Setu Bandhasana Bridge Pose
(SET-too BAHN-dah)
setu = dam, dike, or bridge bandha = lock
Type of Pose: Back Bend
Benefits
• Stretches the chest, neck, and spine
· Strengthens the spine, shoulders, legs and arms
• Calms the brain and helps alleviate stress and mild depression
• Stimulates abdominal organs, lungs, and thyroid
• Increases blood circulation
• Improves digestion
• Helps relieve the symptoms of menopause
• Relieves menstrual discomfort when done supported
• Reduces anxiety, fatigue, backache, headache, and insomnia
• Therapeutic for asthma, high blood pressure, osteoporosis,
and sinusitis
· Improves 4th and 5th chakra functions
Contraindications/Cautions
· Neck injury: avoid this pose unless you are practicing
under the supervision of an experienced teacher.
· Recent or chronic shoulder or back injury or inflammation
· Pregnancy (last trimester)
· For Knee Problems – keep feet and knees over ankles
· For tight shoulders or neck – use a small prop under
the head
· For weak back muscles – repeat the posture a few
times rather than hold it.
Step by Step
1. Lie on the floor, arms at the sides. If necessary,
place a thickly folded blanket under the shoulders to protect the
neck. Bend the knees and set the feet on the floor, slightly pigeon
toed and hip width distance apart. Heels are as close to the sitting
bones as possible.
2. Exhale and, pressing the inner feet and arms
actively into the floor, push your tailbone upward toward the pubis,
firming (but not hardening) the buttocks, lifting with the pelvis,
bringing the lower and upper back off the floor. Keep your thighs
and inner feet parallel, squeezing the inner thighs together as
if there is a ball between the legs.
3. There are two options for the arms: Clasp the
hands below your pelvis to support the bridge and extend through
the arms to help you stay on the tops of your shoulders; Or after
you lift the pelvis and back off the floor, alternately roll onto
each shoulder to create the space to bring the arms underneath you.
Interlace the fingers, extending the arms towards the heels, keeping
the arms and hands on the floor.
4. Lift your buttocks until the thighs are about
parallel to the floor. Keep your knees directly over the heels,
but push them forward, away from the hips, and lengthen the tailbone
toward the backs of the knees. Lift the pubis toward the navel.
5. Lift your chin slightly away from the sternum
and, firming the shoulder blades against your back, press the top
of the sternum toward the chin. Firm the outer arms, broaden the
shoulder blades, and try to lift the space between them at the base
of the neck (where it's resting on the blanket) up into the torso.
6. Stay in the pose anywhere from 30 seconds to
1 minute. Release the shoulders with an exhalation, rolling the
spine slowly down onto the floor.
Beginner’s Tip
· If the student has difficulty supporting the lift of the
pelvis in this pose after taking it away from the floor, slide a
block or bolster under the sacrum and rest the pelvis on this support.
· Once the shoulders are rolled under, be sure not to pull
them forcefully away from the ears, which tends to overstretch the
neck. Lift the tops of the shoulders slightly toward the ears and
push the inner shoulder blades away from the spine.
· If the student is having difficulty keeping the thighs
together, they can wrap a strap around the thighs to prevent the
legs from splaying out.
Deepen the Pose
Once in the pose, lift your heels off the floor and push your tailbone
up, a little closer to the pubis. Then from the lift of the tail,
stretch the heels back to the floor again.
Misalignments
Students will often turn the feet out once they have lifted up off
the floor. Have them reposition their feet back to a slight pigeon
toe.
Variations
Setu Bandha Sarvangasana
From Setu Bandhasana, straighten one leg at a time by sliding or
stepping one foot at a time away from the body. Maintain a strong
lift through the pelvis as well as the backs of the legs. Stay in
the pose from 30 seconds to 1 minute. Keep the thighs isometrically
adducted.
Eka Pada Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (pronounced
ACHE-ah PAH-dah, eka = one, pada = foot or leg)
From Setu Bandhasana -on an exhalation, lift the right knee into
your torso, then inhale and extend the leg perpendicular to the
floor. Hold for 30 seconds, then release the foot to the floor again
with an exhalation. Secure the foot again and repeat with the left
leg for the same length of time.
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