
Samatvam Asana—the Tiptoe Pose
Yoga Journal Master Class
By Ganga White
March, 2008
On Your Toes
An ancient, oft-quoted, definition of yoga from
the Bhagavad Gita is samatvam yoga uchyate
(II.48), or “yoga is balance.” This
verse emphasizes the central role of equilibrium
both in yoga practice and in daily life. As students
of yoga we seek to find physical, mental, and spiritual
balance—and harmony—in our lives. However,
we often objectify the idea of balance by using
it as a noun. We say that we try to “attain”
balance in our lives. But balance is not a static
place to reach. Like an active verb, balance
constantly balances and rebalances itself
each moment in a moving equilibrium of relationships.
us? itself? each moment. Balancing is a journey;
not a destination.
Your personal journey into balance will not be
found by following systematized or formulated modes
of living and being; you will discover it by developing
a sensitive awareness that responds and adjusts
to the ever-shifting moment. Instead of seeking
to attain balance, you will fare better
by learning the art of balancing. Balancing involves
correcting errors and then, in turn, involves correcting
any overcorrection of those errors. Think about
it in your asana practice: when you start moving
or falling too far in one direction, you have to
exert a bit of effort toward the other pole. You
must balance and rebalance yourself as your ongoing
corrections seek a natural harmony with your breath.
Learn to let your breath guide you toward a relaxed
and responsive state of being in your poses as well
as in your daily life. Notice how even, full inhalations
and exhalations create a supple and centered body,
while shortened or suspended breaths give way to
sensations of rigidity and disconnection. When you
refine the ability, to let your breath evenly and
to balance and rebalance yourself, you will become
more stable, and your movements and adjustments
in each pose will become subtler. To an external
observer you may appear to be still or “in
balance,” but from the inside you will be
able to feel the continual adjustments within this
stability. You will feel the constant interplay
of movement within stillness and stillness within
movement.
All balancing postures provide an opportunity to
learn and experience the dynamic nature of balance.
Try a basic pose like Vrksasana (Tree Pose), a seemingly
simple pose where you balance on one foot. No matter
how still or statue-like you become, you will notice
that you must continually listen, feel, and react
responsively to each moment or you’ll lose
your balance. Creating harmony in your life is similar:
It implies tuning in, listening within and without,
and working in concert with yourself and others.
The constant ability to observe and harmonize internal
awareness with outer actions through a steady breath
and with the vigilance that we develop in these
yogic postures becomes an invaluable asset in navigating
the changing seas of life.
More challenging balance poses, such as Samatvam,
turn up the volume so you can hear the dynamics
involved in balancing loud and clear. To do Samatvam,
the Tiptoe Pose, you begin in a squatting position
by bending one leg and supporting it behind the
other knee while sitting on your heel. All the body’s
weight and entire center of balance must be maintained
on the tiptoes on a raised ankle. This posture creates
a very tricky physical form to balance in with only
a single, very small contact point with the earth.
It requires great focus and attention to maintain
equilibrium. The technical difficulty of the posture’s
strength and flexibility challenges, combined with
the stillness of focus and constant subtleties of
adjustment the balance requires, make this asana
exhilarating to hold for even a few breaths. As
you work on the poses in the sequence that follows
don’t worry about being able to maintain perfect
balance right away. Instead, use these poses as
an opportunity to explore how balance works and
be watchful of very subtle ways that your body moves
to find balance. Your strength as well as your ability
to tune into and adjust to small changes in equilibrium
will improve your balance over time.
Pose 1. Vrksasana (Tree Pose)
With regular practice you can greatly improve and
refine your ability to balance. A good way to warm
up for Samatvam is by practicing Tree Pose and its
variations. Before you begin, be sure that you have
a solid foundation to practice on. Remember that
creating a solid foundation is fundamental to all
balancing poses. Whether the base of your pose is
on your hands or feet, you’ll need a hard
or firm surface to stand on, like a wood or tiled
floor. Most carpeted surfaces are too soft, and
sometimes even a thin yoga mat can be too unstable.
Stand with your feet together in Tadasana (Mountain
Pose). Let your breath become even and rhythmic
to help create mental focus and equilibrium. When
you enter a balancing posture, move very slowly,
with complete attention, and not any faster than
you can maintain stability. Try not to think of
the finished pose, instead see that each movement
is steady and complete in itself.
From Mountain Pose, press your hands together in
prayer position, or Namaste, at the chest and gently
fix your gaze on a point on the floor a short distance
in front of you. This dristhi, or gaze point, will
help you maintain your focus. From there, shift
your balance onto your right foot, then lift your
left foot off the floor and press it into the root
of your right leg. Hold the pose quietly and steadily,
keeping your gaze point fixed and your breath even.
