Sit up straight
with legs evenly extended in front. Bend the right leg at the knee and place
the foot so that the heel is in the right groin and the front of the foot
touches the left thigh. Turn the foot so that the bottom of the foot is facing
upward and press the knee back to form an obtuse angle with the body. This
position will be difficult at first; don't force it. Put a folded blanket under
the knee and also under the hips. Gradually the knee will move farther back.
Just keep the foot correctly positioned.
JANU SIRSASANA:
Correct, perfect posture
Having positioned
the foot and knee correctly, stretch the left leg out, keeping the leg firmly
on the mat. Settle the heel firmly and stretch the toes up. (The heel should
pull gently away from the ankle.) Now inhale and bend forward over the straight
leg, catching the foot with both hands if possible. Beginners should bend only
as far as they can without rounding the back. When this posture is done
correctly and completely, the body will roll forward over the extended leg,
absolutely flat from the tail bone to the head. Stay there breathing normally
for as long as you can. Inhale, release the handhold, come up smoothly,
straighten the bent leg and relax. Repeat on other side.
JANU SIRSASANA:
Wrong posture
The heel is not
positioned against its own thigh. The knee has not been pushed back as far as
possible to form an obtuse angle. The back is humped and curved because the
pelvis is jammed and unable to lift properly. Instead of a smooth, complete
stretching of the spine, the lumbar is over-stretched and the rest of the spine
constricted. The left leg is not flat on the floor.
TRIANG MUKHAIPADA
PASCHIMOTTANASANA: Sitting, forward-bending pose over one leg