View "printer-friendly"
version 
The Yoga Stick Pose
Balance your internal energy with five variations
of Dandasana
Dandasana appears to be simple, but inside the pose is
an intense dance of internal energy.
Master Class with Ganga White
Written by Mark Schlenz
From Yoga Journal, June, 2008
Ganga White describes asana as a dance of energy.
In White’s view, it is not only how far you move
into a given asana that matters, but also how you engage
with your subtle, or energy body. “Every posture
has important principles of structure, alignment, and
kinesiology, but learning to cultivate internal energy
flow is just as important as mastering these mechanical
aspects.” Energy is always moving through the
body, but White believes that when you bring your awareness
to it, you enhance the flow. When energy is activated
this way, it articulates the muscles and bones, thereby
helping you refine your alignment in a pose. (The opposite
works, too: When you refine your alignment, you enhance
the energy flow in a pose.) Working this way White says,
“deepens your practice and expands awareness beyond
external forms as you focus your attention on the quality
and nature of the energy in postures.” It also
quiets the mind, calms the nerves, and allays your ego
from its tendency to want to improve, change, or fix
your poses.
To get in touch with your subtle body, White recommends
incorporating two “powers of mind”—concentration
and attention. Concentration moves awareness to specific
parts of the body, while attention involves spreading
awareness to all parts of the body simultaneously. “By
strengthening and integrating these powers of mind,”
he says, “You can strengthen respiratory and circulatory
energy flows and make them more dynamic and you can
increase energy currents through the nerves, connective
tissues, and muscles to increase sensation, activation,
and healing qualities.” And, he explains, “You
can experience a sense of mental well being as you become
more aware of pranic energy flowing throughout the body.”
Dandasana (Four Limbed Staff Pose), or the Seated Stick
Pose, is truly a Mahasana (Great Pose) for cultivating
awareness of flowing energies. It appears entirely inactive,
but Dandasana involves a dynamic internal energy dance
that benefits for yoga practitioners of all levels.
Even its simplest version activates every energy line
required for the posture’s most challenging expression.
In Dandasana, energy flows up and down along the entire
circumference of the spine (the sides, the front, and
the back) between your point of contact with the earth
and the skyward extension of your head. At the same
time, energy extends evenly from the inner and outer
thighs to both edges of the feet, through the backs
of your legs into the floor, and along the tops of the
legs into the ankles.
Keeping track of your breath, alignment, energy, and
awareness is challenging at first. The really tricky
part, though, is to integrate concentration and attention.
In his book, Yoga Beyond
Belief: Insights to Awaken and Deepen Your
Practice, White says that “Concentration
by its very nature moves from point to point and when
you focus on one point you may lose awareness of another.”
Focusing on your abdomen in Seated Stick Pose, for instance,
may cause you to neglect the edges of your feet, or
concentrating on the crown of the head may draw attention
away from lengthening the arms.
While you are concentrating on the different components
of your pose, you must also keep your attention on the
whole. Attention to the whole does not negate the need
for focused concentration. And, as White is quick to
note, too much focus on “attention” by itself
becomes a kind of concentration. However, when you are
able to balance concentration and awareness in Seated
Stick Pose, you will enhance your awareness of all these
energy flows while keeping the body stable, firm, and
light in energized stillness.
Dandasana may look simple, but it develops foundational
alignments and core abdominal actions for numerous seated
poses and serves as a neutral grounding during pose
seated vinyasa flows sequences. Once you can integrate
concentration and attention to activate energy lines
in Seated Stick Pose, deepen your experience by bringing
awareness to the bandhas, or locks. Integrating Mula
Bandha (Root Lock), Uddiyana Bandha (Flying Up Lock),
and Jalandhara Bandha (Chin Lock) to create Maha Bandha
(Great Lock). (If you need guidance on how to do these,
please visit our website, yogajournal.com) Here, in
energized stillness, your asana will merge with Pranayama
(Breathing Techniques) and you will cultivate awareness
that will bring more dynamic versions of the posture
within reach. By integrating your experiences in various
versions of Dandasana, you will someday naturally to
rise into Utpluti Dandasana—or Floating Stick
Pose.
Dandasana (Four Limbed Staff or Seated Stick
Pose)
All of the poses in this sequence begin and end with
Seated Stick Pose. Once you become comfortable and energized
holding the basic pose, you will strengthen your power
of attention and absorb the energy of the variations
that follow by returning to this pose between each one.
Initially five or six breaths in the pose may be enough
to reveal its deceptive energetic power; eventually
you may learn to enjoy longer holds up to 10 or 15 breaths.
