What Is Asana?

An asanais a body posture, originally a sitting pose for meditation, and later in hatha yoga and modern yoga, adding reclining, standing, inverted, twisting, and balancing poses to the meditation seats. The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali define “asana” as “[a position that] is steady and comfortable”. Patanjali mentions the ability to sit for extended periods as one of the eight limbs of his system. Asanas are also called yoga poses or yoga postures in English.

The 10th or 11th century Goraksha Sataka and the 15th century Hatha Yoga Pradipika identify 84 asanas; the 17th century Hatha Ratnavali provides a different list of 84 asanas, describing some of them. In the 20th century, Indian nationalism favoured physical culture in response to colonialism. In that environment, pioneers such as Yogendra, Kuvalayananda, and Krishnamacharya taught a new system of asanas (incorporating systems of exercise as well as traditional hatha yoga). Among Krishnamacharya’s pupils were influential Indian yoga teachers including Pattabhi Jois, founder of Ashtanga vinyasa yoga, and B.K.S. Iyengar, founder of Iyengar yoga. Together they described hundreds more asanas, revived the popularity of yoga, and brought it to the Western world. Many more asanas have been devised since Iyengar’s 1966 Light on Yoga which described some 200 asanas. Hundreds more were illustrated by Dharma Mittra.

Asanas were claimed to provide both spiritual and physical benefits in medieval hatha yoga texts. More recently, studies have provided evidence that they improve flexibility, strength, and balance; to reduce stress and conditions related to it; and specifically to alleviate some diseases such as asthma and diabetes.

Sidhasana

Sidhasana

Etymology

Asana is derived from Sanskrit: आसन āsana “sitting down” (from आस ās “to sit down”), a sitting posture, a seat. The word was first used in English to mean a yoga posture in 1834.

History

Ancient times

The central figure in the Pashupati seal from the Indus Valley Civilization of c. 2500 BC was identified by Sir John Marshall in 1931 as a prototype of the god Shiva, recognised by being three-faced; in a yoga position as the Mahayogin, the god of yoga; having four animals as Pashupati, the Lord of Beasts; with deer beneath the throne, as in medieval depictions of Shiva; having a three-part headdress recalling Shiva’s trident; and possibly being ithyphallic, again like Shiva. If correct, this would be the oldest record of an asana. However, with no proof anywhere of an Indus Valley origin for Shiva, there is no evidence that a yoga pose is depicted in the seal.

Yoga originated in India. In his Yoga Sutras, Patanjali (c. 2nd to 4th century CE) describes asana practice as the third of the eight limbs (Sanskrit अष्टांग, ashtanga, from asht, eight, and anga, limb) of classical, or raja yoga.

The eight limbs are, in order, the yamas (codes of social conduct), niyamas (self-observances), asanas (postures), pranayama(breath work), pratyahara (sense withdrawal or non-attachment), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi(realization of the true Self or Atman, and unity with Brahman, ultimate reality). Asanas, along with the breathing exercises of pranayama, are the physical movements of hatha yoga and of modern yoga. Patanjali describes asanas as a “steady and comfortable posture”, referring to the seated postures used for pranayama and for meditation, where meditation is the path to samadhi, transpersonal self-realization.

The Yoga Sutras do not mention a single asana by name, merely specifying the characteristics of a good asana:

स्थिरसुखमासनम् ॥४६॥
sthira sukham āsanam
Asana means a steady and comfortable posture. Yoga Sutras 2:46

The Sutras are embedded in the Bhasya commentary, which scholars suggest may also be by Patanjali; it names 12 seated asanas including Padmasana, Virasana, Bhadrasana, and Svastikasana.

Medieval documents

The 10th-11th century Vimanarcanakalpa is the first manuscript to describe a non-seated asana, in the form of Mayurasana (peacock) — a balancing pose. Such poses appear, according to the scholar James Mallinson, to have been created outside Shaivism, the home of the Nath yoga tradition, and to have been associated with asceticism; they were later adopted by the Nath yogins.

