In yoga asana, we often experience imbalance in our body, where certain muscles love to be powerful and to dominate – like our hip flexors – while others (our adductors and abductors) begin to soften, weaken, and become quiet. By bringing our bodies into balance and allowing each muscle to truly step back fully into its functional role, the whole of our system becomes more expansive, powerful, and expressive.
I learned this marvelous and simple exercise from Susi Hately Aldous. You’ll need a block and a strap.
Did you notice your hip flexors firing when you squeezed the block or pressed out into the strap? Most of us will. However, we don’t need our hip flexors to fire when we’re doing either of these actions. If your hip flexors fire, that is a sign of these big and overworked muscles are trying to take over for the adductors (inner thighs/ squeezing the block) or abductors (outer thighs/ pressing into the strap). Your muscular relationships have become co-dependent.
Here are some ways to bring this functionality into your asana. Empowering your boundaries will make your practice lighter, more functional, and more free. Now, having great boundaries isn’t necessarily “easy” – in fact, at first it might be harder – but it creates the groundwork for more power and personal expression.
In Surya Namaskar:
In your externally rotated poses (Warrior II, Side Angle, Triangle, Half Moon):
In Bakasana:
Crow pose is not only a balancing pose. And trying to balance your knees in your armpits will disconnect your midline and your core – the very support that you need to realize this pose effectively.
In Handstand
To do this, we’ll play with lifting both legs at the same time. If you have a regular handstand practice, add this into the mix to explore the connection of the inner and outer thighs.
Most of us know the importance of the inner thighs in handstand. After all, we squeeze the legs together like crazy once we’re up. Reinforce this action on the lift up by placing a block between the upper inner thighs as you hop up.
What have you noticed in these explorations?
Do you feel more integrated, lighter? Is there more or less space for your own growth and expression here?
Final thoughts
Creating strength in our adductors and abductors will free your power muscles to do their job with greater functionality and grace. Although waking them up may take a little effort and time, the greater result will be integration and ease.
I used to think that boundaries would make me hard, impermeable, rigid, un-loveable. But in fact, cultivating boundaries and unsticking ourselves gives us space to grow.
Having clear boundaries lets us nourish our internal goodness so that we can shine our best self forward. Then we have the strength to uphold others with compassion. We can serve as an inspiration to those needing to find love in their own eyes rather than the eyes of others.
In the Upanishads, it is said, “The pleasant is one thing. The good another.”
May we rise to the good.
Rachel supports yoga teachers and studios around the world to create transformational education experiences that help them thrive in their business, share their passion, and inspire more people to practice yoga. Her extensive knowledge and experience include: earning two masters degrees, authoring three books, leading 4,000+ hours of TT, building a teacher training college for a national yoga company, and working behind the scenes in yoga studio & teacher management for more than fifteen years. As a writer and speaker, she continually wrestles with the juicy bits of life: relationships, authenticity, and discovering meaning in this crazy, wildish world. E-RYT 500, YACEP, BA, MFA, MSci. Learn more about Rachel.
3 replies on “Using your hip stabilizers effectively in asana”
brilliant!
Love this!
This is outstanding. Thank you for sharing your clarity and wisdom.