A funny thing happened a few weeks back as I watched my teacher trainees teaching one another: I saw things happening in their bodies that I miss when I am the one teaching. That is the benefit of sometimes just watching what’s happening around you! And the most interesting thing I noticed was what happened to the standing leg and knee when one of them was teaching Warrior 3 to the others. I am fond of Warrior 3, and often also frustrated by it, too. It requires balance, strength and flexibility in different parts of your body. Your standing leg hamstring has to be flexible enough to straighten at the knee while your pelvis, top leg and torso all tip over it. Your back body muscles have to be strong enough to keep your top leg, torso and sometimes arms all in one long line parallel with the floor resisting the pull of gravity. Your shoulders have to be flexible enough to take the arms overhead for the full expression of the pose. And those are just the most obvious things going on!
Nina Hyperextending Her Knees |
But the moment they shifted to the “full” pose, where the arms are brought forward along side the ears, am amazing thing happened: everyone’s center of gravity shifted a bit forward in the body, and the body appeared to slide back a few inches in space.
And in that moment, all my hyperextenders hyperextended in that bottom knee in unison!!! It was silent, but visually exploded into my awareness! I was stunned, but it was confirmed when they did the pose on the second side. What’s a newly enlightened (at least in this case of Warrior 3) teacher to do? Share the news with you all, of course. I have been teaching the pose in the last two weeks, and I am continuing to see this pattern of vulnerability in the knees of my students who have extra flexibility.
If you do note a significant increase in hyperextension in the full pose, you might skip it (doing only the version with arms out to the side) or do it less frequently. Alternatively, check with your yoga teacher to see if he or she has techniques that you can use the bring your standing leg in full Warrior 3 into a healthier alignment. If so, try using those techniques to adjust the alignment of your standing leg in Warrior 3 both in class and when you practice at home. After all, this is a modern yoga pose, and in my book that means you can modify and adapt it to suit your unique needs. I hope this information is useful in the ever-changing exploration of your yoga practice.
Cautions: If you have low back pain, you may have to drop your lifted leg a bit lower or bend your back knee to reduce the weight stress this pose puts on your lower back (even a micro-bend to the lifted leg can be helpful). If you have arthritis of the neck, you may want to avoid lifting your head to face forward. As always, use common sense. It if hurts to do the pose, come out and ask your teacher for some feedback about what you’ve been doing. If balancing is a big problem and you’re just getting frustrated, return to the wall version.
If you’re having a lot of trouble and want to work your way gradually into the pose, you can do the pose at an angle instead of parallel. For more tips, see Nina’s post Taking on a Yoga Challenge. For additional instructions, read our entire post on Warrior 3 Variations.
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