The Goraksha Sataka (10–11th century), or Goraksha Paddhathi, an early hatha yogic text, describes the origin of the 84 classic asanas said to have been revealed by the Hindu deity Lord Shiva. Observing that there are as many postures as there are beings and asserting that there are 84 lakh or 8,400,000 species in all, the text states that Lord Shiva fashioned an asana for each lakh, thus giving 84 in all, although it mentions and describes only two in detail: Siddhasana and Padmasana. The number 84 is symbolic rather than literal, indicating completeness and sacredness.

The Hatha Yoga Pradipika (15th century) specifies that of these 84, the first four are important, namely the seated poses Siddhasana, Padmasana, Bhadrasana and Simhasana.

The pillars of the 16th century Achyutaraya temple at Hampi are decorated with numerous relief statues of yogins in asanas including Siddhasana balanced on a stick, Chakrasana, Yogapattasana, and a hand-standing inverted pose with a stick, as well as several unidentified poses.

By the 17th century, asanas became an important component of Hatha yoga practice, and more non-seated poses appear. The Hatha Ratnavali by Srinivasa (17th century) is one of the few texts to attempt an actual listing of 84 asanas, although 4 out of its list cannot be translated from the Sanskrit, and at least 11 are merely mentioned without any description, their appearance known from other texts.

The Gheranda Samhita (late 17th century) again asserts that Shiva taught 84 lakh of asanas, out of which 84 are preeminent, and “32 are useful in the world of mortals.” The yoga teacher and scholar Mark Singleton notes from study of the primary texts that “asana was rarely, if ever, the primary feature of the significant yoga traditions in India.” The scholar Norman Sjoman comments that a continuous tradition running all the way back to the medieval yoga texts cannot be traced, either in the practice of asanas or in a history of scholarship.

Modern pioneers

Man standing in a pose close to Durvasasana, in Thomas Dwight's "Anatomy of a Contortionist", Scribner's, 1889

Man standing in a pose close to Durvasasana, in Thomas Dwight’s “Anatomy of a Contortionist”, Scribner’s, 1889

Further information: Modern yoga

From the 1850s onwards, a culture of physical exercise developed in India to counter the colonial stereotype of supposed “degeneracy” of Indians compared to the British, a belief reinforced by then-current ideas of Lamarckism and eugenics. This culture was taken up from the 1880s to the early 20th century by Indian nationalists such as Tiruka, who taught exercises and unarmed combat techniques under the guise of yoga. Meanwhile, proponents of Indian physical culture like K. V. Iyer consciously combined “hata yoga” [sic] with bodybuilding in his Bangalore gymnasium.

Singleton notes that poses much like Durvasasana, Ganda Bherundasana and Hanumanasana were found in Thomas Dwight’s 1889 article “Anatomy of a Contortionist”, while poses close to Warrior Pose, Downward Dog, Utthita Padangusthasana, Supta Virasana and others were described in Niels Bukh’s 1924 Danish text Grundgymnastik eller primitiv gymnastik (known in English as Primary Gymnastics). These in turn were derived from a 19th century Scandinavian tradition of gymnastics dating back to Pehr Ling, and “found their way to India” by the early 20th century.

Yoga asanas were brought to America in 1919 by Yogendra, sometimes called “the Father of the Modern Yoga Renaissance”, his system influenced by the physical culture of Max Müller.

In 1924, Swami Kuvalayananda founded the Kaivalyadhama Health and Yoga Research Center in Maharashtra. He combined asanas with Indian systems of exercise and modern European gymnastics, having according to the scholar Joseph Alter a “profound” effect on the evolution of yoga.

In 1925, Paramahansa Yogananda, having moved from India to America, set up the Self-Realization Fellowship in Los Angeles, and taught yoga, including asanas, breathing, chanting and meditation, to tens of thousands of Americans, as described in his 1946 Autobiography of a Yogi.

