Top 6 Yoga Poses for Back Pain: Slideshow

Sadie Nardini by Sadie Nardini | May 1st, 2009 | Comments (17)
topic: Health & Wellness, Yoga | tags: back-pain, yoga poses

gaiam-back-fists-forward-fold

Fifteen years ago, I was not acting my age. Since I would recoil from any form of exercise, as well as any green foods, I was overweight, inflexible … and debilitated by back pain. The 40 extra pounds on my frame — plus tight, shortened back muscles and weak abs — left me moving like an 80-year-old version of myself instead of a … well, an 80-year-old yogi!

I suffered daily from sciatica, back spasms, limited mobility, weakness, you name it. When I got stuck in my car one day, unable to swing my legs out of the car because of my sciatic pain, at age 23, I realized, “Something’s gotta change.” I started reading up and realized  a shocking number of people suffer with back pain, partly from hours of sitting in a way that flattens the low back curve. (BTW, Gaiam BalanceBall Chair, the very one I’m sitting on as I write this, is a great tool to help build core strength and re-align your spine.)

Before long, I found yoga. Over time, using some of the same poses I’m showing you here, I built a lean and pain-free body.

With just a few moves, you can bring your legs, hips and spine into proper alignment, release tension and gain supportive strength. These asanas provide traction for your spinal muscles, as you root through the hips and let a gentle pull or gravity make space between the spinal bones. You’ll walk taller and enjoy a body that’s no longer stopping you, but rather serving you to live, move and play to the fullest.

3 Tips for Back Pain Sufferers

1. Don’t Overemphasize the Ab Work

A common misconception about healing back pain is that the back is weak and you should just work the core more. Actually, when you only work the core muscles, as in a hundred crunches a day, you may just be shortening your front body to match the back one. This can further pull on the spine and cause more disc compression and too little (or too much), curvature than before. The six-pack might look good in magazines and Diet Coke commercials, but those bunchy, contracted muscles are actually not so hot for your back. Optimally, you want to work into greater core strength and length in your abdominals, side waist, low and mid back, while keeping the abdominal muscles long and lean. To do this, your back muscles will have to release, and both your back and core will have to stretch as well as flex. We’ll do both simultaneously in each of these poses.

2. Breathe slowly and deeply through the nose for the duration of the practice. On your inhales, flare the ribs wide, and as you exhale, contract around your navel, still maintaining a long, natural spine.Note: Consult your doctor before starting, especially if you’re experiencing severe back or leg pain now or during the practice, or if you have known disc problems, like hernias or degeneration, you’ll want to consult with your doctor or PT before beginning this or any additional movement program.

3. For a longer yoga practice to strengthen and open up your back, try Rodney Yee’s Yoga for Back Care DVD or his yoga practice on the Mayo Clinic Wellness Solutions for Back Pain DVD by Gaiam. Or come see me at my NYC yoga studio, The Fierce Club www.theFierceClub.com and I’ll be overjoyed to help you.

The Practice

FISTS FORWARD BEND

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Come to stand, feet hip-distance apart. Bend your knees, and release your torso over the legs until your belly touches your thighs. Make fists and place them in the opposite elbow creases. Relax your back, neck and head, and squeeze fists actively.

Fits and bent elbows together are a central nervous system trigger that causes your back muscles to open. You’ll feel it after just a few breaths!

Take 10-20 breaths here, releasing more tension from the back on every exhale.

WALL PLANK

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Come to stand in front of a wall at arm’s length. Reach forward from your shoulders, and plant your palms on the wall, fingers wide, middle fingers pointing straight at the ceiling.

Firm your fingers into the wall, and draw your navel back as you lengthen the tailbone towards the floor. Lift your ribs from the pelvis. You want to work with a natural lower back curve but an active belly.

Keep the optimal curves, support, and length of your spine as you begin to walk the legs back, folding at the waist, hands walk down the wall. Eventually you till come to an L-shape as seen here, and if you can’t get there today without feeling pain or rounding in the lower back, bend your knees and maintain the proper spinal alignment.

