• ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS SYSTEM
  • Yoga Sequence Builder
  • HOME YOGA PRACTICE APP
  • About Olga
  • Virtual Yoga Studio
  • FAQs
  • Contact
  • Sign up
  • Log in

Sequence Wiz

Every yoga practice must have purpose, order and meaning

  • yoga for your body
  • yoga for your energy
  • yoga for your mind
  • How to design a practice
  • Sequencing basics
  • Teaching tips
  • Yoga “snacks”
  • teachers’ stories

How to anchor your attention in balancing poses

4
  • by olgakabel
  • in yoga for your body
  • — 15 Jun, 2016

I cannot read in the back seat of the car when I travel – it makes me queasy. This response is pretty typical since it reflects a conflict between three main sensory inputs that inform our sense of balance. When you are riding in the car your vestibular system (inner ear) and proprioceptive system (body pressure receptors) are telling your brain that you are in motion, but your eyes are fixed on the page, so they are saying that you are still. This kind of conflict can lead to slight vertigo.

Or imagine sitting in the car and waiting for the light to turn green. If the car next to you rolls slightly forward, you will get a feeling that you are rolling backwards. Your vestibular and proprioceptive systems give you the right cues, but we tend to trust our vision more. Vision is the input that the brain relies on as most “trustworthy”. As humans we are highly visual species and the sense of vision exerts an enormous influence on how we perceive the world.

DrshtiTitle

That is why fixing the gaze in balancing poses provides a visual anchor and helps all three systems (visual, vestibular and proprioceptive) work in unison to achieve a state of balance. To test this hypothesis just close your eyes while trying to hold a Tree pose and notice how much more difficult it is to balance.

In yoga we call this drshti (or drishti), which means fixing the gaze on a stable object without straining the body or eyesight. One purpose of drshti is to help you balance in more challenging postures, but it also has another important task of focusing your attention.

The wandering eye and the wandering mind are very closely linked. Just think back to your last yoga class and how things that you saw affected your train of thought: “ I wish I could bend as deep as that chick” “That’s a cute tank top” “I need a pedicure” and so on. We move our eyes from one thing to another forming opinions and passing judgments. This is the normal activity of the “vortex of the mind”. But if we intentionally focus the eyes on some external point while maintaining internal awareness, we begin to move toward one-pointed focus.

Your point of focus doesn’t have to be external. You can “hook” your attention to anything – here are some examples of drshti moving from external to more internal:
– any sturdy object at the eye level or below (external)
– point of contact between the body and the floor (external + internal)
– part of the body (feet, legs, hands, etc) (internal-physical)
– flow of breath (internal-more subtle)
– repetition of mantra (internal-even more subtle).

Different combinations of those work particularly well. For example, you can fix your gaze on a stable object and focus on regulating your breathing pace while chanting a simple mantra. This will help you focus the mind and as a result it will become easier to balance. This is a two-way street: balancing helps you focus your mind and focusing your mind helps you balance. Both are essential for optimal daily functioning. Your ability to balance keeps you agile, strong and confident, while a focused mind keeps you sharp, present, mentally and emotionally stable.

“According to some scientific observations, the mind can grasp only one thing at a time, passing extremely quickly from one thing to another. This gives an impression of simultaneity, and the illusion of movement as in film. A focused mind is a natural state that re-centers all energies, allowing great acuteness in observation as well as in action. This state gives optimal force to mental function, like a laser beam”. (The Essence of Yoga by Bernard Bouanchaud).

Stay tuned for a mind-focusing yoga practice using balance poses, breath awareness and mantra repetition.

horizontalBar[jetpack_subscription_form]

 

Tags: attentionbalance posesbalance trainingdrishtidrshtifocus

You may also like...

  • Stretching the hip flexors is not always a good idea 30 Apr, 2014
  • How to lengthen your spine without strain 13 Jan, 2016
  • Short yoga practices to strengthen your body and move your energy 3 Aug, 2022
  • Should we engage the abdomen all the time? 11 Nov, 2015

4 Comments

  1. Lynn says:
    June 15, 2016 at 1:19 pm

    I have been applying your techniques for balancing in my yoga classes which consist of people in their 50’s, 60’s, and 70’s. Prior to practicing this way, they dreaded balance poses, believed they had terrible balance, and fell in and out of the poses as we held them. Almost immediately when I explained and had them try moving within or between poses, their balance improved. Now when we do balancing, we congratulate ourselves on how much better our balance is.
    Thank you for your well-presented information. I would love to take a workshop or study with you sometime!!

    Reply
  2. Suzanne Harrington says:
    June 15, 2016 at 1:26 pm

    Great post, Olga! Thank you. Namaste

    Reply
  3. Michele says:
    June 22, 2016 at 11:50 am

    thank you for some valuable information Olga… enjoy reading your posts as I always learn a lot
    M

    Reply
  4. YOGA GURU says:
    December 8, 2021 at 8:38 am

    Olga, It is extremely hard to understand how you get these articles. Mesmerising!

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Previous story Six easy balancing moves for your daily routine
  • Next story What you think while balancing matters
  • Securely store and easily manage all your class and student records

  • JUST RELEASED

  • Check out our redesigned home yoga practice app

  • Create effective yoga practices online using customizable stick figure images

  • EDUCATIONAL YOGA SERIES

  • THERAPEUTIC YOGA SERIES

  • GET OUR BEST STORIES
    in a monthly newsletter
  • MAXIMIZE THE EFFECT OF YOUR PRACTICE

  • Reignite your home yoga practice

  • Popular posts

    • 20 superposes that carry maximum benefit with minimum risk

    • Three ways to protect your shoulders in your daily life and yoga practice

    • Four steps to minimize the stress placed on the intervertebral disks

    • Vital Vagus: What is the vagus nerve and what does it do?

    • 3 types of pain in the butt and what you can do about it

    • Too many asymmetrical poses can create sacroiliac joint issues

    • Rolling up from a standing forward bend can damage your spine

  • Archives

        © Copyright 2013-2020 Sequence Wiz - resources for yoga teachers and yoga enthusiasts | Privacy Policy