Karuna Yoga Vidya Peetham Bangalore

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1. Word Meaning and Etymology

The Sanskrit term Aṣṭāvakrāsana comes from two words:

  • Aṣṭa – “eight”
  • Vakra – “bent, curved, twisted”
  • Āsana – “seat or posture”

Thus, Aṣṭāvakrāsana means “the posture of eight bends or eight curves.”

The name is inspired by the sage Aṣṭāvakra, a revered spiritual teacher deformed with eight bends in his body. Despite the curvature of his physical form, his brilliance, clarity, and inner strength were extraordinary. The pose embodies his story:
true strength arises not from external perfection but from inner alignment, balance, and intelligence.

In yogic symbolism, this posture represents:

  • Mastery over internal obstacles
  • Integration of strength and grace
  • Overcoming physical and mental limitations through awareness

The pose requires arm balance, core strength, hip mobility, spinal stability, and a refined integration of multiple joint actions.

2. Definition of Aṣṭāvakrāsana

Aṣṭāvakrāsana is an advanced arm balance that combines:

  • Hip flexion and external rotation
  • Core engagement
  • Upper-body strength
  • Oblique activation
  • Coordinated leg scissoring
  • Lateral spinal engagement
  • Elbow-extension load-bearing

It is categorized as:

  • An advanced arm balance
  • A twisting and asymmetric posture
  • A pose requiring dynamic equilibrium

In the final posture:

  • The legs wrap around one arm
  • The torso leans forward
  • The elbows extend while the arms support the body
  • The body lifts off the ground via isometric and concentric muscular engagement
  • The legs scissor to create counter-resistance
  • The spine remains long, lifted, and twisted
  • The pelvis stays lifted and suspended

This asana reflects strength, grace, asymmetry, balance, and poetic geometry—all integrated into a single movement.

3. Method of Practice: Step-by-Step Technique

Below are highly detailed sequential steps for safe entry into Aṣṭāvakrāsana.

Step 1: Begin in Dandāsana (Staff Pose)

Sit with legs extended straight
Ground the sitting bones
Draw the spine tall
Activate the thighs and flex the ankles

Establish awareness in your core and breath.

Step 2: Bend the Right Knee and Lift the Leg

Bring the right knee toward the chest
Hug the shin inward
Externally rotate the hip

Stay grounded through the left leg.

Step 3: Thread the Right Shoulder Beneath the Right Knee

Lean forward slightly
Bring the right arm under the right thigh
Slide the shoulder as deeply as possible

Final position: your right leg rests on your right triceps.

Step 4: Clamp the Leg Over the Arm

Use the strength of inner thighs
Hug the arm firmly with the right shin
Maintain hip external rotation

This creates the “leg-on-arm lock” essential for stability.

Step 5: Plant Both Hands on the Mat

Place palms shoulder-width
Fingers spread wide
Index-finger mounds press down
Wrists align slightly outward for safety

Hands act as your foundation.

Step 6: Lift the Hips

Lean forward, shifting weight onto hands
Press firmly into palms
Lift the pelvis off the floor

Use core activation rather than arm strength alone.

Step 7: Extend Both Legs to the Left Side

The right leg remains hooked
The left leg extends parallel, joining the right
Activate inner thighs to create a “scissor effect”
This counter-press stabilizes the pelvis

Step 8: Straighten Both Arms

Elbow extension lifts the torso
Keep shoulder blades protracted
Avoid collapsing between shoulders
Maintain chest broadening and spinal length

Step 9: Engage and Sustain

Lift the sternum
Keep the core tight
Maintain breath in rhythmic waves

Hold for 5–10 breaths.

Step 10: Exit with Control

Lower hips gently
Release legs
Return to Dandāsana
Repeat on the left for symmetry

This method emphasizes controlled weight transfer, coordinated core activation, and intelligent muscular patterning.

4. Alignment Cues

Precise alignment ensures safety, stability, and energetic balance.

