Want to work toward a safe and confident handstand? Try these tips, while applying the principles of persevering practice and non-attachment to your practice.
Part of the sublime nature of hatha yoga is the infinite potential it
offers for deepening, refining, and evolving our practice as a process
of self-transformation. At first, a new asana or pranayama technique
might seem altogether daunting. But through abhyasa, or persevering practice, we stay fully committed to the path, and with vairagya,
an attitude of non-attachment, we embody our higher intention instead
of identifying with the outcome of the pose or the completion of a goal.
A vinyasa krama practice typically follows an arc-like structure, first
sequencing toward the peak asana(s) by moving from simple to more
complex postures that warm the body and give targeted attention to areas
where you will work more deeply. Anticipatory asanas help open and
stabilize the muscles and joints most involved in the peak pose. After
exploring the peak, the sequence follows a path of integration toward shavasana, each successive asana releasing the tension that may have arisen in earlier stages.
As you apply these principles in the handstand sequence that follows, cultivate an abiding sense of vairagya: allow the asanas and the practice to come to you as you consciously explore opening to them. Use the breath and the intensity of physical sensation to guide your effort, and remember that it is not about how far you go but how you go. You may find your practice is best explored without getting to the fullest expression of the peak pose.
Handstand helps build strength, confidence, and self-acceptance.We’ll examine these principles by working toward adho mukha vrikshasana (downward-facing tree pose, or handstand). An intermediate-level asana, handstand helps us build strength, confidence, and self-acceptance. It supports transformation precisely because it is challenging: it challenges us to stand on our hands instead of our feet, to find balance when our normal relationship to gravity is inverted, and to overcome a palpable and perfectly rational fear of falling. By persevering through these challenges we generate tapas, the self-purifying inner fire of transformation.
Wisdom of Gradual Progression
To integrate abhyasa and vairagya in hatha practice, we can work with the concept of vinyasa krama. Vinyasa means “to place in a special way” and krama, or “stage,” refers to the effective sequencing of actions. Vinyasa krama allows us to chart our course through a more sustainable and accessible practice by giving each successive asana a meaningful place in relation to what has come before and what will follow.As you apply these principles in the handstand sequence that follows, cultivate an abiding sense of vairagya: allow the asanas and the practice to come to you as you consciously explore opening to them. Use the breath and the intensity of physical sensation to guide your effort, and remember that it is not about how far you go but how you go. You may find your practice is best explored without getting to the fullest expression of the peak pose.
Watch a Video of the Handstand Sequence
This brief handstand tutorial demonstrates some of the practices outlined in this article. Watch it—and after you read the article, use it as a mini-class as you build strength for adho mukha vrikshasana.Anticipatory Warming and Awakening
To begin, warm the body with the surya namaskar (sun salutation) variation of your choice. Pause to explore in the asanas where there are elements that anticipate handstand or that prepare the body to ultimately make handstand more accessible, as follows:In anjaneyasana (low lunge pose), gradually release more deeply to stretch the hip flexors, especially the iliopsoas.
In adho mukha shvanasana (downward-facing dog pose), you will learn, develop, and refine most of the elements of handstand.
Tight or weak shoulders create specific risks to the neck, back, elbows, wrists, and the shoulders themselves, in downward-facing dog and handstand. Moderate effort in downward-facing dog develops both strength and flexibility, opening the shoulders to greater flexion. Externally rotating the shoulders may cause the inner edges of the hands to lift; balance this effort by internally rotating the forearms, thereby establishing stability and ease in the hands, wrists, and shoulders.
With each exhalation, feel the light and natural engagement of your abdominal muscles. Try to maintain that subtle engagement while inhaling, without gripping in your belly. This light engagement in your core is a key source of stability in handstand.
Opening the Shoulders
One of the main challenges in handstand arises from tight shoulders. Imagine for a moment that you are able to raise your arms only halfway overhead, and that you are now in handstand—the rest of your body will not be able to line up over your arms. This is why many bodies are shaped like a banana when in handstand, making balance more elusive.The easiest path to opening the shoulders to full flexion is through adho mukha shvanasana, as well as garudasana (eagle pose) and gomukhasana (cow face pose). Garudasana arm position stretches the rhomboids, a key set of muscles which can restrict movement of the shoulders when they’re tight. Gomukhasana arm position opens the chest and shoulder girdle.
Preparation for Handstand
To move closer toward adho mukha vrikshasana, come to a wall. Start with your hands on the wall at hip height, with your hips aligned over your heels. Look forward to position the arms parallel, then gaze at your belly to draw your lower front ribs in. Rotate your pelvis forward to bring your sacrum more level with the floor, and bring your ears level with your arms.Next, reverse this position: place your hands where your feet were, place one foot on the wall where your hands were, and press into the foot to straighten the lifted leg; then place your other foot on the wall alongside. If you feel comfortable, extend one leg up to the sky, then switch sides. Try to hold for one minute, then release into uttanasana (standing forward bend pose).
The Peak Pose
Getting Up into Handstand
There are several ways to get up into handstand, each one progressively more challenging: using assistance (which may get you up prematurely), scissor kicking, or piking.Scissor Kicking
Come into downward-facing dog with your fingertips placed about five inches away from a wall (closer if you have really open shoulders and hip flexors). Keeping your arms straight and strong (without hyperextending the elbows), walk in until your shoulders are aligned over your wrists. Gazing between your thumbs, extend one leg up about two feet off the floor, keeping it straight, strong, and internally rotated. This is your swinging leg.Piking
When you’re comfortable scissor kicking up with either leg, graduate to piking. Start as before in downward-facing dog, but with the hands about six to eight inches away from the wall, and feet just about a foot closer in from downward-facing dog.Aligning into Balance
Now it’s time to explore balancing. Upon arriving upside down in handstand, drop your head to gaze across the room, draw your lower front ribs slightly in, and try to find pelvic neutrality. Press firmly down through your hands while rooting the knuckles of your index fingers. Maintain external rotation of the upper arms and begin to press even more strongly down through your hands. If it is comfortable for your neck, shift your gaze down between your thumbs; while this makes alignment in the spine more challenging, it makes balancing easier.Bring your awareness to your legs. Keeping the ankles together, internally rotate the thighs and energize out through the balls of the feet, while spreading the toes. As you root your hands and extend up through the entire length of your body, create a feeling of drawing energy to the midline, cultivating stability deep in the core. Use the actions of your feet and legs to more easily access and sustain mula bandha, accentuating a sense of awakened energy drawing along your spine.
It's equally important to know how to get into the pose--and how to get out of it.Rather than drawing one leg and then the other away from the wall, keep strongly rooting and extending while visualizing your body coming into a straight line from the wrists through the shoulders, hips, and ankles. Get longer while stabilizing your shoulders, torso, and legs, continuously drawing energy to center. Keep the breath smooth and steady. As you get longer and more stable, your hips will gravitate over your wrists, your heels will leave the wall, and your body will gradually align into initial balance.
Integrating
It is important to know not just how to get into a pose but how to get out. This means not just coming down from handstand, but integrating the experience through pratikriyasana, or opposite action, which dissolves whatever tension has arisen and restores energetic balance.However far you make it toward handstand, when releasing, first come into uttanasana or balasana (child’s pose) for at least a few breaths.
As you complete your overall practice session, settle into a profoundly restful shavasana, assimilating a deeper sense of abhyasa and vairagya. Let the persevering practice be one of doing nothing: allow the breath to flow freely and surrender into blissful awareness.
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