Virabhadrasana II

  • Beginner's Tip:
    • When you bend the left knee to a right angle, bend it very quickly with an expressive exhalation, and aim the inside of the left knee toward the little-toe side of the left foot.
  • Modifications and props:
    • If you have difficulty supporting yourself in this pose, position a metal folding chair outside your left leg, with the front edge of the chair seat facing you. As you bend the left knee to come into the pose, slide the front edge of the seat under your left thigh (taller students may need to build up the height of the chair seat with a thickly folded blanket). Repeat with the right leg bent.
  • Deepen the pose:
    • To increase the length and strength of the arms in the pose, turn the palms and inner elbow creases to face the ceiling while you draw the shoulder blades down the back. Then maintaining the rotation of the arms, turn the palms from the wrists to face the floor again.
  • Partnering:
    • A partner can help you strengthen your back leg. Have your partner stand behind your back leg. Loop a strap around your inner groin, and as you bend the front knee into the pose, your partner can pull firmly on the strap while you resist the back-leg inner groin away from that movement. Feel how this helps to open the groins.
  • Info
    • Virabhadra = the name of a fierce warrior, an incarnation of Shiva, described as having a thousand heads, a thousand eyes, and a thousand feet, wielding a thousand clubs, and wearing a tiger's skin .
  • Benefits:
    • Strengthens and stretches the legs and ankles.
    • Stretches the groins, chest and lungs, shoulders .
    • Stimulates abdominal organs
    • Increases stamina .
    • Relieves backaches, especially through second trimester of pregnancy.
    • Therapeutic for carpal tunnel syndrome, flat feet, infertility, osteoporosis, and sciatica.
  • Therapeutic Applications:
    • Sciatica.
  • Contraindications and Cautions:
    • Diarrhea.
    • High blood pressure .
    • Neck problems: Don't turn your head to look over the front hand; continue to look straight ahead with both sides of the neck lengthened evenly.