Hand & Wrist Alignment

  • Spread fingers wide
  • Press through palms evenly
  • Ground mounds of index fingers
  • Slightly externally rotate forearms
  • Avoid sinking into wrists
  • Maintain micro-bend if hypermobile

Cue:
“Claw the mat gently to engage forearm musculature.”

Shoulder Alignment

  • Shoulders protracted, not collapsed
  • Avoid elevating shoulders toward ears
  • Create a dome-like support through scapulae

Cue:
“Push the floor away; lift the chest away from gravity.”

Torso and Spine

  • Keep spine long
  • Engage obliques to maintain twist
  • Avoid excessive rounding
  • Maintain thoracic lift

Cue:
“Grow longer through the sternum while keeping the belly strong.”

Pelvis and Core

  • Lift pelvis high
  • Engage deep core (TVA)
  • Activate psoas
  • Press inner thighs together

Cue:
“Draw the lower belly inward and lift upward.”

Leg Alignment

  • Top leg clamps tightly
  • Bottom leg presses outward
  • Both legs extend fully
  • Ankles flex to stabilize

Cue:
“Scissor the legs—hug in and extend out simultaneously.”

Breath Alignment

  • Inhale: lengthen
  • Exhale: engage and lift

Cue:
“Let your breath be the spine of the posture.”

5. Benefits of Aṣṭāvakrāsana

Aṣṭāvakrāsana offers a unique blend of muscular, nervous-system, glandular, energetic, structural, and psychological benefits:

A. Physical and Musculoskeletal Benefits

  1. Strengthens arms, wrists, shoulders
  2. Tones obliques and deep abdominal muscles
  3. Improves spinal rotation
  4. Enhances shoulder stability
  5. Increases core strength multidirectionally
  6. Develops hip mobility (external rotation + flexion)
  7. Strengthens psoas, quadriceps, and adductors
  8. Tones gluteus medius and minimus
  9. Enhances structural symmetry and cross-body coordination
  10. Develops strong and stable scapular mechanics

B. Energetic and Physiological Benefits

  1. Stimulates Manipura Chakra (solar plexus)
  2. Enhances digestive fire (agni)
  3. Improves liver and pancreas function
  4. Builds pranic heat
  5. Enhances energetic control (bandhas)

C. Neurological & Psychological Benefits

  1. Improves proprioception
  2. Develops concentration
  3. Enhances neuromuscular integration
  4. Builds resilience and perseverance
  5. Reduces anxiety through breath anchoring
  6. Cultivates self-confidence and inner strength
  7. Encourages steady focus and single-pointedness (ekagrata)

6. Contraindications of Aṣṭāvakrāsana

Avoid or modify the pose with:

  1. Wrist strains, carpal tunnel syndrome
  2. Elbow tendonitis or hyperextension
  3. Shoulder impingement or rotator-cuff injury
  4. Lower-back injury
  5. Sacroiliac instability
  6. Acute sciatica
  7. Hernia or abdominal surgery
  8. Pregnancy
  9. Hip joint limitations (tight external rotation)
  10. High blood pressure or vertigo (in beginners)

7. Counterposes

After Aṣṭāvakrāsana, practice:

  1. Balasana (Child’s Pose)
  2. Supine Twist (Supta Matsyendrasana)
  3. Baddha Koṇāsana
  4. Wrist stretching and extension release
  5. Cat-Cow (Marjarasana-Bitilasana)
  6. Downward Dog for shoulder decompression

These restore balance, release tension, and neutralize wrists and spine.

8. Preparatory Practice

Strong preparation ensures safety and mastery.