Repeat on the other side, then practice changing
sides a couple of times while carefully shifting
your balance through the transitions, which will
hone your awareness and abilities.
Tree Pose can be held quietly and passively like
this, focusing mainly on steadiness and balance,
or you can practice it more dynamically. When your
Tree is steady, you can begin to intensify the pose
by activating more muscle sets. Firmly press your
hands together, tighten the buttocks, tuck your
tailbone, and lift the chest to build strength and
add a challenge. You can also actively extend your
folded palms overhead, like limbs of a tree growing
toward the light, to further increase the lively
expression of this elegant asana.
A final and challenging variation of Vrksasana
is to slowly come up on your tiptoes and practice
maintaining a steady balance. This Tiptoe Tree variation
will strengthen your ankles and prepare you for
Samatvam Asana. Keep your standing foot pointing
straight ahead and try lifting up and down a few
times from flat foot to extended ankle to further
tone and strengthen the ankle muscles.
To experiment with another threshold of balancing
awareness, try holding the Tree with your eyes closed.
There are three primary sensory systems used for
balancing: visual perception, auditory perception,
and the proprioceptive sites distributed throughout
the body. Proprioceptors are sensory receptors,
found in muscles, tendons, joints, and the inner
ear, that detect the motion or position of the body.
You can experiment by closing your eyes and trying
to touch your nose with the tip of one finger. These
sensory receptors are what are telling you the position
of your body parts. By closing your eyes and shutting
off external visual perception, you can increaseyour
ability to listen to the breath and your proprioceptors
to improve the function of your inner balancing
systems With repeated practice your ability to listen
and navigate toward balance will emerge from within.
Start by coming into the Tree, choosing a dhristi
on the floor close to the tips of your toes. Then
become as steady as possible with even breathing.
Slowly let the eyelids relax and fall like soft
curtains. Don’t shut them quickly or close
them all the way, let them rest with a slight opening
at the bottom so that you can still use a small
portion of your visual perception for balance. Then,
after a few more even breaths, withdraw even this
remaining awareness and use of your eyes by closing
them all the way. This practice will help you learn
to develop and use your inner balancing mechanisms.
You’ll get the hang of this with some experimentation
and your inner balance will steadily improve.
Pose 2. Squatting Tiptoe Balance
 |
2 feet, tiptoe
balance |
Front view |
Squat, side
view |
This pose will strengthen your ankles and allow
you to experiment with balance in a squatting position.
Come into a squat with your feet flat on the floor
if possible. (If you are unable to squat with flat
feet, place a block or a folded mat under your heels.)
Keep your feet parallel with the inner edges touching,
or if you need to, bring them to hip distance apart.
You may need to extend your arms in front of your
knees at first to counterbalance your weight. Press
your hands at the chest in Namaste and hold the
pose for a few breaths. Next, rise up on the tiptoes
of both feet, sitting on your heels, with your weight
propped on each sit bone. Hold this for several
steady, even breaths. Rise up and down a few times
to further strengthen the ankles: when you rise
up, your upper thighs and knees will come down parallel
to the floor; when you go back to Squat, the knees
will point upward. You can also try holding the
Squatting Tiptoe with closed eyes, as explained
above, and you may find it easier to balance here
than it was in the Tree.
Pose 3. Twisting Tiptoe Pose
|
Twisting Tiptoe (aka Tiptoe
Twist) |
Adding a twist into this asana is a good variation
of the Squatting Tiptoe because it requires heightened
balance awareness to make this movement and it gives
a nice rotational adjustment to the spine while
opening your hips for Samatvam. Come into
the raised Tiptoe Pose with ankles extended. Steady
yourself while balancing on both feet. Now twist
slowly to your right as you breathe out. Bring the
back of your left upper arm over the right thigh
and press it against the outside edge of that thigh.
Press your palms firmly together and lift your chest
to increase extension and the space between your
vertebrae while twisting. Turn your head naturally
to the right and find a comfortable gaze point on
the floor or side wall. Hold for twenty to thirty
seconds, or to your own comfort level, and then
change sides.
A further variation of the basic twisting squat
known as Noose Pose, or Pasasana, involves wrapping
the forward arm in front of your shinbones while
taking the back arm around behind you and clasping
hands. This type of binding requires considerable
flexibility and I generally caution against risking
the arm lock in twisting poses. Even for very flexible
people, such binding exerts an undesirable outward
torque on the shoulder cuff that can lead to instability
and injury. Binding would be even riskier in a balancing
Tiptoe twist. You twist just as effectively and
beneficially by pressing the hands and lifting the
chest as you rotate.