Tirumalai Krishnamacharya (1888–1989) studied under Kuvalayananda in the 1930s, creating “a marriage of hatha yoga, wrestling exercises, and modern Western gymnastic movement, and unlike anything seen before in the yoga tradition.” Sjoman argues that Krishnamacharya drew on the Vyayama Dipika gymnastic exercise manual to create the Mysore Palace system of yoga. Singleton argues that Krishnamacharya was familiar with the gymnastics culture of his time, which was influenced by Scandinavian gymnastics; his experimentation with asanas and innovative use of gymnastic jumping between poses may well explain, Singleton suggests, the resemblances between modern standing asanas and Scandinavian gymnastics. Krishnamacharya, known as the father of modern yoga, had among his pupils people who became influential yoga teachers themselves: the Russian Eugenie V. Peterson, known as Indra Devi; Pattabhi Jois, who founded Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga in 1948; B.K.S. Iyengar, his brother-in-law, who founded Iyengar Yoga; T.K.V. Desikachar, his son, who continued his Viniyoga tradition; Srivatsa Ramaswami; and A. G. Mohan, co-founder of Svastha Yoga & Ayurveda. Together they revived the popularity of yoga and brought it to the Western world.

In 1959, Vishnudevananda Saraswati published a compilation of sixty-six basic postures and 136 variations of those postures.

In 1966, Iyengar published Light on Yoga: Yoga Dipika, illustrated with some 600 photographs of Iyengar demonstrating around 200 asanas; it systematised the physical practice of asanas. It became a bestseller, selling three million copies, and was translated into some 17 languages.

In 1984, Dharma Mittra compiled a list of about 1,300 asanas and their variations, derived from ancient and modern sources; the Dharma Yoga website suggests that he created some 300 of these.

Origins of the asanas

The asanas have been created at different times, a few being ancient, some being medieval, and a growing number recent. Some that appear traditional, such as Virabhadrasana I (Warrior Pose I), are relatively recent: that pose was probably devised by Krishnamacharya around 1940, and it was popularised by his pupil, Iyengar. A pose that is certainly younger than that is Parivritta Parsvakonasana (Revolved Side Angle Pose): it was not in the first edition of Pattabhi Jois’s Yoga Mala in 1962. Viparita Virabhadrasana (Reversed Warrior Pose) is still more recent, and may have been created since 2000. Several poses that are now commonly practised, such as Dog Pose and standing asanas including Trikonasana (triangle pose), first appeared in the 20th century, as did the sequence of asanas, Surya Namaskar (Salute to the Sun). A different sun salutation, the Aditya Hridayam, is certainly ancient, as it is described in the “Yuddha Kaanda” Canto 107 of the Ramayana. Surya Namaskar in its modern form was created by the Raja of Aundh, Pant Pratinidhi; K. Pattabhi Jois defined the variant forms Surya Namaskar A and B for Ashtanga Yoga, possibly derived from Krishnamacharya. Surya Namaskar can be seen as “a modern, physical culture-oriented rendition” of the simple ancient practice of prostrating oneself to the sun.

In 1966, Iyengar’s classic Light on Yoga was able to describe some 200 asanas, consisting of about 50 main poses with their variations. Sjoman observes that whereas many traditional asanas are named for objects (like Vrikshasana, tree pose), legendary figures (like Matsyendrasana, the sage Matsyendra’s pose), or animals (like Kurmasana, tortoise pose), “an overwhelming eighty-three” of Iyengar’s asanas have names that simply describe the body’s position (like Utthita Parsvakonasana, “Extended Side Angle Pose”); these are, he suggests, the ones “that have been developed later”. A name following this pattern is Shatkonasana, “Six Triangles Pose”, described in 2015. Mittra illustrated 908 poses and variations in his 1984 Master Yoga Chart, and many more have been created since then. The number of asanas has thus increased with time, as summarised in the table.

Sjoman notes that the names of asanas have been used “promiscuous[ly]”, in a tradition of “amalgamation and borrowing” over the centuries, making their history difficult to trace. The presence of matching names is not proof of continuity, since the same name may mean a different pose, and a pose may have been known by multiple names at different times. The estimates here are therefore based on actual descriptions of the asanas.

Estimates of the number of asanas

The graph shows the rapid growth in number of asanas in the 20th century.