A. Preparatory Warm-Up

  1. Wrist mobilization
  2. Shoulder protraction drills
  3. Core activation: Dead-bugs, hollow-body holds
  4. Hip mobility:
    • Pigeon pose
    • Fire-log pose
    • Happy baby
  5. Gentle spinal twists

B. Strength-Building Preparatory Poses

  1. Chaturanga Dandasana
  2. Plank variations
  3. Bakasana (Crow Pose)
  4. Lolasana
  5. Eka Pada Koundinyasana-Prep
  6. Side plank variation
  7. High-to-low push-ups

C. Flexibility Preparatory Poses

  1. Seated forward fold
  2. Reclined figure-four
  3. Hamstring stretches
  4. Hip external rotation drills

D. Intermediate Arm Balances to Prepare

  1. Eka Hasta Bhujasana
  2. Bhujapidasana
  3. Tittibhasana

Progression through these leads naturally into Aṣṭāvakrāsana.

9. Modifications and Variations

A. Beginner Modifications

  1. Use a block under the hips
  2. Keep bottom leg on the floor
  3. Practice with bent knees
  4. Use a strap around the thighs
  5. Perform mini-lifts without extending legs

B. Intermediate Modifications

  1. Extend only top leg
  2. Practice leg scissoring while seated on block
  3. Support feet with bolster

C. Advanced Variations

  1. Aṣṭāvakrāsana B – leg swing transitions
  2. Parivrtta Aṣṭāvakrāsana – deeper twist
  3. Aṣṭāvakrāsana vinyasa transitions – jumping back

10. Muscles Involved (Detailed)

Prime Movers

  1. Triceps brachii – elbow extension
  2. Rectus abdominis – lifts torso
  3. Obliques – spinal rotation
  4. Psoas major – hip flexion
  5. Adductors – leg clamp

Stabilizers

  1. Serratus anterior – scapular protraction
  2. Rotator cuff muscles
  3. Transversus abdominis
  4. Quadratus lumborum
  5. Gluteus medius

Synergists

  1. Rectus femoris
  2. Tensor fascia lata
  3. Hamstrings (isometrically)
  4. Forearm flexors

11. Kinesiology of Aṣṭāvakrāsana

This posture integrates:

  • Closed kinetic chain in the hands
  • Open kinetic chain for legs
  • Isometric contractions
  • Concentric lifting
  • Eccentric control during entry/exit

Joint actions:

  • Wrist extension + pronation
  • Elbow extension
  • Shoulder protraction
  • Hip external rotation
  • Knee flexion (initial) then extension
  • Spinal rotation + anti-lateral flexion

12. Kinematics

Movement patterns include:

  • Weight shift from pelvic base to upper limbs
  • Rotational torque in spine
  • Lateral displacement of legs
  • Anti-gravity lift through shoulder girdle
  • Counterpressure scissoring between legs

The pose demonstrates multi-planar movement—sagittal, frontal, and transverse planes unite simultaneously.

13. Biomechanics of Aṣṭāvakrāsana

Key biomechanics:

  • Leverage of legs around arm increases mechanical advantage
  • Forward shift of center of gravity reduces load on torso
  • Scissoring of legs produces internal stability torque
  • Protraction stabilizes shoulder joint against collapse
  • Abdominal pressure creates stiffness (spinal bracing)

Force distribution:

  • 70% arms
  • 20% core
  • 10% legs

Muscle activation is both global (prime movers) and local (stabilizers).

14. Functional Anatomy & Physiology

Aṣṭāvakrāsana develops:

  • Neuromuscular control
  • Proprioceptive sensitivity
  • Intermuscular coordination
  • Deep core stability
  • Shoulder girdle endurance

Physiologically:

  • Stimulates digestive organs
  • Enhances circulation
  • Improves glucose metabolism
  • Strengthens connective tissue

Energetically, it awakens:

  • Manipura Chakra
  • Pingala Nadi activity (solar, heat)
  • Confidence, courage, willpower

15. How to Correct and Adjust While Teaching

A. Verbal Adjustments

  1. “Hug your thigh higher up on your arm.”
  2. “Shift slightly forward before lifting.”
  3. “Press strongly through the palms.”
  4. “Scissor your legs for stability.”
  5. “Lift the chest away from the floor.”

