6
Muscles
2
Joints
2
Organs
2
Mental
Salabhasana Variation (Blanket under Hips)
शलभासन (हिप्स के नीचे कंबल के साथ विविधता)
This variation of Salabhasana introduces a folded blanket beneath the hips, fundamentally altering the leverage and initial demand of the pose. By providing a gentle lift and a stable fulcrum, it makes the backbend more accessible, especially for those new to the practice or with lower back sensitivities. This subtle elevation allows practitioners to cultivate a deeper awareness of spinal extension and leg lift with greater ease and precision. Salabhasana, or Locust Pose, is a foundational prone backbend that profoundly strengthens the entire posterior chain, particularly the muscles along the spine, buttocks, and backs of the thighs. It works synergistically to lift the body against gravity, cultivating immense inner strength and stability while opening the chest and front body. This pose not only builds physical resilience, addressing common complaints like back pain and poor posture, but also ignites the inner fire, bringing a sense of vitality and courage to the practitioner. Through conscious engagement and breath, it teaches us to find power from our core, extending outwards with grace and control, fostering a harmonious flow of prana.
Placing a folded blanket under the hips in Salabhasana provides a gentle lift that makes the backbend more accessible. The elevation reduces the demand on the lower back muscles and allows the practitioner to focus on lifting the chest and legs with proper form. This prop-supported variation is ideal for beginners and those with lower back sensitivity.
Helps with
What This Variation Changes
The folded blanket under the hips acts as a gentle fulcrum, physically elevating the pelvis and thereby reducing the 'starting depth' of the backbend. This redistribution of weight diminishes the initial strain on the lower back, allowing for a more accessible and controlled lift. It subtly changes the joint angles at the hips and lumbar spine, making the backbend feel less strenuous and more expansive.
Muscles Worked
Spinal Erectors
The blanket under the hips provides an initial lift to the pelvis, acting as a gentle fulcrum.
This significantly reduces the primary demand on the lumbar spinal erectors to initiate the deepest part of the backbend, allowing for a more gradual and sustained engagement throughout the entire length of the spine.
Practitioners can then focus on extending the thoracic spine with greater awareness, cultivating a more even and less compressed backbend.
Glutes
With the hips slightly elevated, the gluteal muscles can engage more effectively to extend the thighs without having to overcome the full gravitational pull from a flat position.
This support allows for a more refined activation, encouraging a balanced engagement of all gluteal fibers for hip extension and external rotation, rather than just brute force.
It helps stabilize the pelvis, preventing excessive strain on the sacroiliac joint and promoting a more integrated lift.
Hamstrings
The blanket support under the hips lightens the load on the hamstrings, making it easier to lift the legs from the hip joint.
This allows for a more conscious engagement of these muscles, encouraging a balance between strength and length as they work to extend the knees and lift the entire leg.
The reduced strain can help prevent cramping and facilitate a smoother, more controlled leg lift, fostering greater awareness of the posterior chain.
Deep Abdominals
By providing support to the anterior pelvis, the blanket allows the deep abdominal muscles, particularly the transversus abdominis, to engage more effectively in their role of stabilizing the lumbar spine.
With less need to counteract excessive compression in the lower back, these muscles can draw inwards and upwards with greater subtlety, creating internal spaciousness and supporting a healthy spinal curve throughout the backbend.
This promotes a more refined and integrated core engagement.
Rhomboids (Major & Minor)
Rhomboideus major, Rhomboideus minor
With the lower back receiving support, practitioners can more easily draw their shoulder blades towards each other and down the back, engaging the rhomboids to lift the chest.
This action stabilizes the scapulae against the rib cage, allowing the upper spine to extend more freely and fostering an expansive quality in the upper back.
It helps to create space across the collarbones, promoting a broader and more open heart center.
Middle and Lower Trapezius
Trapezius (middle and lower fibers)
The support under the hips shifts the energetic focus upwards, enabling a more deliberate engagement of the middle and lower trapezius fibers.
These muscles retract and depress the scapulae, facilitating a lift of the chest that originates from the upper back, rather than solely from the lumbar spine.
This encourages a broadness across the shoulders and a more integrated, less strained spinal extension, allowing for greater freedom in the breath.
Joints Mobilized
Spine
mobilizingThe entire vertebral column, especially the thoracic and lumbar regions, undergoes extension in Salabhasana.
Each segment of the spine is gently mobilized as the back muscles contract to lift and lengthen, encouraging healthy disc hydration and flexibility.
This controlled movement helps to decompress the anterior aspect of the vertebral bodies while strengthening the posterior muscles, improving overall spinal health and resilience.
With regular practice, the spine regains its natural curves, fostering a feeling of energetic flow and suppleness, releasing stagnant prana.
Hip Joints
mobilizingThe ball-and-socket hip joints are engaged in extension as the legs lift away from the floor.
This action strengthens the hip extensors and can help to improve the range of motion in the front of the hips (hip flexor lengthening).
By actively lifting the legs from the hip crease, we encourage healthy articulation and stability within the joint capsule.
This creates a sense of freedom and mobility in the pelvis, which is essential for healthy movement patterns and releasing stored tension, allowing for a more uninhibited flow of apana vayu.
Organ & System Benefits
Abdominal Organs
Lying prone with the abdomen gently pressed against the floor provides a subtle, invigorating compression to the digestive organs.
This gentle pressure, combined with the subsequent release and fresh blood flow upon exiting the pose, can stimulate peristalsis and improve digestive function.