As you lift the navel and lower ribs into the body, reach long through the tailbone and legs into the floor, and the spine, arms and head long towards the wall.

Repeat for 10-20 breaths, then fold into FISTS FORWARD FOLD once again. Move to the next pose after a few breaths.

DOWNWARD-FACING DOG

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If done properly, this tried-and true asana can be excellent for spinal traction and back health.

Move into the pose with feet hip-distance apart [did you know that’s only two fists-width or so?] and hands shoulder distance. It’s important not to let your back arch too much, which pressurizes the shoulder joints and over-contracts the back muscles.

Instead, give a light lift into the spine of the navel and front ribs, providing a buoyancy in the shoulders and back. Carve the tailbone towards the heels, and press back through the inner and outer legs equally. This provides a root, a backward grounding from which you can pull and grow your spine and head forward, towards the space between your hands.

Even as you move the shoulders down the back and wrap your outer shoulderblades towards your armpits slightly, press long through the arms and fingers, providing a whole-body realignment and stretch.

Take 5-10 breaths here, then proceed to the next pose.

PIGEON

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We should call this pose Angel of Mercy for what it can do to rescue your poor aching back. It’s genius at opening the lower body muscles like hamstrings, hip rotators and the iliopsoas muscles, all which can contribute to back pain, without putting too much torque on the already tight back muscles. This releases them by springing open the muscles beneath. It’s a must-do in my yoga sequencing.

From your Dog Pose, bring your right knee behind the right wrist, foot either touching the left hip crease or slightly forward. Stretch the left leg out long behind you, knee and top of the foot facing the floor. Center your hips in space even if they don’t touch the floor. Press your palms into the floor or a block, ground your legs into the mat, and allow your legs to stretch while you let your low back curve and lift up.

Draw your navel and pelvic floor muscles in, and send your heart to the sky. To deepen this pose, move your front knee wider and back, and creep the back leg longer.

Take 5-10 breaths here, then fold forward, forearms on a block or the floor for a full body stretch to counterpose. Return to Dog Pose and repeat on the other side.

BACK TRACTION POSE

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After your last Pigeon, swing your back leg around and come onto your back, knees bent, feet under knees as if to prepare for a Bridge Pose. Grab your yoga block or if you don’t have one, a firmly-rolled yoga mat will do.

Lift your hips, and place the block in the center of your hips (not low back). The block should be the skinny way, in the same direction as your spine, not wide across the hips like your pants line.

Place your hips on the block, and gently walk your feet wide. Knock your knees in towards one another for one minute to stretch across the sacrum, and then walk feet and knees together, and lift your knees over your hips until you can relax them but still stay suspended in the air.

This pose will release your iliopsoas muscles even as it detoxes you and provides traction for the low back spine. After about 30 seconds or so, scoot your head longer from the shoulders and rest for another 30 seconds or more with the breath. Return to the first variation, feet wide on the floor, knees closer, for a few breaths.

To release, walk the feet under the knees at hip distance. Engage your navel, lift your hips off the block and remove it to the side. Roll slowly down the spine inch by inch and enjoy your new spacious lower back curve and sacrum!

CHILD’S POSE

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Roll over and take Child’s Pose for one minute or more. Try knees wide, big toes closer, but end with knees together too for a neutral spinal stretch. If your head doesn’t touch the floor, place a block or fists under your forehead so you can relax completely.

Breathe slowly into your back body, expanding more nourishing energy and space on the inhale, and on the exhales, let ever more tension dissolve.

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Comments

  1. Love your post. You have a nice way or giving directions that really articulate what you are trying to say…a must for a good yoga teacher! Good on ya!
    Om and Prem,
    Meera

    meera | May 2nd, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  2. Hi Meera, thanks for your comments.

    I’m so happy you’re enjoying these posts. I do try and say it straight!

    Let me know what else you’d like to read about, and hope to hear from you again.

    Namaste,
    Sadie

    Sadie Nardini | May 4th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  3. I just found your blog. Great articles and well written. Thanks for all the info. Namaste!