B. Physical Adjustments

  1. Support pelvis during lift
  2. Guide shoulders into protraction
  3. Hold ankle to support leg extension
  4. Stabilize forearm for wrist-restricted students

C. Safety Corrections

  • Avoid elbows winging outward
  • Prevent shoulder collapse
  • Maintain proper wrist alignment
  • Keep breath steady
  • Ensure even spinal rotation

D. Common Mistakes and Corrections

  1. Elbows sliding out → “Hug inward.”
  2. Collapsing chest → “Push the floor away.”
  3. Legs slipping → “Clamp the arm with thighs.”
  4. Hips dropping → “Lift lower belly up.”

Questions and Answer –  Astavakrasana (Eight-Angle Pose)

SECTION 1: GENERAL KNOWLEDGE & THEORY

1. The word “Astavakrasana” is derived from which two Sanskrit terms?

A. Ashta + Vayu
B. Ashta + Vakra
C. Asana + Vakra
D. Aksha + Vakra
Answer: B. Ashta + Vakra

2. What is the English name of Astavakrasana?

A. Eight-Fold Twist Pose
B. Eight-Angle Pose
C. Eight-Arm Balance Pose
D. Eight-Sided Pose
Answer: B. Eight-Angle Pose

3. Astavakrasana primarily belongs to which category of postures?

A. Backbends
B. Forward bends
C. Arm balances
D. Standing balances
Answer: C. Arm balances

4. Which legendary sage is associated with the story behind the pose?

A. Sage Bharadvaja
B. Sage Patanjali
C. Sage Astavakra
D. Sage Vyasa
Answer: C. Sage Astavakra

5. Astavakrasana is traditionally considered a pose that develops:

A. Compassion
B. Strength and determination
C. Surrender and softness
D. Deep sleep
Answer: B. Strength and determination

SECTION 2: METHOD OF PRACTICE

6. Which is the most essential foundation requirement before lifting into Astavakrasana?

A. Straight legs
B. Deep thoracic extension
C. Strong root through palms
D. Hip internal rotation
Answer: C. Strong root through palms

7. In the step-by-step method, the leg initially hooks over which body part?

A. Upper arm
B. Forearm
C. Wrist
D. Shoulder
Answer: A. Upper arm

8. The torso movement in Astavakrasana is predominantly a:

A. Backward extension
B. Lateral twist and forward lean
C. Backward tilt with hip drop
D. Spinal compression
Answer: B. Lateral twist and forward lean

9. The final lift in Astavakrasana happens when:

A. Legs straighten and core activates
B. Elbows lock
C. Spine rotates fully
D. Neck drops freely
Answer: A. Legs straighten and core activates

10. The most effective cue to balance in this pose is:

A. Bend elbows deeply
B. Lean back
C. Shift weight forward onto palms
D. Drop hips down
Answer: C. Shift weight forward onto palms

SECTION 3: ALIGNMENT CUES

11. Proper hand alignment in Astavakrasana is:

A. Fingers facing backward
B. Fingers slightly turned out
C. Palms cupped
D. Only fingertips on the floor
Answer: B. Fingers slightly turned out

12. Elbows during the pose should ideally be:

A. Flaring out
B. Hyperextended
C. Hugged in toward ribs
D. Resting on the mat
Answer: C. Hugged in toward ribs

13. The chest in the pose should be:

A. Over-arched
B. Collapsed
C. Broad and lifted
D. Rotated backward
Answer: C. Broad and lifted

14. The legs in the final position are maintained by:

A. Active squeezing of thighs
B. Passive hanging
C. Tipping onto elbows
D. Strong hip internal rotation only
Answer: A. Active squeezing of thighs

15. The drishti (gaze) in Astavakrasana is usually:

A. Upward
B. Backward
C. Forward
D. Toward the belly
Answer: C. Forward

SECTION 4: BENEFITS

16. Which system is significantly stimulated in Astavakrasana due to twisting and compression?

A. Integumentary system
B. Cardiovascular system
C. Digestive system
D. Reproductive system only
Answer: C. Digestive system

