Yoga Best Practices for Physical Pain Relief

By Linsey Birusingh

By Linsey Birusingh Yoga Medicine Therapeutic Specialist E-RYT 1000

Pain is your body’s signal to pay attention. It is calling you to care for yourself. Whatever affliction you may be currently experiencing, it’s important to remember that most times, pain can be mitigated and ephemeral. And while pain is experienced differently and at a range of severities, yoga principles can aid in your overall quality of life. Here are a few ways I’ve found research supports yoga for pain relief.

1. Pin point your pain.

It sounds obvious, but many lack the body awareness to actually tend in the current moment to their body’s calls for relief. Pain shows up in the body if it is phyiscal, emotional, or spiritual. It manifests in tension and distress that can be treated through somatic exercises. For example, many of my clients carry their stress in painful headaches at the base of the skull. Stretching and compressing the area not only unwinds the hardened knots of fascia, but also the nervous system, lowering their stress levels.

If you can mindfully scan your state each day, you create better body awareness. Now you can consciously tend to exactly which areas want stretched right now. You can also be cognizant of cushioning injuries that do not need certain poses. In any yoga class, you are welcome to modify poses with blocks and mat folds so as to not deepen your affliction. You are also welcome to add movements that a teacher may not call out if you know your body is calling for them.

2. Counteract habitual pose patterns.

Many times, we are afraid to move because it will intensify pain. Some of my clients sit in a chair all day long because movement is hard. Yet what you practice, you become. Your body remodels muscle and fascia every second, and it will adapt to your lifestyle. You do not want your body to become restricted to that chair pose.

Be gentle with yourself, but finding poses that stretch and use muscles in different forms can not only make your body feel easier to live inside, but create more fluid pathways for blood circulation and nerve pathways. A well rounded chair yoga class, yin sequence or vinyasa helps touch points in the body you may not even realize are related to your overall pain experience. Many physical points, even if they are not the exact point of disease, are directly responsible and correlated to other body points. Their release can actually create a global nervous system relaxation, or ease pain because they have been compensating for your injury.

3. Range of motion

Don’t be afraid to expand your movements to their fullest expression. The less range of motion you practice, the more rigid your physical body becomes. In your yoga practice, the bigger and more bold you can be, the more pliable and free your tissues become. Rigid tissues inhibit nerve signaling, lymph drainage and blood flow. Free these pathways not only with these bold expressions, but lots of hydration.

4. Compress and stretch counter points.

Many physical points, even if they are not the exact point of disease, are directly responsible and correlated to other body points. Their release can actually create a global nervous system relaxation, or ease pain because they have been compensating for your injury.

Many clients come with back pain that persists even with back stretches. This is due to tight, compensating trigger points that actually exist in the front abdominal muscles. It may seem counter-intuitive, yet stretching and compressing these opposite points helps relieve the back. The tapestry of your muscles are also not compartments. Your calf muscles are connected through strong fascia to your hamstrings, back, neck and feet. Find a professional who knows these myofascial trains and tend to them in your yoga practice. There are great resources online on trigger points, counter points and anatomy trains if you do your own research.

5. Tax your body in a way that gets you out of your comfort zone but does not exacerbate pain.

When were not feeling well, the last thing we want to do is move. But pushing yourself on the mat in a loving way disposes of old energy, making room for new nourishment. Equally important, it clears your mental landscape and helps process emotion. Our body is constantly renewing. What you do to detoxify and nourish today, whether body, mind or spirit, will make a difference tomorrow.

6. Meditate on non-judgmental awareness.

When pain persists, its hard to think of anything else. Meditation helps! Here is an easy meditation I prescribe for clients with pain:

Find a comfortable nest to be completely still for 10 minutes. Find a few deep, releasing breaths. As you come into full exhales, start to notice a place in the body that feels good. Sit with that focus, not judging or labeling the feeling for 10 breaths. Next, find a place in the body that feels neutral: not great, not painful, but just “there”. Be with that focus for 10 breaths. Finally, find a place in the body of discomfort. Focus on it, without judgement but with loving kindness and compassion for ten breaths. As you take a few relaxing last breaths, feel those spots all at once, in gratitude for the body and it’s ability to heal and change throughout time.

This exercise helps us emotionally regulate. If done regularly, our patience and perception of body changes for the better. We learn that our current state is not the state we will be in tomorrow, and that we can compassionately listen to our bodies and work with them for optimal living.

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About Kirk: 

Kirk was working 80-hour weeks and wearing his shoulders as earrings when he found yoga in 2005. Forever the competitive athlete, he loved the physicality of yoga. When the spiritual and philosophical side of yoga were exposed to him, Kirk was hooked. Yoga provided him with what other activities couldn’t -- the ability to foster the benefits of practice both on and off of the mat. Yoga was something that Kirk could bring into all aspects of his life. 

Kirk knows that yoga can be intimidating, so he crafts a class that is playful and inviting, while still being challenging and safe. His creatively planned classes build strength and flexibility in your body and mind while establishing clarity, giving you more confidence to overcome obstacles in your life, and keeping you injury-free. His classes are themed with a message that is relatable and will inspire you to take it with you off your mat. Kirk has been teaching yoga since 2008 and lead his first teacher training in 2012. Where Kirk truly shines is in coaching, developing and bringing out the best in others.  

Kirk enjoys traveling (40+ countries to date!), snowboarding, and cherishes time with his wife and two daughters. 

About Christen: 

Christen Bakken’s yoga journey began in 1998 in a Bikram studio that provided a safe and secure place to practice. She saw the yoga mat as a place to remember her purpose and a place to play. As she continued her studies and began her journey to teaching in 2006, Christen infused yoga classes with devotion and the yoga mat became a place of personal transformation and healing. Her classes are filled with laughter, song, sweat, and usually heart openers. In 2013, Christen began training yoga teachers. This is the place where she finds the most joy - in community with folks looking to grow and be of greater service in their homes, on their mats, and in the world. Over the years, she has led trainings in Denver, the Midwest, Florida, and now abroad. She has trained in continuing education modules, 200-hour, 300-hour, and 500-hour programs. Beyond the mat, Christen is a passionate adventure seeker - she loves to bike, snowboard, and spend time with her husband and pups. She sees each day as a blessing and hopes to remind all who interact with her of this truth.  

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Yoga Best Practices for Physical Pain Relief Info