To come into the pose, sit with your legs extended
and your back tall and straight. Lengthen your spine
and press your hands into the ground next to your hips
without lifting your sitting bones off the floor. Bend
elbows or come to your fingertips to adjust for the
proportions in arms and torso. Drop your chin so that
it is about level with the ground. Notice the different
lines of energy in this simple shape. Extending energy
runs from shoulders down the arms and into the earth.
Lifting energy rises from the pelvic floor all the way
up the front of the spine. At the same time, extend
energy lines along both sides of each leg.
With flexed ankles, spread and create space between
your toes. Observe how these movements in the feet activate
more nerve channels through the legs. Notice a flow
sensation awakening in the arches of the feet and through
the joints of every toe. Create energetic connections
with the floor through the backs of your thighs and
calves to increase extension of the legs; feel your
heels rise. Maintain these activations as you also generate
lifting energy in the spine and extend through the crown
of the head. Simultaneously lift the spine and chest,
drop the chin, lengthen the arms, and firm the abdomen.
Activate energy evenly through the arches and outer
edges of each foot, as though pressing against a wall,
to ensure energy flows evenly through both legs and
throughout the entire body.
As you expand your attention to all these activations
at once with awareness of their inner-workings, you
will experience the posture fully. Observe the interplays
throughout your body. Notice how engaging the abdominal
muscles and lengthening the muscles along the spine
create compatible counter-movements of through the legs.
Notice how lifting the chest upward balances the downward
counter-movements of the tailbone and sitting bones.
Spend a few breaths awakening each bandha to bring
strength and lightness to your pose. As you inhale and
exhale for a few breaths, energetically connect your
sitting bones to each other and to the mat, which will
naturally encourage the pelvic floor to lift into Mula
Bandha. Release it and then firm the lowest part of
your belly toward the spine gently with each exhalation
and feel Uddiyana Bandha engage. Release that and then
feel the next inhalation lift the breastbone and elongate
the spine through the back of the neck as your chin
draws toward the breastbone into Jalandara Bandha. After
you’ve focused energy in each bandha a few breaths,
do them again individually in the same order for one
breath, then do Maha Bandha by doing them all at the
same time. If you are familiar with retaining the breath,
you can do that, too. Either way, simply sitting with
Maha Bandha in Dandasana cultivates your ability to
become powerfully absorbed in balancing rising and falling
energies of your breath, extending energies in the body,
and the earth’s gravitational pull.
Parivrtta Dandasana (Revolved Four Limbed Staff
or Twisting Seated Stick Pose)
Twisting
Stick Pose teaches you to keep your attention on extending
evenly aligned energy flows through the inner and outer
lines of the legs while you concentrate on turning the
spine. It also opens the outer hips, preparing them
for the later poses.
To transition from Seated Stick Pose to the Twisting
version, raise your arms straight up. When you bring
your arms overhead you’ll notice an additional
challenge—your spine no longer has support from
the hands contacting the floor. To balance this, lengthen
the spine with a firm counter-movement through your
base to increase your physical and energetic connection
with the earth. Extend your arms overhead, palms facing
each other, and bring your arms alongside the ears in
alignment with the shoulders to create more lifting
energy. Counter that by sending energy from your sitting
bones to your fingertips and from your fingertips back
down to the earth to open and stabilize the shoulders
with a relaxed neck. Lift your floating ribs away from
the pelvic girdle with an inhalation to prepare space
for the spine to rotate.
Maintain extending energies throughout the body, but
relax the chin as you begin the twist with exhalation.
Turn through the waist while extending the legs and
pulling the feet and toes back. Lift the chest to create
space between lumbar vertebrae. Bring your right hand
to the ground behind the right hip, pointing fingers
toward the right. Reach your left hand across your legs
to the floor alongside the right thigh. If you have
short arms and are not able to get your palms to the
ground, press through the fingertips instead.
Once you’re in the external shape of the pose,
bring awareness to its internal energies. Observe how
the energy flowing through your spine and legs inspires
increases your ability to turn the spine. But be sure
not to concentrate only on turning, twisting, or stretching
along outer portions of the body: instead, bring attention
to your breath, too. As you inhale, engage the bandhas
to support spinal extension; as you exhale, allow rotation
to come from the core of the body and from a sense of
relaxation in the spine.
After four or five breaths in the twist, transition
to the other side by extending and pressing through
feet and legs as you inhale the arms back up overhead.
Then bring your hands alongside your hips in Seated
Stick Pose once more. Stay for several cycles of breath,
rebalancing your energy. Observe and absorb the effects
of the twist throughout your entire body. Notice any
improvements in the quality of the energy flow. Sense
your spinal discs expanding and drawing sustenance from
surrounding tissue. Then lift your arms up with an inhalation
and exhale as you transition to the other side.
