Two Easy Yoga Practices to Lift Your Mood
There are specific yoga practices that can lift your mood and help you sustain a positive outlook. Try these step-by-step instructions and notice how you feel.
Smiling Heart Pose
This simple restorative pose, recommended in my book Yoga for Depression, helps calm the nervous system and build energy.
Place two folded blankets, a bolster, or a firm cushion under your back, just beneath your shoulder blades. Make sure the lift is comfortable; use more or less support as feels right for your body.
- Place a rolled blanket underneath your neck so that the back of your head rests comfortably on the floor.
- Place a bolster or cushion under your knees and allow your legs to be a comfortable (usually about hip-width) distance apart.
- Allow your arms to stretch out comfortably at shoulder level, with palms facing up.
- Stay in this position for at least five minutes. On each inhale, imagine breathing into the crown of your head and repeat silently “I am.” On each exhale, imagine the breath going to your feet and repeat silently, “here.”
- To make this posture slightly more stimulating, stretch your arms over your head on the floor so they rest behind you.
Bee Breath (Brahmari)
Bee Breath has many applications for achieving and sustaining a balanced emotional and mental state. Try this practice if you (or your students or clients) suffer from anxiety, ADHD, or OCD. You will find it will cut through the tangle of distracting thoughts. You will feel calm and at ease and better able to focus. This practice slows down the exhalation and has a calming effect on the entire nervous system. In India, it is often recommended for women in labor.
- Sit in a comfortable position with the spine erect.
- Inhale through the nostrils, drawing the root of the tongue to the back of the throat.
- Slightly tilt the chin and keep the lips sealed.
- On the exhale, you will be drawing the back of your tongue to the back of your throat, as though dislodging a popcorn kernel.
- Exhale slowly through the nostrils, making a deep buzzing sound in your throat like a bee. Because the lips are closed, you will not hear the “ZZZ” sound. Instead, you will hear a “swarm” of bees in your throat.
- Start with three rounds on the exhale only.
- Practice this breath no more than 10 times.
© Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health. All rights reserved. To request permission to reprint, please e-mail editor@kripalu.org.
Amy Weintraub, MFA, C-IAYT, YACEP, author of Yoga for Depression and the founder of LifeForce Yoga, is an acclaimed yoga therapist and a pioneer in the field of yoga and mental health.
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