17. Which of the following benefits is most associated with arm balances like Astavakrasana?

A. Enhances bone density
B. Increases ankle flexibility
C. Strengthens scapular stabilizers
D. Increases hip external rotation only
Answer: C. Strengthens scapular stabilizers

18. Astavakrasana strongly enhances:

A. Lower body endurance
B. Hamstring length
C. Core stability and balance
D. Lung capacity
Answer: C. Core stability and balance

19. Which mental quality is often developed through practicing this pose?

A. Lethargy
B. Fear
C. Determination
D. Attachment
Answer: C. Determination

20. Regular practice can improve:

A. Wrist instability
B. Knee hyperextension
C. Shoulder strength and wrist resilience
D. Low back weakness
Answer: C. Shoulder strength and wrist resilience

SECTION 5: CONTRAINDICATIONS

21. Students with which condition must avoid Astavakrasana?

A. Mild knee soreness
B. Chronic wrist pain
C. Tight hamstrings
D. Flat feet
Answer: B. Chronic wrist pain

22. The pose should be avoided postpartum until:

A. Pelvic floor is stable
B. Spine lengthens
C. Wrist chakra opens
D. Hips widen
Answer: A. Pelvic floor is stable

23. Which of the following is a contraindication?

A. Mild cold
B. Heavy meals just before practice
C. Hungry state
D. Dry skin
Answer: B. Heavy meals just before practice

24. Students with hypertension should:

A. Avoid the pose
B. Enter without twisting
C. Hold for a long time
D. Do only dynamic variations
Answer: A. Avoid the pose

25. Elbow injuries are contraindicated because:

A. The pose compresses the forearm nerves
B. Requires full elbow weight-bearing
C. Legs hit the elbow
D. Elbow must twist outward
Answer: B. Requires full elbow weight-bearing

SECTION 6: COUNTERPOSES

26. The best counterpose for Astavakrasana is:

A. Savasana
B. Downward Dog
C. Child’s Pose
D. Cobra Pose
Answer: C. Child’s Pose

27. Which of the following decompresses wrists after arm balances?

A. Wrist flexor stretch
B. Forward bend
C. Shoulder opener
D. Side bends
Answer: A. Wrist flexor stretch

28. To release the twist, students should do:

A. Spinal flexion
B. Gentle supine twist in opposite direction
C. Backbend
D. Tadasana
Answer: B. Gentle supine twist in opposite direction

29. Which shoulder release is recommended?

A. Passive hanging from bar
B. Thread-the-needle
C. Handstand
D. Squat
Answer: B. Thread-the-needle

30. A counterpose that helps neutralize hips is:

A. Paschimottanasana
B. Baddha Konasana
C. Ananda Balasana
D. Vajrasana
Answer: B. Baddha Konasana

SECTION 7: PREPARATORY POSES

31. Which preparatory posture helps build arm strength?

A. Sukhasana
B. Plank
C. Viparita Karani
D. Pawanmuktasana
Answer: B. Plank

32. Which hip-opening preparatory pose is essential?

A. Malasana
B. Tadasana
C. Uttanasana
D. Virasana
Answer: A. Malasana

33. For twisting mobility, the best preparatory pose is:

A. Marichyasana C
B. Trikonasana
C. Warrior II
D. Sphinx
Answer: A. Marichyasana C

34. Core engagement is best practiced in:

A. Navasana
B. Vajrasana
C. Sukhasana
D. Balasana
Answer: A. Navasana

35. Hamstring preparation can be done through:

A. Ardha Uttanasana
B. Savasana
C. Bhujangasana
D. Urdhva Hastasana
Answer: A. Ardha Uttanasana

SECTION 8: MODIFICATIONS

36. Beginners can modify the pose by:

A. Using blocks under hands
B. Lifting straight into full pose
C. Tilting head back
D. Twisting more deeply
Answer: A. Using blocks under hands

