yoga springtime

Spring Cleaning: Get Back In Balance

Published on
March 12, 2013

As spring approaches, you may feel the urge to set the stage for new growth by cleaning house or cleansing the physical body. Shaucha or purity is one of the foundational principles of yoga, and ancient yogis practiced six types of cleanses, known as the shatkarmas. Most of these should be undertaken only with the guidance of an experienced teacher. However, some yogic cleanses, combined with gentle ayurvedic practices, make an effective daily cleansing routine suitable for anyone who wants to release toxins and build agni, the digestive fire.

Start each morning by cleaning the tongue of ama, toxins that have accumulated overnight. A tongue scraper is the best tool. If you like, follow this by gargling or oil pulling, swishing a spoonful of oil in the mouth for at least 10 minutes, then spitting it out. Before showering, massage your skin with a dry washcloth or soft brush to stimulate circulation and slough off dead skin cells. Use light pressure, stroking toward the heart. Other simple cleanses include washing the eyes using an eyecup and purified water, and cleaning and massaging the gums with a paste of sesame oil and salt.

If you’ve learned jala neti—nasal irrigation using lukewarm saline solution and a neti pot—you know that it’s ideal for warding off allergies or helping control symptoms of upper respiratory infections. In 2011, however, news stories about neti practitioners dying from infections scared some away from this simple and venerable practice. If you have learned cleaning and drying techniques from a teacher, and you keep everything—water, salt, neti pot—squeaky clean, you should have nothing to worry about. (Don’t use water straight from the tap.) Jala neti, like most yoga cleanses, has both a physical and a psychospiritual purpose. Nasal washing removes debris and pollutants and stimulates the sinus cavities, but also helps open the third eye, ajna chakra, the seat of inner vision.

Incorporate your cleansing routine into a morning sadhana, which might include meditation, sun salutations, and pranayama. The candle-gazing meditation known as trataka cleanses the third eye. Kapalabhati pranayama, taught in many yoga classes, is said to purify the frontal brain regions, as well as help remove carbon dioxide from the lowest regions of the lungs. Asana cleanses the body by promoting circulation and massaging the digestive organs. Twists are especially effective at this. The pawanmuktasana digestive series focuses on building agni and freeing energy blockages in the abdominal area. This spring yoga sequence can help awaken dormant energy and release stagnation.

Just as the spring equinox marks the equilibrium of day and night, the aim of cleansing (like the aim of yoga) is to restore balance. When purification becomes part of an ongoing healthy lifestyle, we begin to experience balance on ever deeper levels, encompassing body, mind, and spirit. This is the renewal of spring.

How are you preparing for spring?

Share with

Friends

Our Latest

Yoga Articles
  • Yoga With Meditation

    Combining Yoga With Meditation: Tips, Benefits, and Expert Advice

  • What Is Meditation

    What Is Meditation? (Definition, History, Types, and Styles)

  • Chakra Stones

    Chakra Stones & Crystals: Types, Meaning and Use

  • Mental Health Benefits of Yoga

    10 Tips for Harnessing the Mental Health Benefits of Yoga

  • Best Time to Meditate

    Finding the Best Time to Meditate: Tips and Advice on When to Sit

  • Purusharthas

    Purusharthas: The Four Goals of Life

  • Trimurti

    Trimurti: The Hindu Trinity of Brahma Vishnu Shiva

  • Brahman

    Brahman: Definition, Meaning, and Philosophy

Remove Ads with a

Premium Membership

Viewing ads supports YogaBasics, which allows us to continue bringing you quality yoga content. Sign up for a premium membership to remove all ads and enjoy uninterrupted access to the best yoga resources on the web.

Explore More

Yoga TipsAdviceArticlesPracticesBasicsTechniques

  • Practice yoga fast or slow

    Fast or Slow? How to Find Your Yoga Flow

  • Yoga Styles defined

    Yoga Styles: One Word Definitions

  • mala bead meditation

    Using Mala Beads to Deepen Your Yoga Practice

  • Intense cardio yoga session

    Need More Intensity? 7 Ways to Amp Up Your Yoga

  • eating before yoga

    Snack Attack: What to Eat Before Yoga

  • teaching yoga at festival

    How to Choose a Yoga Teacher Training Program

  • Yoga for Self-Care

    How to Use Yoga as a Self-Care Tool

  • nada yoga meditation

    Nada Yoga: Union Through Sound

  • yogi

    What is a Yogi? And How Do You Become One?

One response to “Spring Cleaning: Get Back In Balance”

  1. Sofny Guina Avatar
    Sofny Guina

    These are such wonderful tips and I have already started implementing them in my daily yoga practice. Many thanks and blessings to you!

Leave a Reply to Sofny Guina Cancel reply

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

Kathleen Bryant Avatar
About the author
A former teacher and forever student, Kathleen Bryant swapped her running shoes for a yoga blanket in 1992, when she joined her first Hatha Yoga class in the back room of a local crystal shop. After earning a 500-hour teaching certificate from the International Yoga College, she taught anatomy, asana, and other subjects at 7 Centers School of Yoga Arts in Sedona, AZ. Kathleen is especially interested in the therapeutic aspects of yoga and continues to learn from Rama Jyoti Vernon, an amazing yogini who inspires her students to integrate yoga philosophy and mythology with contemporary life. An award-winning author, she has also published a children’s story, a cookbook, and books that focus on Southwest culture, travel, and natural history.
Yoga Basics