Purposes

Spiritual

The asanas of hatha yoga originally had a spiritual purpose within Hinduism, the attainment of samadhi, a state of meditative consciousness. The scholar of religion Andrea Jain notes that medieval Hatha Yoga was shared among yoga traditions, from Shaivite Naths to Vaishnavas, Jains and Sufis; in her view, its aims too varied, including spiritual goals involving the “tantric manipulation of the subtle body”, and at a more physical level, destroying poisons. Singleton describes Hatha Yoga’s purpose as “the transmutation of the human body into a vessel immune from mortal decay”, citing the Gheranda Samhita’s metaphor of an earthenware pot that requires the fire of yoga to make it serviceable. Mallinson and Singleton note that the purposes of asana practice were, until around the fourteenth century, firstly to form a stable platform for pranayama, mantra repetition (japa), and meditation, practices that in turn had spiritual goals; and secondly to stop the accumulation of karma and instead acquire ascetic power, tapas, something that conferred “supernatural abilities”. Hatha Yoga added the ability to cure diseases to this list. Not all Hindu scriptures agreed that asanas were beneficial. The 10th century Garuda Purana stated that “the techniques of posture do not promote yoga. Though called essentials, they all retard one’s progress,” while early yogis often practised extreme austerities (tapas) to overcome what they saw as the obstacle of the body in the way of liberation.

The yoga scholar and practitioner Theos Bernard, in his 1944 Hatha Yoga: The Report of a Personal Experience, stated that he was “prescribed .. a group of asanas calculated to bring a rich supply of blood to the brain and to various parts of the spinal cord .. [and] a series of reconditioning asanas to stretch, bend, and twist the spinal cord” followed when he was strong enough by the meditation asanas. Bernard named the purpose of Hatha Yoga as “to gain control of the breath” to enable pranayama to work, something that in his view required thorough use of the six purifications.

Asanas work in different ways from conventional physical exercises, according to Satyananda Saraswati “placing the physical body in positions that cultivate awareness, relaxation and concentration”.

Iyengar observed that the practice of asanas “brings steadiness, health, and lightness of limb. A steady and pleasant posture produces mental equilibrium and prevents fickleness of mind.” He adds that they bring agility, balance, endurance, and “great vitality”, developing the body to a “fine physique which is strong and elastic without being muscle-bound”. But, Iyengar states, their real importance is the way they train the mind, “conquer[ing]” the body and making it “a fit vehicle for the spirit”.

Names of asanas illustrating spiritual evolution
Asana Level
Vishnu’s Couch,
Salute to the Sun
Gods
Virabhadra,
Matsyendra
Heroes,
sages
Dog Mammals
Pigeon Birds
Cobra Reptiles
Fish,
Frog
Aquatic
animals
Locust Invertebrates
Tree Plants
Mountain Inanimate

Iyengar saw it as significant that asanas are named after plants, insects, fish and amphibians, reptiles, birds, and quadrupeds; as well as “legendary heroes”, sages, and avatars of Hindu gods, in his view “illustrating spiritual evolution”. For instance, the lion pose, Simhasana, recalls the myth of Narasimha, half man, half lion, and an avatar of Vishnu, as told in the Bhagavata Purana.The message is, Iyengar explains, that while performing asanas, the yogi takes the form of different creatures, from the lowest to the highest, not despising any “for he knows that throughout the whole gamut of creation … there breathes the same Universal Spirit.” Through mastery of the asanas, Iyengar states, dualities like gain and loss, or fame and shame disappear.

Sjoman argues that the concept of stretching in yoga can be looked at through one of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras, 2.47, which says that [asanas are achieved] by loosening (śaithilya) the effort (prayatna) and meditating on the endless (ananta). Sjoman points out that this physical loosening is to do with the mind’s letting go of restrictions, allowing the natural state of “unhindered perfect balance” to emerge; he notes that one can only relax through effort, “as only a muscle that is worked is able to relax (that is, there is a distinction between dormancy and relaxation).” Thus asanas had a spiritual purpose, serving to explore the conscious and unconsious mind.

Exercise

Since the mid-20th century, asanas have been used, especially in the Western world, as physical exercise. In this context, their “overtly Hindu” purpose is masked but its “ecstatic .. transcendent .. possibly subversive” elements remain. That context has led to a division of opinion among Christians, some asserting that it is acceptable as long as they are aware of yoga’s origins, others stating that hatha yoga’s purpose is inherently Hindu, making Christian yoga an evident contradiction or indeed “diametrically opposed to Christianity”. A similar debate has taken place in a Muslim context; under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, yoga, formerly banned as a Hindu practice, has been legalised, while mainly-Hindu Bali has held a yoga competition in defiance of a ruling by Indonesia’s Muslim Ulema Council.

