
To move into the Wheel of Life from sitting, bend
the right knee to 90 degrees and align the shin
parallel with the front end of your mat. Bend the
left knee to 90 degrees and swing the hip back to
align the shin parallel with the left side of the
mat. Use hands pressing into the floor to lift and
extend the spine as you rotate to the right. Experiment
with leverages here by pushing and pulling on the
floor with your hands and legs, noting how these
actions change the openings, articulations, and
releases of tensions in the joints and musculature.
Work with this version of the pose for a while to
open the hips before bringing the chest and shoulders
to the floor. As you lower, use your right hand
into the floor and bend the elbow to regulate progress
as you slide your left arm along the floor with
the elbow at 90 degrees and forearm parallel with
the front of mat. Place your head on the floor gazing
right. If you feel comfortable here, slide the right
hand away from the body and extend the entire arm.
Complex angles and leverages of your limbs connecting
with the floor in Ayurchakrasana generate strong
torque along the entire spinal column in the core
body. Start with five or six breaths; work up to
longer holds slowly. It may take some practice to
become comfortable with the basic shape of the pose.
Once you do, experiment with different leverages
created first by pressing the lower body and then
by pressing the upper body into the floor. Then
explore combinations of upper and lower body activations
to create the most balanced and dynamic experience.
Reverse movements one at time carefully to return
to sitting. Pause sitting straight for several breaths
before twisting on the other side.
ARDHA BADDHA PADMA JANUSIRSASANA—CLASPED
HALF-LOTUS FORWARD FOLD
This Clasped Half-Lotus Forward Fold involves
all your limbs in sophisticated patterns of pulling
and pushing actions, leverages and tractions that
can produces strong torques in the lower back and
hip sockets. It develops deep core engagement you
will need comfortable balance in Purna Matsyendrasana,
the Full Twist. Use this pose to strengthen your
awareness of subtle biomechanical effects.
“Avoid overexertion,” White reminds
students, “you’re working with powerful
internal forces here. Taken all together, these
twists should feel good. They should create length
and release tightness and impingements along the
spinal column. Once you hold the posture comfortably
with good alignment, experiment consciously with
various uses of leverage, traction, and torque to
seek your optimal experience. Become sensitive to
feedback from your balance, breath, and nervous
system as you adjust subtle biomechanics and fine-tune
precise articulations of joints and muscles. Follow
these inner-guidance feedback systems toward alignments
and toward accessible variations within poses that
open shoulders and hips and relieve compression
of the spine as they build strength.”
From Janusirsasana, place the left foot into the
fold between your upper left thigh and torso. Keep
energies activated in the foot and through the leg
to protect your bent knee. Exhaling, fold and rotate
the torso, reach the left hand to take the outer
right foot, and wrap the right arm behind the lower
back. You can clasp the shin or inner thigh of the
bent leg—or hold a belt strapped around the
bent ankle—to increase your reach.
Use your left hand to pull against your foot extended
in front of you. At the same time the right hand
wrapping from behind strengthens rotation by pulling
the clasped the shin, thigh, or belt around the
bent leg. Together these actions will help you to
elongate your spine. Work with this leveraging extension
of the entire spine to create a unique, beneficial
opening through the lumbar. Pull the front ankle
and toes backward while simultaneously pressing
with the foot into the clasping hand. Lift the chest.
As you increase leverage, increase awareness of
sensations deep in the spine. The articulations
of the joints should feel healthy and tension releasing.
Be especially sensitive if you have sacro-iliac
or lumbar pain. “Sometimes if there’s
a pinch or a block or tightness, you may have to
go gently into the pain a little bit to release
it,” White says; “This is something
you learn subjectively. Go slowly, though. Twisting
carefully with therapeutic intention can help heal
back injuries and restore mobility, but unconscious
or aggressive twisting will aggravate problems.”
After five or six breaths, inhale, lift, and unwind
from the pose. Exhale to extend the right leg. Sit
in Dandasana for a few breaths feeling the effects
of the twist. Then repeat on the opposite side.
Compare qualities of your experiences on each side.
PURNA MATSYENDRASANA—FULL TWIST
White’s version of Full Spinal Twist puts
some interesting spins on a classic asana. Like
the previous pose, Purna Matsyendrasana involves
strong leverages. Watch how leverage from your front
elbow pressing into the top of the thigh lifts and
expands your chest. See how leverage from your lifting
chest enhances rotation as the hand noosed behind
you pulls back on the front ankle. Remember, benefits
will come without straining either knees or spine.
As White explains, “Asanas are very potent
forms. With relatively short holds, of seconds or
minutes, asanas can counteract hours of bad posture
and misaligned carriage. Keep your poses within
the range of structural integrity and make
movements that serve and enhance well-being. Learning
proper alignment and asana kinesiology while maintaining
a softer context that allows some latitude in the
way the pose is held is an intelligent approach.
Being too rigid about alignment sacrifices flow
and grace.”
Cross your legs as you would for a basic seated
spinal twist. Instead of sitting on the floor though,
flex the foot of your lower leg at a right angle
and sit up on it. Depending on the structure of
your pelvis, one sitting bone may rest on the metatarsal
and the other on the heel. The main thing is to
get balanced and comfortable. This elevation of
the sitting bones gives an advantageous leveling
to the pelvic alignment and produces more balanced
rotation up the spine. You can accomplish the same
thing by using a blanket or a pad if necessary.