Purvottanasana (Upward Plank or Reverse Stick
Pose)
Start
in Dandasana and activate the energy lines in your spine
and legs. For this pose, try feeling your abdomen as
a point of concentration in the field of energy lines
you create. Increase energy flows everywhere with integrated
attention as you inhale the spine its full extension.
Use Jalandara Bandha to enhance extension and protect
your neck. Next, extend through your arms and lift your
chest as you slide your hands back a few inches behind
the hips with fingers pointing forward.
Balance the energy moving up through the spine and
crown of the head with equal energy moving through your
legs and feet toward the floor as you lift your hips
upward to the ceiling. Even if the entire soles of your
feet do not actually contact your mat, you still want
to expand energetically through the arches, metatarsals,
and toes as though they were. It’s not the floor,
but the energy flow that matters here.
As you concentrate flowing energy from the toes to
the top of the head, maintain your awareness of the
interactions that integrate the front and back of your
body. Broaden the sacrum and tuck the tailbone toward
the heels to create a supportive feeling from the backside
of the body. At the same time, open and expand across
the breastbone and collarbones. Watch how energy from
underneath the body comes into interplay with the head-to-toe
energy line of the pose.
If you do reach your head back, be sure not to cause
tension in the neck. Keep it in line with the dpinr
and use the crown of the head as a concentration point
for extending energy. White has noticed, “as you
get older, arching your head back tends not to feel
good and can even aggravate the cervical spine.”
And, he says, “younger people tend to lead too
much with the head in backbends.”
Just a few breaths in this pose requires a lot of energy:
Hold it only as long as you can maintain your attention.
When you leave the Reversed Stick Pose, stay physically
and mentally engaged and do not collapse with your weight
pulling through your buttocks. Think of your departure
from the raised position as an energetic return to Seated
Stick Pose. Become aware of a continuum of movements
and counter-movements of the muscles and the breath
as you transition into and out of these poses. Let your
attention become absorbed in continuity, balancing firmness
and lightness within and between your postures by repeating
it a few times. Always reintegrate your experience by
sitting in Dandasana for several breaths in between
poses.
Ubhaya Padangusthasana (TK YJ translation or
Balancing Stick Pose)
With
practice, Balancing Stick Pose will increase your ability
to create mutually supportive lines of energy because
it requires you to balance your energy in the legs and
spine. Lifting into this more challenging version of
Dandasana will also increase your awareness of the interactions
between the body’s energy and earth’s gravitational
pull, will require even more concentration and attention.
Again, start in Dandasana. Imagine your core as a point
of concentration and allow the energy to flow from your
center to every point of your body. At the same time,
bring greater attention to your contact with the earth,
the lifting power of your breath, and integrated activation
of the bandhas. Maintain extending energy through the
legs even as you bend the knees to take the edges of
your feet with your hands. Then keep energy moving evenly
from your center through the spine and legs as you inhale
to lift the breastbone higher while rocking back into
balance on the sitting bones.
Consciously balance the energy flowing from your core
through the spine and the legs as you inhale to come
into the pose. Notice what happens if the leg and spinal
energy lines separate from each other—the legs
will move sooner or with more energy than the spine
(or vice versa) and you’ll lose contact with your
core. To lift the legs, you must extend evenly through
the soles of your feet and through the crown of your
head—at the same time and to the same degree!
Bring awareness to your breath to fuel your energy
lines and to allow the bandhas to engage. Observe the
body feeling lighter and more stable in balance as you
integrate Maha Bandha. Firm your energetic connection
with the earth through each exhalation. Rejuvenate energy
flows from your center to your fingers, toes, and crown
of the head with each inhalation. Focus your eyes on
your spreading toes with a drishti that integrates energetic
qualities of both concentration and attention in your
gaze as you generate energy in your core.
After four or five breaths, return to Dandasana to
integrate your experience in the pose and to prepare
for levitating into Floating Stick Pose.
Utpluti Dandasana (Floating Stick Pose)
Floating
Stick Pose is an energy dance with gravity. When you
integrate your experience of the Dandasana variations
and learn this dance, you learn more about yourself
and about the earth as your partner. Where Seated Stick
Pose seems deceptively inactive from an external view,
Utpluti Dandasana may appear more difficult than it
actually is. To prepare, sustain practice of Seated
Stick Pose over time with deeper absorption of concentration
and attention in awareness of breathing, balance, activation,
and alignment. Practice raising and lowering yourself
during a single cycle of breath to develop strength
and awareness together gradually before you attempt
to do longer holds while lifted.
Floating Stick Pose requires core and arm strength,
but the real key to floating above the earth involves
unlocking energy flows through the feet, legs, and spine.