In a secular context, the journalists Nell Frizzell and Reni Eddo-Lodge have debated (in The Guardian) whether Western yoga classes represent “cultural appropriation”. In Frizzell’s view, yoga has become a new entity, a long way from the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, and while some practitioners are culturally insensitive, others treat it with more respect. Eddo-Lodge agrees that Western yoga is far from Patanjali, but argues that the changes cannot be undone, whether people use it “as a holier-than-thou tool, as a tactic to balance out excessive drug use, or practised similarly to its origins with the spirituality that comes with it”.

From a Hindu perspective, the practice of asanas in the Western world as physical exercise is sometimes seen as yoga that has lost its way. In 2012, the Hindu American Foundation ran a “Take Back Yoga” campaign to emphasise yoga’s roots in Hinduism.

For women

Main article: Yoga for women

The researcher Suzanne Newcombe has noted that yoga has sometimes been practised mainly by women. For example, in Britain in the 1970s, women formed between 70 and 90 percent of most yoga classes, as well as most of the yoga teachers. Yoga was seen as a support for women in the face of male-dominated medicine, offering an alternative approach for chronic medical conditions, as well as to beauty and ageing, and it offered a way of meeting other women. Singleton notes that classes in Britain are often unbranded “hatha yoga”, peopled mainly by women. In his view, these are in the tradition of Mollie Bagot Stack’s 1930 League of Health and Beauty, influenced by Stack’s visit to India in 1912 when she learnt some asanas, and in turn of Genevieve Stebbins’s Harmonic Gymnastics.

Benefits and contraindications

Claimed benefits

Medieval hatha yoga texts make a variety of claims for the benefits brought by the asanas, both spiritual and physical. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika (HYP) states that asanas in general, described as the first auxiliary of hatha yoga, give “steadiness, good health, and lightness of limb.” (HYP 1.17) Specific asanas, it claims, bring additional benefits; for example, Matsyendrasana awakens Kundalini and makes the semen steady; (HYP 1.27) Paschimottanasana “stokes up the digestive fire, slims the belly and gives good health”; (HYP 1.29) Shavasana “takes away fatigue and relaxes the mind”; (HYP 1.32) Siddhasana “bursts open the door to liberation”; (HYP 1.35) while Padmasana “destroys all diseases” (HYP 1.47) and if done together with retention of the breath in pranayama confers liberation. (HYP 1.44–49) These claims lie within a tradition across all forms of yoga that practitioners can gain supernatural powers, but with ambivalence about their usefulness, since they may obstruct progress towards liberation. Hemachandra’s Yogashastra (1.8–9) lists the magical powers, which include healing, the destruction of poisons, the ability to become as small as an atom or to go wherever one wishes, invisibility, and shape-shifting.

The asanas have been popularised in the Western world by claims about their health benefits, attained not by medieval hatha yoga magic but by the physical and psychological effects of exercise and stretching on the body. The history of such claims was reviewed by William J. Broad in his 2012 book The Science of Yoga. Broad argues that while the health claims for yoga began as Hindu nationalist posturing, it turns out that there is ironically “a wealth of real benefits”.

Physically, the practice of asanas has been claimed to improve flexibility, strength, and balance; to alleviate stress and anxiety, and to reduce the symptoms of lower back pain. Claims have been made about beneficial effects on specific conditions such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and diabetes. There is evidence that practice of asanas improves birth outcomes and physical health and quality of life measures in the elderly, and reduces sleep disturbances and hypertension. Iyengar yoga is effective at least in the short term for both neck pain and low back pain.

Contraindications

The National Institutes of Health notes that yoga is generally safe “when performed properly”, though people with some health conditions, older people, and pregnant woman may need to seek advice. For example, people with glaucoma are advised not to practise inverted postures. The Yoga Journal provides separate lists of asanas that it states are “inadvisable” and should be avoided or modified for each of the following medical conditions: asthma; back injury; carpal tunnel syndrome; diarrhoea; headache; heart problems; high blood pressure; insomnia; knee injury; low blood pressure; menstruation; neck injury; pregnancy; and shoulder injury.

