Free YOGA Exercises
DESKTOP YOGA
Whether you’re a high-powered executive or an administrative assistant
with your boss’s problems becoming your own, many people in the business
world experience an inordinate amount of stress at the office. It would be nice to
have a quiet place to practice conventional yoga techniques, but that isn’t always
possible.
Yoga experts have devised a way for you to do a short yoga program right
at your desk. Try these exercises to de-stress at the office.
• Sit up tall in your chair, or if possible stand up. Stretch your arms
overhead and interlock your fingers, turn the palms to the ceiling. Take a
deep breathe in and on the exhale extend your side torso and take the tips
of the shoulder blades into the body. Take another deep breathe and on
the exhale stretch to the right, inhale come up and exhale stretch to the
left.
• On an inhale, lift your shoulders up to your ears and then exhale and let
them drop. Repeat 3 times. Contract the shoulder muscle fully when you
lift your shoulders up and then on the drop it will release more completely.
• Stand (or sit at your desk) with your feet planted firmly in the ground.
Inhale and raise the arms out to the side, palms down. Exhale and rotate
the palms up, rolling the shoulders back. Take an inhale and on the exhale,
bend the elbows in toward the waist. Inhale and on the exhale bring the
palms to the belly. This exercise helps to open the chest and extend the
upper back.
• Take your hands behind your back and interlock the fingers, stretching the
shoulders back, opening the chest. Take several breaths. Make sure that
your head stays in the mid-line and that your eye gaze is on the horizon.
• Stand by the wall, extend your right arm and place the palm on the wall
with the fingers up. On an exhale, turn your chest away, taking the
shoulder blade into the torso.
• Stand by your desk and place your palms on the desk top with the fingers
pointing toward your body. Gently stretch the lower arm and wrist.
• Wrap the right arm around the torso and place your right hand on the left
shoulder with the elbow at chest height and facing forward. Put your left
hand on the right elbow and on an exhale, stretch it toward the left,
opening between the shoulder blades. Hold for several breaths and then
release. Repeat on the other side
• Reach the right arm into the air and on an exhale bend the elbow and
reach your fingers down the back, between the shoulder blades. Place the
left hand on the elbow and on an exhale gently pull the elbow to the left.
Relax the ribs and hold for several breaths. Release and repeat on the
other side
• Hug your arms around your chest and then put one elbow underneath the
other, the hand facing toward each other and fingers to the ceiling. Exhale
and slowly raise the arms so that the elbows come up to the height of the
shoulder, keep the shoulders down. Repeat on the other side.
• Sit on your chair and pull back away from the desk, resting your palms on
the desk top and extend your side torso. Lift the ribs up, let the shoulder
blades slide towards the desk, and make sure the head is extended from
the spine with the chin towards the chest.
• Sit on your chair, feet planted firmly in the floor, sitting bones pressing
into the chair. Extend the side torso, and twist to the right (on an exhale),
one hand on back to chair, one hand on the side of the chair. Hold for a
few breaths and then repeat the other side.
• Sit forward on your chair and open the legs a little wider than the hips.
Lean forward from the hips and drop your torso down. Let the head and
arms hang down toward the floor.
• Sit upright in your chair with your feet planted firmly on the ground. Press
your sitting bones down into the chair and extend the side torso. Relax
your shoulders. Place your palms on your knees and spread the fingers
wide. Take a deep breath in and on the exhale extend your tongue to your
chin; focus your eyes to your nose. Inhale and bring the tongue back into
the mouth. Exhale and stick the tongue out again and this time focus the
eyes up to your forehead. Repeat 3 times.
• Sit upright on chair, relax your shoulders and extend the side torso up.
Relax your facial muscles, the jaw and tongue. Circle the eyes clockwise 8
times and counter-clockwise 8 times. Close your eyes and breathe deeply
for a few slow breaths.
You may want to try a quick relaxation meditation to wrap up this session
just as a way to refresh and regroup.
Yoga can be used for more than simple de-stressing. It can also be used to
alleviate the symptoms of everyday ailments without the use of medication.
YOGA FOR HEADACHES
There are many different kinds of headaches. Some (like tension
headaches and migraines) are fairly common; others (like sinus headaches or
headaches caused by brain tumors) are relatively rare. Various treatments are
recommended for dealing with headaches. Yoga asanas and breathing can help
too, though mostly with tension-type headaches.
Everyone gets a tension headache now and again, but if you suffer from
this type of headache habitually, it's important to consult a doctor or other health
practitioner to treat the pain and work to resolve the ultimate source of the
tension.
When treating a tension headache with asanas and breathing, it's
important to start practicing as soon as possible after you start to feel the pain.
Once the headache is established it will be very difficult to alleviate.
Here are the yoga positions that can be used to alleviate a headache:
Child’s Pose (Balasana)
1. Kneel on the floor. Touch your big toes together and sit on your heels,
then separate your knees about as wide as your hips.
2. Exhale and lay your torso down between your thighs. Broaden your
sacrum across the back of your pelvis and narrow your hip points
toward the navel, so that they nestle down onto the inner thighs.
Lengthen your tailbone away from the back of the pelvis while you lift
the base of your skull away from the back of your neck.
3. Lay your hands on the floor alongside your torso, palms up, and release
the fronts of your shoulders toward the floor. Feel how the weight of
the front shoulders pulls the shoulder blades wide across your back.
4. Balasana is a resting pose. Stay anywhere from 30 seconds to a few
minutes. Beginners can also use Balasana to get a taste of a deep
forward bend, where the torso rests on the thighs. Stay in the pose
from 1 to 3 minutes. To come up, first lengthen the front torso, and
then with an inhalation lift from the tailbone as it presses down and
into the pelvis.
Note: you can do the child’s pose when you get tired, out of breath, or
need to rest. Simply pick up with your exercises again when refreshed. Child’s
pose is also a great way to quickly alleviate stress at any time.
|