Neither concentrated efforts to press with sheer arm
strength, nor to pull up through abdominal muscles,
will bring you into an energetic dance with the earth
that allows you to float lightly from its gravitational
pull. Instead, you will levitate into Floating Stick
Pose by totaling energizing your body into a firm and
light stability and then elegantly counterbalancing
its weight centers through breath-inspired counter-movements.
At first you may only feel your skeletal structure
lifting slightly, though no part of your flesh actually
leaves the floor. Do not rush to push through this experience;
instead, absorb its levitating qualities over several
practice sessions. Keep lengthening your arms and increase
space between your floating ribs and the pelvis. Eventually,
the sitting bones may rise and begin to swing back through
balance behind the wrists without observable exertion
on your part.
Although you may bend the knees a bit as your hips
float up, keep your feet activated and resist urges
to lift the legs from the floor with muscular action.
Keep your attention instead on overall lightness, stability,
and balance while your calves or heels still touch the
ground. Increase core integration through extension
of the spine and legs. Though it may seem counterintuitive,
sense energetic connection with the earth through the
sitting bones, the backs of the calves, and the thighs
even as they begin to levitate. With some practice,
your heels will eventually allow themselves to be pulled
back and up away from the floor by swinging momentum
of the hips. When this happens, reach the arms down
and breathe into the breastbone to encourage it to lift.
Remember that gasping or tightening the breath will
interrupt flowing and fragment concentration and attention.
Allow uninterrupted breath to bring your awareness to
energy flows and points of concentration along all dimensions
of the spine, legs, and arms. Let attention expand to
the interplays of between the breath and the bandhas
while your energy body dances through balance with the
earth.
By practicing this sequence you can begin to follow
your internal awareness to guide and inspire their practice
instead of relying only on external feedback or information.
He believes that Seated Stick Pose provides an opportunity
to integrate expanding awareness of internal energies
in stillness to inspire natural, intelligent action.
He illustrates this lesson by comparing it to a spring-fed
stream flowing through a deep canyon. Threading boulders
in tumbling cascades, the stream carries a stick steadily
downstream; yet, within quiet pools, energies spiral
in powerful eddies, spinning the floating stick in circles
as it dances upstream once more.
Dandasana (Seated Stick Pose)
Connect firmly with the floor through thighs and calves.
Simultaneously lift the spine and chest, drop the chin,
extend the arms, and firm the abdomen. Elevate sitting
bones with a blanket or use a bolster under the knees
if you need to relieve tight hamstrings or tension in
the lower back. Allow points of concentration to expand
into full body and breath attention as you generate
extending energy through the legs and feet. Hold for
five to six breaths.
Parivrtta Dandasana (Twisting Stick Pose)
Inhale as you raise arms overhead and lift the rib cage
to prepare for twisting. Relax your chin and turn to
the right with exhalation. Keep the inner and outer
edges of your feet evenly activated to maintain proper
alignment of the hips. Bring your right hand behind
you and your left hand to your right thigh. Lift energy
through your spine and out through your legs as you
rotate from the energy point in your abdomen. Hold each
side for four or five breaths. Rest for several breaths
in Simple Seated Pose between sides.
Purvottanasana (Reverse Stick Pose)
From Seated Stick Pose, move your hands behind your
hips and press them firmly into the floor. Arc the whole
body up with inhalation. Lengthen the soles of your
feet and your toes toward the floor as you rise. If
it feels better on your neck, you may drop your chin
forward. Integrate energies from the front and back
of the body with the head-to-toe energy flow. Start
with two or three breaths and slowly build strength
for longer holds.
Ubhaya Padangusthasana (Balancing Stick Pose)
Hold your big toes with your first two fingers and thumbs
or, if you have the flexibility, wrap your hands around
the soles of the feet and interweave your fingers. (At
first, you may find holding outer edges of the feet
with your hands makes the pose more accessible and helps
maintain activation and alignment of the inner arches.)
Bend the knees slightly and tilt back onto the sitting
bones with an inhalation, staying attentive to the energy
in your feet and legs. Keep spreading your toes as you
lift and arc the spine while reaching out through your
legs. Stay for four or five breaths or for as long as
your concentration and attention are evenly balanced.
Utpluti Dandasana (Floating Stick Pose)
After practicing and integrating your experience of
the variations described above, sit in Seated Stick
Pose to energize your entire body. Visualize yourself
floating from the floor for several breaths, but do
not initiate an effort through the arms or belly to
do so. Instead, when your energy body is ready, coordinate
the breath and the bandhas, tilt your pelvis forward
and lengthen your spine. From there, inhale as you reach
your breastbone forward and exhale as you draw your
hips back, allowing the back to round a bit. The momentum
of these actions will allow your hips to float behind
the wrists. Stay completely activated as you lower back
into Seated Stick Pose. Practice rising and lowering
gracefully in a single cycle of the breath before attempting
longer holds.
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.