Sitting on the foot may not be comfortable at first
and sometimes it feels a little off balance, but
quickly becomes more familiar with a little time
and practice. In White’s experience “most
people who can do this comfortably find it a more
effective variation.”
Place the foot of the upper-crossed leg flat on
the floor in close and parallel with the lower leg
and keep its femur as vertical as possible. This
vertical alignment may require time as your hips
open. Rotate your torso toward the upper-crossed
leg, place fingertips of one hand into the floor
at the back of the spine, and reach the other elbow
around the front knee. The front elbow bent as pictured
may seem less dynamic than some binding variations,
but actually it’s quite effective for all
levels of students as you can use leverage from
the back of the arm to press, lift, and rotate.
Practice the pose here, or move on to clasping the
front foot from behind the back for deeper therapeutic
lumbar opening. If clasping with the hand makes
you slouch, use a strap wrapped around the ankle
from behind.
As you clasp, experiment also with different biomechanics
in your arms, hands, and feet. Press the front foot
into the floor and create traction by drawing it
back. Flexing the toes back of the foot you are
sitting on creates spiraling counter rotations at
the base of the posture in opposition to the turning
of the torso and brings a whole dimension of beneficial
effects. These combined actions enhance spinal decompression,
especially in the lumbar. “Feel rotation and
counter rotations spiraling up from the base of
the spine to the brain,” White says: “Twisting
in this way creates spirals of energy and integrates
energies in the upper and lower body with the seat
of consciousness.”
As you experiment with internal forces in these
twists, remember to observe changes to symmetry
and alignment in your body that your inner-guidance
and practice bring you. Then, White says, “bring
awareness of posture and biomechanics from yoga
practice back to daily life. Notice when you hold
tension in the muscles. Watch patterns of sitting,
walking, lying, and picking up and carrying things
as you move through the day. Develop a practice
of continual experimentation to use and balance
both sides of the body in all your activities."
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BENEFITS
Creates space in spine
Relieves vertebral compression
Improves nerve flow in and from the spine
Improves lumbar mobility
Keeps entire spinal column flexibility
Refines diaphragmatic control
CONTRAINDICATIONS
Back injuries
Disc subluxion
Shoulder cuff injuries
Arthritic or injured hip or S-I joint
Hip replacement
CAPTIONS
LYING SPINAL TWIST
Start in Savasana. With inhalation, place your right
foot just above the left knee. Adjust your left
hip slightly to the right so the extended left leg
aligns with the spine when you twist. Reach arms
to either side with palms contacting the floor.
Exhale and carefully lower your right knee to the
left and let your left hand rest on it. Prop the
right knee from the floor with a blanket or block
to relieve tension. Hold five to fifteen breaths;
return to center, take several breaths in Savasana,
repeat on opposite side.
Easy SEATED TWIST— SUKHASANA
From an easy, comfortable sitting position, twist
and place the hand behind you into the floor. Fingers
point in the direction of the rotation to open the
shoulder as you lift the chest. Push and pull the
hand on the front knee and press the rear hand into
the floor. Lift the spine evenly with inhalation
and increase rotation with exhalation. Begin with
five breaths and work up to ten to fifteen breaths.
Try gazing over the forward shoulder as well as
over the rear shoulder. Twists both directions with
legs crossed in both patterns. Compare openings
and energy flows in every variation you experience.
AYURCHAKRASANA—WHEEL OF LIFE POSE
From sitting, bend the right knee 90 degrees to
align the shin parallel with the front of the mat.
Bend the left knee and align the shin with the side
of the mat. Press into the floor to extend the spine
and rotate to the right. Press your right hand against
the floor to lower the torso carefully. Gaze right
with the head on the floor. You may also extend
the right arm away from the body along the floor.
Take five or six breaths; then reverse movements
and sit up straight a few breaths. Repeat on the
opposite side.
ARDAHA BADDHA PADMA JANUSIRSASANA—CLASPED
HALF-LOTUS FORWARD FOLD
From Janusirsasana, place the left foot into the
fold between your upper left thigh and torso. Exhale,
reach and turn the torso to take the front foot
with your left hand. Reach the right hand from behind
the back to clasp the shin or inner thigh of the
left leg. You may use a strap. Increase awareness
as you increase leverage. Hold for five or six breaths.
Compare experiences on both sides.
PURNA MATSYENDRASANA—FULL TWIST
Cross your legs as in basic spinal twist, but sit
up on top of your rear foot. Take some time to become
balanced and comfortable with this variation. Use
a blanket or block to prop the sitting bones if
necessary. Press the front foot into the floor close
and parallel to the lower leg. Work for vertical
alignment of the femur. Bend the right elbow across
the left knee and press to create lifting rotation.
Press fingers of the left hand into the floor or
clasp the left heel. Experiment with different activations
of leverages, tractions, and torques to release
spinal compressions. You may gaze over the back
and front shoulders for an even number (five or
six) breaths.
Mark Schlenz is a freelance writer who practices,
teaches and offers personal yoga coaching from his
home in the mountains of the eastern Sierra Nevada.
Ganga
White is author of Yoga
Beyond Belief—Insights to Awaken and Deepen
Your Practice and co-director of White Lotus Yoga
Foundation retreat.