Yoga: Benefits of Bridge Pose

Full Moon Bridge at Garvan Gardens is the backdrop for Karen Watson Reeves to demonstrate Bridge Pose.

By Karen Watson Reeves
The location of the photo shoot for this month’s pose should not be a mystery to anyone who is a lover of the beautiful outdoors in the Hot Springs area. It has been on my “yoga pose list” to do bridge pose at the Full Moon Bridge at Garvan Woodland Gardens for a while, and I was fortunate to get to visit the gardens just before its closing due to Covid 19.

Since mid-March when so many places temporarily shut down, work diminished, and social gatherings became a thing of the past, my yoga practice became more important than ever. Bridge Pose has many benefits, as most every yoga pose does, but the fact that it helps calm the body and alleviate stress and mild depression has made it a good one to put into the sequence during the past weeks.

To be able to get the full benefit of calming, it helps to hold the pose for several minutes. A glance at the photo may indicate a certain amount of unreasonableness in holding the pose for more than a couple of breaths. Strength is required to hold this pose, and Bridge Pose is definitely a strength builder, particularly the hamstrings and hip adductors (which we more often focus on stretching), as well as the back, glutes and ankles.

To enable the practitioner to stay in the pose for the calming aspect, a yoga block under the hips to prop on helps to experience the cooling, grounding, releasing of anxiety benefit that the pose can bring. It can be practiced with the legs bent or straight, which in turn opens and stretches the front hip flexors.

Many of us sit for extended periods of time, causing an excessive tightening of the hip flexors and extreme lengthening of the muscles in the lower back. Over time this can lead to imbalances in the skeletal structure and likely pain.

Whether using the yoga block or not, other benefits of Bridge Pose include opening the chest, stretching the neck, shoulders, and spine, and stimulating the organs of the abdomen, lungs, and thyroid. Like several of the yoga poses, Bridge Pose can be modified to make it more challenging. Squeezing the shoulder blades together enables one to lift higher into the bridge, stretching the anterior deltoids and providing a deeper stretch to the entire front of the body. After a time of practicing Bridge Pose, yogis may be ready to lift up into Wheel/Upward Facing Bow Pose. But. . . that is a pose for another day.

Karen Watson Reeves has called Hot Springs home since 2006.  She became a registered yoga teacher and a registered children’s yoga teacher in 2011.  She has taught children and family yoga in many settings, and would welcome an opportunity to help your family stay physically active during this time of quarantine. She owns The Yoga Place, is on the Hot Springs YMCA teaching staff, is an adjunct instructor at National Park College, as well as teaching in several other fabulous venues. www.TheYogaPlaceHS.com.

Share:

Most Popular

Get The Latest Updates

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

No spam, notifications only about Arts, Entertainment & Wellness In Hot Springs, AR.

Categories

On Key

Related Posts

About the Cover . . .  

“Moku Playland”   Photo of Kate Zunick Courtesy of Hot Springs Sister City  Kate Zunick relaxes in one of the most beloved features of the Moku Playland exhibit — a giant wooden “hot springs” tub filled with hundreds of smooth wooden balls inspired by the bubbling thermal waters of Hot Springs.  Hidden somewhere among the

A One-of-a-Kind Wooden Play Experience Arrives in Downtown Hot Springs 

Moku Playland Pop-Up Opens June 1 with Interactive, Screen-Free Fun for Families  Families and visitors to downtown Hot Springs will have the opportunity to experience a unique style of hands-on play this summer as Moku Playland opens June 1 for a special month-long pop-up at 831 Central Avenue.  Open Thursday-Tuesday

World Championship Bathtub Races Set for June 6 

The Hot Springs Fire Department entry nears the finish line in the 2025 Running of the Tubs. — Courtesy Visit Hot Springs  The lineup is complete for the 2026 Stueart Pennington World Championship Running of the Tubs bathtub races through historic downtown Hot Springs. The race starts at 9 a.m. on Saturday,

Yoga: Two Months at The Yoga Place 

Where are we?” Missy Conry and Melissa Stevens  By Missy Conry & Melissa StevensCan you spot where we took this picture? Take a selfie in front of the same mural and text to 501-651-0545 for a free drop-in class! You can also text us for hints if you need a clue.  As we reflect