The Yoga Sutras 2:46 state that asanas, here Natarajasana, should be "steady and comfortable".

The Yoga Sutras 2:46 state that asanas, here Natarajasana, should be “steady and comfortable”.

Common practices

In the Yoga Sutras, the only rule Patanjali suggests for practicing asana is that it be “steady and comfortable”. The body is held poised with the practitioner experiencing no discomfort. When control of the body is mastered, practitioners are believed to free themselves from dualities such as heat and cold, hunger and satiety, or joy and grief. This is the first step toward relieving suffering by letting go of attachment.

Traditional and modern guidance

Different schools of yoga, such as Iyengar and The Yoga Institute, agree that asanas are best practised with a rested body on an empty stomach, after having a bath. From the point of view of sports medicine, asanas function as active stretches, helping to protect muscles from injury; these need to be performed equally on both sides, the stronger side first if used for physical rehabilitation.

Surya Namaskar

Surya Namaskar, the Salute to the Sun, commonly practiced in most forms of modern yoga, links up to twelve asanas in a dynamically expressed yoga series. A full round consists of two sets of the series, the second set moving the opposing leg first. The asanas include Adho Mukha Svanasana (downward dog), the others differing from tradition to tradition with for instance a choice of Urdhva Mukha Svanasana (upward dog) or Bhujangasana (cobra) for one pose in the sequence. Schools, too, differ in their approaches to the sequence; for example, in Iyengar Yoga, variations such as inserting Maricyasana I and Pascimottanasana are suggested.

Styles

In the Western world, asanas are taught in differing styles by the various schools of yoga. Some poses like Trikonasana are common to many of them, but not always performed in the same way. Some independently documented approaches are described below.

Adho Mukha Svanasana, downward-facing dog pose, is performed at least once and often twice in Surya Namaskar, the Salute to the Sun.[125]

Adho Mukha Svanasana, downward-facing dog pose, is performed at least once and often twice in Surya Namaskar, the Salute to the Sun.

Iyengar Yoga “emphasises precision and alignment”, and prioritises correct movement over quantity, i.e. moving a little in the right direction is preferred to moving more but in a wrong direction. Postures are held for a relatively long period compared to other schools of yoga; this allows the muscles to relax and lengthen, and encourages awareness in the pose. Props including belts, blocks and blankets are freely used to assist students in correct working in the asanas. Beginners are introduced early on to standing poses, executed with careful attention to detail. For example, in Trikonasana, the feet are often jumped apart to a wide stance, the forward foot is turned out, and the centre of the forward heel is exactly aligned with the centre of the arch of the other foot.

Sivananda Yoga practices the asanas, hatha yoga, as part of raja yoga, with the goal of enabling practitioners “”to sit in meditation for a long time”. There is little emphasis on the detail of individual poses; teachers rely on the basic instructions given in the books by Sivananda and Swami Vishnu-devananda. In Trikonasana, the top arm may be stretched forward parallel to the floor rather than straight up.Sivananda Yoga identifies a group of 12 asanas as basic. These are not necessarily the easiest poses, nor those that every class would include. Trikonasana is the last of the 12, whereas in other schools it is one of the first and used to loosen the hips in preparation for other poses.

In Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga, poses are executed differently from Iyengar Yoga. “Vinyasa” means flowing, and the poses are executed relatively rapidly, flowing continuously from one asana to the next using defined transitional movements. The asanas are grouped into six series, one Primary, one Intermediate, and four Advanced. Practice begins and ends with the chanting of mantras, followed by multiple cycles of the Sun Salutation, which “forms the foundation of Ashtanga Yoga practice”, and then one of the series.Ashtanga Vinyasa practice emphasises aspects of yoga other than asanas, including drishti (focus points), bandhas (energy locks), and pranayama.

