Your Spine, Your Yoga : Developing stability and mobility for your spine

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Your Spine, Your Yoga : Developing stability and mobility for your spine

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780968766552
  • DDC分類 613.7046

Full Description

Your Spine, Your Yoga is arguably the first book that looks at the spine from
both the Western anatomical/biomechanical point
of view and the modern yoga perspective. It is filled with detail, discussion, illustrations, and practical
advice for spines of all types. This emphasis on variety is welcome and necessary: no two spines are exactly
alike, and no two people have the same biology and biography. What your spine is able to do may be vastly
different from what other yoga students' or teachers' spines can do.


The human spine is unique in its
structure and function. Primarily, it provides stability through the core of our body, allowing forces
to be transmitted from the upper body (arms and shoulders) to the lower body (pelvis and legs) and
vice versa. Secondarily, the spine allows tremendous range of movement. Unfortunately, in modern yoga
practice we find the primacy of these two functions reversed, with flexibility prized over stability.
This focus on spinal mobility comes at a grave cost to many students. Stability is lost, and when that
happens, dysfunction and pain often follow.


Just as all tissues and areas of the body need a healthy
amount of stress to regain and maintain optimal health, so too our spine needs the appropriate levels
of stress to remain functional throughout our lives. How we choose to exercise the spine makes a
difference, though. Knowing the way the spine is built, specifically, how your spine is built, will
allow you to tailor your exercises wisely to match your goals.


Your Spine, Your Yoga is the second
book in the Your Body, Your Yoga series and focuses on the axial body--the core, from the sacral complex,
which includes the pelvis, sacrum, and sacroiliac joint, through the lumbar and thoracic segments of
the spine, to the cervical complex, which includes the neck and head. The structural components of
each segment are examined: from the bones, to the joints, ligaments, fascia, tendons, muscles, and
even the neurological and blood systems. The range and implications of human variations are presented,
as well as the ways these variations may affect individual yoga practices. The sources of restrictions
to movement are investigated through answering the question "What Stops Me?" The answers presented
run through a spectrum, beginning with various types of tensile resistance to three kinds of compressive
resistance.


Whether the reader is a novice to yoga, anatomy, or both, or a seasoned practitioner with
an in-depth knowledge in these fields, this book will be valuable. For the novice, there are easily
understood illustrations and photographs, as well as sidebars highlighting the most important topics.
For the anatomy geek, other sidebars focus on the complexity of the topic, with hundreds of references
provided for further investigation. For the yoga teacher, sidebars suggest how to bring this knowledge
into the classroom. Your Spine, Your Yoga can be used as a resource when specific questions arise,
as a textbook to be studied in detail, or as a fascinating coffee-table book to be browsed at leisure
for topics of current interest.

Contents

Table of Contents for Your Spine, Your Yoga

Gratitude

How to read this book

Preface

Foreword

Summary of key concepts

Intentions

Chapter 1: The axial body

Overview of the axial body

Axial landmarks
Spinal segments
Variations of the spine
Curves of the spine
Posture perfect?
Bones of the axis
Ligaments and fascia
Movements of the spine
The kinds of stress in the spine
Spinal nerves and neurodynamics

Overview summary

Chapter 2: The sacral complex

Form

The architecture of the sacral complex
Bones and cartilage
Joints and ligaments
Muscles of the sacral complex
Fascial trains of the sacral complex

Function: Application in yoga postures

Normal ranges of motion within the sacral complex
Stressing and supporting the sacroiliac joint in yoga postures
Normal ranges of motion of the whole sacral complex

Sacral complex summary

Chapter 3: The lumbar segment

Form

The architecture of the lumbar segment
The bones of the lumbar segment
Axial fascia and muscles
Lumbar and thoracic muscles

Function: application in yoga postures

Normal ranges of motion
Sources of tension
Sources of compression
Variation in ranges of motion for flexion and extension
Yoga and the lumbar spine

The lumbar spine summary

The thoracic spinal segment

Form

The architecture of the thoracic spine
The bones of the thorax
Joints and ligaments
Thoracic fascia
Thoracic muscles