Pose 4. Tiptoe Pose (Samatvam Asana)
Now you’re ready to move into Samatvam Asana.
From the squatting position up on your tiptoes,
place your right heel toward the center of your
pelvis and sit on the heel. Where you press the
heel will depend on your anatomy, so experiment
until you find a placement that’s comfortable
for you. Most people are able to press the heel
against the tailbone or center it in the perineum
area to distribute the weight between both sitting
bones. Some people find they must keep the heel
to one side supporting their weight right on the
sitting bone.
Once you’ve found a suitable place for your
heel, cross one leg over the opposite thigh and
support it just behind the knee by lifting your
right foot off the floor and, with the knee bent,
externally rotating the leg and placing your left
ankle just below your right knee. . If possible,
keep the shinbone parallel to the floor. While coming
into Samatvam, prop yourself up by keeping your
fingertips, of one or both hands, on the floor to
the side of your thighbones. Then you can slowly
lift your hands off the floor, using them like training
wheels as you learn to balance. Try to hold the
pose for a few breaths and then changes sides. Changing
sides back a forth a few times after holding can
help you improve. Keeping your breathing smooth
and even improves concentration and balance.
Samatvam Variations:
Once you are able to balance on the ball of either
foot, explore the three different arm-hand positions
available for this posture. The first works a bit
like a tight-rope walker’s weighted balancing
bar: You reach the arms straight out to each side
and pointed downward with palms up and the hands
in chin mudra—index finger touching the thumb
with the other fingers extended outward.
Next, try bringing the hands closer to your balancing
centers with palms folded at the chest in Namaste.
Lastly, extend the energy of balance skyward by
raising your arms overhead with palms in Namaste.
Each of these arm positions develops a slightly
different balance awareness and it is enjoyable
to do them all. Work up to holding Tiptoe Pose for
several slow breaths, or about thirty seconds on
each side. You may also experiment with closing
your eyes.
|
| |
Palms in Namaste |
Straight leg, arm-hand in
Chin Mudra |
|
For the final variation in this series, you will
extend one leg forward while in a Tiptoe balance.
Start in Tiptoe Pose on both feet. Support yourself
with your hands on each side, extend your left leg
and sit on your right heel, pressing it in the same
spot you used in the previous pose. Extend strong
lines of energy through your foot by reaching the
ankle forward and flexing the toes back. As you
steady yourself, balance with your arms down and
out toward the sides with hands in Chin Mudra. You
can also hold with your palms folded in Namaste
at your heart center. For another variation clasp
the big toe or outside edge of the extended foot
with the hand from the same side and balance with
the other hand down and out in Chin Mudra.
Enjoy the equilibrium you discover!
Maintaining balance and equilibrium is one of the
precious goals in yoga. This challenging pose of
equilibrium can help you recognize that balance
is not a fixed place at which you arrive, but a
journey of constant adjustment, sensitivity, and
responsiveness to the changing circumstances of
each moment. Our busy, modern lives cause many of
us to seek to reestablish wholeness through exercise,
right eating, and inner work. It is all too easy
to overfill our days with constant input and activity
and all too rarely take the time to tune in to the
balance present in the natural world around us.
An integral part of the teachings at White Lotus
emphasizes the great lessons we learn about the
nature of balance by meditating in and observing
the balance of nature.
Hatha yoga, the yoga of Sun and Moon, reminds us
that many opposites naturally balance each other.
Our breath constantly balances our existence with
the greater equilibriums of nature and life, and
reminds us of our interconnectedness with all things..
By practicing balancing poses, guided by the dance
of inward and outward currents in the flow of breath,
we can learn to become aware of and to balance faith
with questioning, pushing through with backing off,
control with surrender, left with right, back bending
with forward bending, upward moving energy with
downward energy, softness with firmness, strength
with flexibility, heating with cooling, activity
with rest, and masculine with feminine--to name
a few of the important polarities that inform and
guide our lives.
The breath is a constant reminder of balancing
the inward and outward, expansion and contraction,
filling and emptying, assimilation and elimination,
the outer with the inner and the breath continually
reminds us of our connection with all things and
of the balance the breath is always creating.
Samatvam asana, the Tiptoe Pose, dramatizes the
interplay of the stillness of focus and motionlessness
in harmony with the constant movement and adjustment
that balancing requires. The challenges this pose
and its variations present give us ample opportunity
to enhance our awareness of balancing dynamics and
to rehearse our life skills for harmony.
Ganga
White is author of Yoga
Beyond Belief—Insights to Awaken and Deepen
Your Practice and co-director of White Lotus Yoga
Foundation retreat. www.whitelotus.org