37. A safe modification for weak core muscles is:

A. Keep one foot on floor
B. Lock elbows
C. Bend wrists more
D. Reduce breath
Answer: A. Keep one foot on floor

38. A strap can be used to:

A. Tie elbows together
B. Keep legs together
C. Support ankles
D. Stabilize shoulders
Answer: B. Keep legs together

39. For wrist relief, the modification is:

A. Fists on the floor
B. Hands wider than mat
C. Elbows bent to 90°
D. Legs bent
Answer: A. Fists on the floor

40. Easier variation for hip mobility issues:

A. Sit on bolster before entering
B. Deepen twist
C. Remove arm support
D. Straighten both legs
Answer: A. Sit on bolster before entering

SECTION 9: MUSCLES & ANATOMY

41. The primary core muscles activated are:

A. Rectus abdominis only
B. Obliques + transverse abdominis
C. Serratus anterior
D. Quadratus lumborum
Answer: B. Obliques + transverse abdominis

42. Main upper body muscles working include:

A. Biceps & triceps
B. Deltoids, triceps, serratus anterior
C. Latissimus dorsi only
D. Rotator cuff only
Answer: B. Deltoids, triceps, serratus anterior

43. The hip movement required primarily is:

A. Internal rotation only
B. External rotation + flexion
C. Extension
D. Adduction
Answer: B. External rotation + flexion

44. Which muscle stabilizes the shoulder blade in this pose?

A. Pectoralis minor
B. Serratus anterior
C. Gluteus maximus
D. Tensor fascia lata
Answer: B. Serratus anterior

45. The pressing of upper arm into thigh activates which muscle group?

A. Hip abductors
B. Adductors
C. Hamstrings
D. Quadriceps
Answer: B. Adductors

SECTION 10: KINESIOLOGY, KINEMATICS & BIOMECHANICS

46. Primary force resisting gravity in this pose is generated by:

A. Passive ligament tension
B. Active muscular contraction of arms and core
C. Spinal compression
D. Breath retention
Answer: B. Active muscular contraction of arms and core

47. The legs extend using:

A. Hamstrings concentrically
B. Quadriceps concentrically
C. Glutes eccentrically
D. Soleus muscles isometrically
Answer: B. Quadriceps concentrically

48. Wrist biomechanics involve:

A. Extreme ulnar deviation
B. Neutral extension with load-bearing
C. Heavy radial deviation
D. Wrist flexion
Answer: B. Neutral extension with load-bearing

49. Body stabilization depends on:

A. Lateral shift of center of gravity
B. Posterior lean
C. Lowering pelvis
D. Head lifting only
Answer: A. Lateral shift of center of gravity

50. The spine in Astavakrasana is in:

A. Hyperextension
B. Large rotation + slight flexion
C. Neutral
D. Deep lumbar extension
Answer: B. Large rotation + slight flexion

SECTION 11: TEACHING, ADJUSTMENTS & SAFETY

51. Verbal cue for beginners:

A. “Fall into the pose.”
B. “Press the palms down and lift the chest.”
C. “Bend your wrists more.”
D. “Look backward.”
Answer: B. “Press the palms down and lift the chest.”

52. A safe hands-on adjustment includes:

A. Pushing student’s hips down
B. Stabilizing their shoulders by supporting upper arm
C. Forcing legs to straighten
D. Pulling torso sideways
Answer: B. Stabilizing their shoulders by supporting upper arm

53. Avoid adjusting students by:

A. Correcting palm position
B. Lifting their legs for them
C. Supporting wrist alignment
D. Cueing core activation
Answer: B. Lifting their legs for them

54. Best teaching method is:

A. Demonstrate and break down components
B. Push students into full pose
C. Skip warm-up
D. Focus only on breathing
Answer: A. Demonstrate and break down components

55. The teacher should ensure:

A. Student twists from torso, not neck
B. Elbows flare
C. Student collapses chest
D. Student bends wrist more
Answer: A. Student twists from torso, not neck

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