How Yoga Unlocks Emotions: Camel Pose, Then Crying?

It happened near the start of my yoga practice a couple of years ago, though I remember it like it was yesterday. I was flowing from one asana to the next in a series of progressions that led me to that fateful pose: pigeon. As I tucked my lower leg under me and bent forward, I felt my previously steady breath catch in the back of my throat. The tightness of my hip flexors took me by surprise—as did the tightness in my chest as a wave of emotions suddenly welled up inside me. It took me back to my days of tae kwon do, when my instructor would push my bent knee against my chest and I’d think I was going to start crying right then and there.

The more I’ve looked into it, though, the more I’ve found that the intense emotions I experience during yoga are quite common. In fact, certain poses are well known to release pent-up anger, sadness, frustration, and so forth.

Mind and Body as One
Though a sudden onset of emotions during a routine yoga session takes many practitioners by surprise, it’s really an important part of the discipline. That’s because there’s no differentiation between the mind, the body, and human emotions within yoga. They’re all connected, and, as such, they all affect each other. Yogis will tell you that when something weighs you down mentally, it’ll likely weigh you down physically, too. And that remains true whether you follow yoga’s tenets or not. For example, severe stress has a demonstrated effect on heart health, but within yoga specifically, certain body parts are believed to carry different types of emotions. As Sarah Powers wrote in the book Insight Yoga, “We may experience disappointment in a tight hip or fear as we settle into a long-held backbend. The longer we practice, the more we notice how varied our feelings are, how we can feel agitation one minute and elation the next, exuberance followed by despair.”

Poses that tap into tension in the hips, chest, and back seem to prompt emotional releases most often during yoga sessions. Frustration and anger could manifest in spinal tension, heartbreak and depression could linger in the chest, and emotional pain from the past could lie dormant in the hip flexors. These moves can help you confront such unresolved issues.

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From Around the Web:
I love yoga so much! It has absoulty changed my life psychially,mentally and of course spiritually,the way I feel after my poses is better than any pill out there,one of my fav poses is dancers pose,makes me feel so confident and strong,I would recommend yoga to any one wanting to transform their mind and body
04.18.2011
Brittnee Henry
The power of yoga is simple life changing. For all dimensions of life. I have experienced first-hand the amazing journey to self-awareness through yoga (specifically camel pose). I think readers of your story, Vicki, will also gain further insight to the power of the pose. http://www.elephantjournal.com/2011/04/with‐this‐asana‐i‐thee‐puke‐why‐a‐camel‐is‐a‐girls‐best‐friend‐‐brittnee‐henry/
Interesting, no wonder I love yoga.
It feels good to write.

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