Kripalu Yoga uses teachers from other asana traditions, focussing on mindfulness rather than using effort in the poses. Teachers may say “allow your arms to float up” rather than “bring up your arms”. The goal is to use the asanas “as a path of transformation.” The approach is in three stages: firstly instruction in body alignment and awareness of the breath during the pose; secondly, holding the pose long enough to observe “unconscious patterns of tension in the body-mind”; and thirdly, through “deep concentration and total surrender”, allowing oneself “to be moved by prana”. In Trikonasana, the teacher may direct pupils’ attention to pressing down with the outer edge of the back foot, lifting the arch of the foot, and then experimenting with “micro-movements”, exploring where energy moves and how it feels.

In Bikram Yoga, as developed by Bikram Choudhury, there is a fixed sequence of 26 poses, in which Trikonasana is ninth, its task to focus on opening the hips. The Bikram version of Trikonasana is a different pose (Parsvakonasana) from that in Iyengar Yoga. The position of the feet is seen as critically important, along with proper breathing and the distribution of weight: about 30% on the back foot, 70% on the front foot.

Types of asana

Further information: List of asanas

Asanas can be classified in different ways, which may overlap: for example, by the position of the head and feet (standing, sitting, reclining, inverted), by whether balancing is required, or by the effect on the spine (forward bend, backbend, twist), giving a set of asana types agreed by most authors. Mittra uses his own categories such as “Floor & Supine Poses”.Yogapedia and Yoga Journal add “Hip-opening”; Darren Rhodes, Yogapedia and Yoga Journal also add “Core strength”. The table shows an example of each type of asana, with the title and approximate date of the earliest document describing (not only naming) that asana.

  • GS = Goraksha Sataka, 10th century
  • HY = Hemacandra’s Yogasastra, 11th century
  • VS = Vasishtha Samhita, 13th century
  • HYP = Hatha Yoga Pradipika, 15th century
  • JP = Joga Pradipika, 18th century
  • ST = Sritattvanidhi, 19th century
  • TK = Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, 20th century

Types of asana, with dates and examples

In culture

In religious art

Further information: Lotus position

Religious Indian art makes use of a variety of seated asanas for figures of Buddha, Shiva, and other gods and religious figures. Most are meditation seats, especially the lotus position, Padmasana, but Lalitasana and its “royal ease” variant are not. Jain tirthankaras are often shown seated in the meditation asanas Siddhasana and Padmasana.

In literature

The actress Mariel Hemingway’s 2002 autobiography Finding My Balance: A Memoir with Yoga describes how she used yoga to recover balance in her life after a dysfunctional upbringing: among other things, her grandfather, the novelist Ernest Hemingway, killed himself shortly before she was born, and her sister Margaux killed herself with a drug overdose. Each chapter is titled after an asana, the first being “Mountain Pose, or Tadasana”, the posture of standing in balance. Other chapters are titled after poses including Trikonasana, Virabhadrasana, Janusirsasana, Ustrasana, Sarvangasana, and finally Garudasana, in each case with some life lesson related to the pose. For example, Garudasana, “a balancing posture with the arms and legs intricately intertwined … requires some flexibility, a lot of trust, and most of all, balance”; the chapter recounts how she, her husband and her daughters all came close to drowning in canoes off Kauai, Hawaii.

Among yoga novels is the author and yoga teacher Edward Vilga’s 2014 Downward Dog, named for Adho Mukha Svanasana, which paints a humorously unflattering picture of a man of the world who decides to become a private yoga teacher in New York society. Ian Fleming’s 1964 novel You Only Live Twice has the action hero James Bond visiting Japan, where he “assiduously practised sitting in the lotus position.” The critic Lisa M. Dresner notes that Bond is mirroring Fleming’s own struggles with the pose.

In advertising

The yoga teacher and author Erin Stewart writes that yoga poses are used in advertising to denote “serenity, strength, attractiveness, and feminine energy”. She notes that the emphasis is strongly physical, rarely showing yogic practices like pranayama or meditation, and that the poses chosen, such as Natarajasana (dancer), Bakasana (crane), and Rajakapotasana (king pigeon), are often difficult, indicating yogic qualities like “perfectionism, earnestness, and a profound level of flexibility and grace”, in particular of a “young, able-bodied, white, and female” practitioner.

Adapted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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