Function: application in yoga postures

Normal ranges of motion
Sources of tension
Sources of compression
Variation in ranges of motion for twists and side bends
Biomechanics of the breath and its variations

Thoracic spine summary

The Cervical Complex

Form

The Architecture of the cervical spine
The bones of the cervical complex
Joints and ligaments
Muscles of the cervical complex
Fascia of the cervical complex

Function: application in yoga postures

Normal ranges of motion
Movements and their restrictions: tensions and compressions
Variation in ranges of motion

Cervical spine summary

Volume 3: Summary

Major Sidebars

It's important

The flaw of averages

The myth of the static ideal

Where is the neutral spine?

The myth of the static ideal

What does "stable" mean?

Early morning yoga and yoga after sitting

Stress, stretch, flexibility, mobility and hypermobility

Defining some terms

Yoga poses, sitting postures and sleeping position can overstretch nerves

Yoga and the sacral complex

In standing yoga postures, should we tuck the tailbone?

Defining the core muscles

Stiffness and stability

Our orientation to gravity affects the amount of stress on the spine

Different yoga postures stress the vertebral discs in different ways

Avoid twisting the spine when it is flexed or extended and under load

For deeper backbends, relax the extensor muscles!

Bracing and Spacing

Building endurance

Of bent knees and straight spines

Maintaining our vital capacity as we age

Slowing the breath is better than deepening the breath

Galileo, scaling laws and Headstand

The vertebral arteries

As you get older, be careful of weight bearing neck movements!

Returning the head to neutral

Shoulder stand—a high risk, low reward posture

Headstand—a high risk, low reward posture

It's complicated

Statistics

Approximation and Distraction

Shear is stressful

Naming the nerves and their routes

The sciatic nerve

Force closure and form closure

Details of the sacrum

The perineum

The ways the sacrum moves

Does the sacrum nutate or counternutate in backbends?

Is it possible to therapeutically adjust the sacrum?

Changing the alignment of your hips before twisting

Snaps, cracks and pops—noisy sacrum

Lumbar lordosis in sports

Variations between the lumbar vertebrae

The spines of contortionists

Deep fascia and aponeuroses

The strength and stiffness of the spinal ligaments

A functional view of the erector spinae

The strength of the back muscles

How can our spines lift heavy loads?

How much stress can our spines tolerate?

Variations of the thoracic vertebrae

The diaphragm pulls and pushes on the heart

Membranes and ligaments between the skull and neck

Coupled movements

The neck does not move as one unit

Whiplash and sports trauma

Note to teachers

Learning to sense the spine

To hinge or not to hinge?

A philosophy for counterposes

Moola bandha and Kegel exercises

Can you feel relative movements of the ilia or of the sacrum?

Stress, twists and the sacroiliac joint

Don't be fooled by the apparent curve in the lower back!

We cannot isolate and activate individual muscles

Watch your students!

Keep watching your students!

A flat back does not create a neutral spine

Strengthening the bones of the spine

Combatting hyperkyphosis

Sometimes it is okay to do only one side of a pose!

Variation in breast size will affect some women's yoga practice

Movement can enhance breath, breath can enhance movement—sometimes!

Jalandhara bandha

Web appendices

Measuring the curves of the spine

Body size and spinal curves

Orientation of the facets

Creep and counterposes

Thickness of the discs and vertebral bodies

Hypermobility and Yin Yoga

Spinal biotensegrity

Variations in the shapes and sizes the auricular area of the sacroiliac joint

Pelvic parameters and variations

Accessory joints of the sacral complex

Myofascial meridians

Sacral, low back and neck pain and problems

Moment arms, torque and force

Wedging of the vertebrae and discs

Alignment of the spinous processes

Prying open the anterior discs in deep backbends

The thoracolumbar fascial train

More on the strength of the spinal ligaments

Folding forward with arms overhead increases stress in the spine

Axial rotation and lateral flexion can create flexion and extension

How yoga affects our blood chemistry

Other anterior neck muscles

Muscles of the face and jaw

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