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Yoga for Headaches
There are many different kinds of headaches. Some (like tension
headaches and migraines) are fairly common; others (like sinus headaches
or headaches caused by brain tumors) are relatively rare. Various
treatments are recommended for dealing with headaches. Yoga asanas and
breathing can help too, though mostly with tension-type headaches.
Everyone gets a tension headache now and again, but if you suffer from
this type of headache habitually, it's important to consult a doctor or
other health practitioner to treat the pain and work to resolve the
ultimate source of the tension.
When treating a tension headache with asanas and breathing, it's
important to start practicing as soon as possible after you start to
feel the pain. Once the headache is established it will be very
difficult to alleviate.
Here are the yoga positions that can be used to alleviate a headache:
Child’s Pose (Balasana)

1. Kneel on the floor.
Touch your big toes together and sit on your heels, then separate your
knees about as wide as your hips.
2. Exhale and lay your torso down between your thighs.
Broaden your sacrum across the back of your pelvis and narrow your hip
points toward the navel, so that they nestle down onto the inner thighs.
Lengthen your tailbone away from the back of the pelvis while you lift
the base of your skull away from the back of your neck.
3. Lay your hands on the floor alongside your torso, palms
up, and release the fronts of your shoulders toward the floor. Feel how
the weight of the front shoulders pulls the shoulder blades wide across
your back.
4. Balasana is a resting pose. Stay anywhere from 30 seconds
to a few minutes. Beginners can also use Balasana to get a taste of a
deep forward bend, where the torso rests on the thighs. Stay in the pose
from 1 to 3 minutes. To come up, first lengthen the front torso, and
then with an inhalation lift from the tailbone as it presses down and
into the pelvis.
Note: you can do the child’s pose when you get tired, out of
breath, or need to rest. Simply pick up with your exercises again
when refreshed. Child’s pose is also a great way to quickly
alleviate stress at any time.
Downward Facing Dog
Standing Forward Bend
1. Stand in relaxed position with your hands on your hips.
Exhale and bend forward from the hip joints, not from the waist. As you
descend draw the front torso out of the groins and open the space
between the pubis and top sternum. As in all the forward bends, the
emphasis is on lengthening the front torso as you move more fully into
the position.
2. If possible, with your knees straight, bring your palms
or finger tips to the floor slightly in front of or beside your feet, or
bring your palms to the backs of your ankles. If this isn't possible,
cross your forearms and hold your elbows. Press the heels firmly into
the floor and lift the sitting bones toward the ceiling. Turn the top
thighs slightly inward.
3. With each inhalation in the pose, lift and lengthen the
front torso just slightly; with each exhalation release a little more
fully into the forward bend. In this way the torso oscillates almost
imperceptibly with the breath. Let your head hang from the root of the
neck, which is deep in the upper back, between the shoulder blades.
4. This pose can be used as a resting position between the
standing poses. Stay in the pose for 30 seconds to 1 minute. It can also
be practiced as a pose in itself.
5. Don't roll the spine to come up. Instead bring your hands
back onto your hips and reaffirm the length of the front torso. Then
press your tailbone down and into the pelvis and come up on an
inhalation with a long front torso.
Bridge Pose -
Legs Up The Wall -
Corpse Pose
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