  4. You’re so welcome. Glad you found me!!

    Namaste,
    Sadie

    Sadie Nardini | May 5th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  5. GREAT information — now I need to try them. Keep it coming. Maxx

    Maxx Ross | May 5th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  6. Hi Maxx,

    Exactly. Transformation is all about action.

    Just Do It!

    xoSadie

    Sadie Nardini | May 5th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  7. Wonderful detail, really helpful explanatory pictures. Feeling lucky to be close enough to get to the Fierce Club where you bring the same care and helpful explanations to these, and more, poses that help us reclaim strength and flexibility. My back has been amazingly quiet since starting classes with you (after many years of pain from stress, childbearing and carrying, and shlepping overstuffed tote bags on one shoulder all over NYC). Have to check out that Gaiam chair! Thank you!

    yogamamacita | May 6th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  8. I wish there was a printable for these..

    Jude | May 6th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  9. DUH..found it..thanks ..will do these religiously..

    Jude | May 6th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  10. Very appropriate post for me – I can relate to the pain you were going through (as I’ve been suffering from back pains for almost 10yrs). And just had an ‘episode’ of not being able to move just last week.

    Thx so much for this post & i will bookmark this to remind myself about these yoga poses!

    Lourdes | May 6th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  11. Awesome! Forward bend, downward dog and wall plank I’ve been doing for years to help stretch my back–now I have others to try! Thank you for the back care byte!

    Leanna | May 7th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  12. Hi,
    I hurt my back a couple of months ago. My lower back seems fine but my sciatica still bothers me when I sit for too long and my job entails sitting most of the day. I just tried the poses you recommended and I feel soo much better. Amazing. Thank you. I will be including these poses throughout my day. I hope I will be rid of this annoying sciatica pain in the rear…literally. Thanks again.
    Peace,
    Sandy

    sandy | May 7th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  13. Hi Leanna–you’re so welcome. Try Open Janu Sirsasana and then folding forward over the straight leg for another great option!

    Sandy, I’m so glad you wrote. I had sciatica so severely and yes, with a regular yoga practice, you can free yourself from a lifetime of pain, Work up to a basic class and higher over time, 3-4 times a week as your fitness routine, and I promise you you will get huge relief from your back. Commit, and it will be so worth it.

    Good luck–let me know how it goes!
    Sadie

    Sadie Nardini | May 7th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  14. what yoga poses do you recommend for L5-S1 herniated disc or which poses do you recommend not to do.

    laura | May 9th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  15. Hi Laura,

    That depends,
    Is it a new, painful herniation, or an old one?

    Are you under a doctor’s supervision for it?

    Generally speaking, when injured, work with a doctor and a physical therapist. When cleared to move, try therapeutic yoga.

    Stabilizing Poses like Plank Pose, Lunge with back knee down, and Side Plank can be good. Traction poses like Down Dog with bent knees, and Down Dog Wall Splits are ok too. Stretches like Pigeon on your back [ankle to knee, pull gently in, keeping hips on the floor] or lie on your back with one leg up the wall, knee bent. Then cross the other ankle over the knee, and rest like this in a gentle stretch. The above supported back traction pose are necessary to open up the surrounding muscles and free your spine from compression.

    I would do only light backbending, no Up Dog, Bow Pose or Wheel but Cobra, Locust and Bridge are OK.

    Basically, if you feel a twinge, don’t do it, and make sure you go to a yoga therapeutics specialist with lots of experience with herniated discs before attempting these, or any poses by yourself.

    Good luck!!
    Sadie

    Sadie Nardini | May 11th, 2009 | Comment Permalink
  16. Yes, I always recommend Yoga to all my patients and I even do it myself which was difficult at first but I definitely go the hang of it.

    Eric Roach

  17. Thank you – I’ve recently been diagnosed with mild arthritis in my lower back. These poses give me the relief I need to keep moving!

    Mike | July 14th, 2009 | Comment Permalink

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