Muscular joint actions
Spine
Concentric contraction or passively lengthening
Erector spinae
Lower limbs
Front leg Back leg
Concentric
contraction
Eccentric
contraction
Concentric
contraction
Eccentric
contraction
Passively
lengthening
To extend knee:
Articularis genu,
vastii
To allow hip
flexion:
Hamstrings at hip
joint, gluteus
maximus
To level and
center pelvis
over feet and
to maintain
balance side to
side:
Gluteus medius
and minimus,
piriformis,
superior and
inferior gemel-
lus, intrinsic
and extrinsic
muscles of foot
To extend knee:
Articularis genu,
vastii
To maintain
arches of
foot without
inhibiting
dorsiflexion
of ankle:
Intrinsic muscles
of foot
To allow hip flex-
ion without
dropping back
leg forward:
Hamstrings at hip
joint, gluteus
medius (pos-
terior fibers),
adductor
magnus, glu-
teus maximus
To allow outer
ankle to
lengthen with-
out collapsing
inner knee or
inner foot:
Peroneals
Soleus, gas-
trocnemius
Parsvottanasana (continued)
Notes
The action of the legs in parsvottanasana is almost the same as in utthita trikonasana (page
111), and this asana can be a challenge to balance in for the same reason—the narrowness
of the base and the need for the outer hip muscles to be both long and active. Additionally,
if you are accustomed to using your eyes to help you balance, this position with the head
rolled forward might be interesting.
This forward-bending action is more intense in the hamstrings of the front leg than utta-
nasana because of the asymmetry of the pose: The back leg’s position directs the flexion
more specifically into the front leg hip joint, and mobility in the spine can compensate less
for lack of mobility in the leg. (This is seen in an even more extreme form in hanumanasana
[page 156].)