It's like a gentle internal massage that awakens sluggish digestion and encourages the body's natural elimination processes.
This activation of samana vayu in the abdominal region helps balance the energies of assimilation and digestion, leading to a feeling of lightness and improved metabolism.
Lungs and Heart
The lifting of the chest in Salabhasana creates an expansive opening across the front of the torso, stretching the intercostal muscles and pectorals.
This increased space allows for deeper, fuller breaths, enhancing lung capacity and encouraging better oxygen exchange.
The gentle backbend also stimulates the heart center, promoting circulation and often leading to a feeling of invigoration without undue strain.
This opening of the anahata chakra fosters a sense of courage and emotional openness, allowing prana to flow more freely throughout the chest and upper body.
Nervous System
The sustained, controlled effort required in Salabhasana, combined with focused breathing, helps to shift the nervous system from a state of 'fight or flight' (sympathetic) to 'rest and digest' (parasympathetic).
As you hold the pose, the mind becomes absorbed in the physical sensations and the rhythm of the breath, drawing awareness inward.
This process of intentional engagement and mindful presence calms the incessant chatter of the mind (chitta vritti), fostering a profound sense of groundedness and mental clarity.
You learn to steady your attention, cultivating a quiet internal space.
By strengthening the posterior chain and improving posture, Salabhasana directly impacts the proprioceptive feedback loop, telling the brain that the body is strong and stable.
This enhanced body awareness and sense of physical competence can reduce feelings of anxiety and vulnerability.
The act of lifting against gravity builds a powerful connection between mind and body, strengthening the subtle channels for prana, allowing for a more balanced and harmonious flow of vital energy throughout the system.
This leads to a feeling of inner resilience and self-possession.
Mental & Emotional
Salabhasana, as a backbend, is inherently an uplifting and energizing pose that challenges the mind to overcome inertia and cultivate courage.
The act of lifting the body off the ground, even slightly, requires a mental resolve that translates into greater self-confidence and a willingness to face challenges off the mat.
This conscious effort to expand and lift helps to counteract feelings of lethargy or depression, fostering a more positive and expansive outlook on life.
It's a powerful practice for building mental fortitude and a 'can-do' attitude.
The precise actions and sustained hold in Salabhasana demand a high degree of concentration and mental focus, acting as a potent form of dharana, or single-pointed attention.
As the practitioner refines their efforts and breath, the mind naturally becomes less distracted by external stimuli and internal worries.
This cultivation of present-moment awareness trains the mind to be more disciplined and steady, offering a refuge from mental agitation and fostering a deeper connection to one's inner strength and stillness.
It teaches us to persevere with patience and determination.
Because of Its Shape
backbend
Backbends like Salabhasana are considered invigorating and heart-opening poses that extend the spine and open the front of the body.
Anatomically, this action strengthens the muscles along the posterior aspect of the spine (erector spinae) while lengthening the anterior muscles (abdominals, hip flexors, pectorals).
This creates a balanced strength and flexibility across the torso, counteracting the effects of prolonged sitting and forward-folding postures.
Energetically, backbends are said to stimulate the anahata (heart) and manipura (navel) chakras, cultivating courage, compassion, and a sense of inner power.
The prone position of Salabhasana ensures that the backbend is primarily driven by muscular effort rather than gravity, making it a safe and accessible way to build spinal strength and mobility for beginners.
This controlled engagement allows for a deep understanding of spinal mechanics and proprioception, teaching the body to extend without compression.
From a yogic perspective, this conscious, effortful lifting helps to awaken 'prana vayu,' the upward-moving energy, bringing a sense of lightness, vitality, and expansion to the entire being.
It helps to dissolve mental and emotional blockages that can manifest as stiffness in the upper back and chest.
Fascial Lines
The fascia, that intricate web of connective tissue enveloping every muscle, organ, and bone, plays a crucial role in Salabhasana by transmitting tension and unifying movement throughout the posterior chain.
As you lift your legs and torso, the superficial back line and the spiral line of fascia along the back of the legs and spine are actively engaged and strengthened.
This intelligent engagement helps to remodel fascial patterns, releasing areas of chronic tension and creating greater fluidity and resilience throughout the entire posterior kinetic chain.
Energetically, this opening and strengthening of fascial lines is akin to clearing subtle energy channels (nadis), allowing prana to flow more freely and unimpeded.
Breathing & Respiratory
In Salabhasana, the prone position and the engagement of the back muscles naturally restrict the movement of the abdomen, encouraging a more diaphragmatic and thoracic breath.
This means you'll find your breath expanding more into the side ribs and upper chest, challenging the respiratory muscles to work more efficiently.
This specific breathing pattern helps to strengthen the diaphragm and intercostal muscles, improving overall lung capacity and respiratory endurance.
From a pranic perspective, this focused breath in a backbend helps to uplift and circulate prana throughout the body, fostering a feeling of energetic awakening and mental clarity, preparing the practitioner for more advanced pranayama techniques.
Anatomical Caution
Teachers, always remind students to move with awareness, especially if they have any pre-existing lower back or neck sensitivities.
The tendency can be to 'grip' or overarch, particularly in the lumbar spine or to strain the neck by lifting the head too high.
Encourage students to lengthen through the crown of the head and the heels, distributing the effort evenly, rather than collapsing into the lower back.
A soft blanket under the pelvis can provide comfort and encourage a more even lift, protecting the pubic bone.