| Emotional
Release through Yoga

Feeling
stuck and inflexible in a yoga posture may be more than just
tight hamstrings; it could be some old feelings holding you
back. Unexpressed emotions become stored and held in the body
and, over time, create physical tightness, stress, tension,
and sometimes pain. Yoga is the perfect tool to release emotional
tension in the body and to experience the healing that comes
with this release. There are many tools that we can use within
a yoga practice to uncover deeply stored emotions, bring them
to the surface, and let them completely release from the body.

Pratyahara: inward focus
Pratyahara is a deep inward focus, rooted in the sensations
of the breath and the body. As we bring our awareness inside
the body, we can feel things that lie under the surface of
ordinary awareness. When holding a yoga posture, keep the
mind focused on where you feel sensations. Explore where the
sensations start, stop, and travel to, paying attention to
any emotional feelings in the physical sensations. When emotional
feelings emerge from the physical sensations keep your focus
on them to encourage these feelings to be drawn out and released.

Pranayama: yogic breathing
There are several breathing techniques that can encourage
emotions to be stimulated, brought to the surface, and released.
Dirga pranayama brings energy and awareness to the chest,
belly, and hips and allows emotions to be released from deep
within the body. Kapalabhati strongly stimulates and moves
emotions that lay near the surface of the body, bringing them
up and out. Breathing through the mouth invokes the emotional
body and is highly effective in expressing and releasing emotions
that have been brought to the surface, especially sadness
and grief. Hara breathing (exhaling with a “Haaa”
out of the mouth) helps release anger and frustration.

Vocalize: make sounds
Making sounds while holding a yoga posture opens the throat
chakra and can allow tension and emotions to release from
the body. Letting out a loud sigh eases frustration; humming
releases joy; groaning softens fear; howling unbinds sadness.
When emotions become activated and start to rise to the surface,
vocalizing is especially important to completely release them
out of the body.

Asana: backbends and hip openers
The hips, shoulders, chest, and throat are the primary places
where emotional tension resides in our bodies. Make note of
these places during asana practice or do a body scan at the
start of your practice, looking for tension or tightness in
these areas. Once you are aware of where emotional tension
is held in your body you can focus on postures that target
that area.

Intensity: holding the postures
When you find the posture that opens areas of tension and
invokes emotional sensations, it is important to hold the
posture to your edge. Just going to the physical or mental
edge in any posture hold can activate an emotional release,
but it will be especially cathartic in the postures where
you hold tension. While holding these poses, utilize all of
the above techniques for the strongest effect and most complete
emotional release. Longer hold times can be facilitated with
the use of props and restorative postures or physically supported
by a yoga teacher or yoga therapist.

Contraindications: keep it safe
Using the above techniques can be extremely powerful and release
intense emotions. If you are not familiar with this type of
work, start off slowly and practice only one technique at
a time. Too much emotional release can be harmful; do not
do this work more than two to three times per month. This
work is contraindicated with a history of emotional or psychological
instability, and would be cautioned with a history of intense
trauma.

On our Membership Site: Yoga
posture sequence for releasing emotions guides you through
a 26 asanas designed to safely release emotional tension.


|