Question about yoga

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First thing--- anyone else get sore wrists/hands? sweaty feet that make it hard to keep a grip? I tried a couple online vids today and I found I usually had to release the pose I was holding due to one of these things. Frustrating!!!!!!!

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  • mlb929
    mlb929 Posts: 1,974 Member
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    Are you using a yoga mat? That seems to keep any issues of slipping from occurring for me. I do it barefoot as well, not in socks. They do sell grippy gloves and socks if you need them, I think Target carries them too. As far as sore wrists or hands, you will get used to it, it's working flexibility and strengths in those areas it should be better in no time.
  • MissNations
    MissNations Posts: 513 Member
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    If you have the option, I would take a few classes first so that you know you are doing the poses correctly.
  • ChristySeeksBalance
    ChristySeeksBalance Posts: 43 Member
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    I had both those problems. It took a while for my wrists to get stronger, but once they did they stopped hurting. My feet sliding got better when I was stronger too, but to be honest what helped even more is I started folding my yoga mat. I fold it under a few inches in the front, a few in the back, so that when i'm doing down dog my hands are on the double padded part in the front (which also helps my wrists), and my feet are against where it starts to double in the back. It's a slight adjustment, but I found it was enough to stop the slip.
  • dward2011
    dward2011 Posts: 416 Member
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    but to be honest what helped even more is I started folding my yoga mat. I fold it under a few inches in the front, a few in the back, so that when i'm doing down dog my hands are on the double padded part in the front (which also helps my wrists), and my feet are against where it starts to double in the back. It's a slight adjustment, but I found it was enough to stop the slip.


    ^^ GENIUS!!!!
  • littlewords
    littlewords Posts: 43
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    You can also do a modified version of downward facing dog - I believe it is called dolphin? - in which you place your forearms on the floor, rather than using your hands. I found that this helped me somewhat when I was having a hard time with hand/wrist soreness.
  • clariangel
    clariangel Posts: 156 Member
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    I've been taking yoga classes twice a week for over a year now. And I did get sore hands and wrists at the beginning. Eventually, my hands and wrists got stronger, and now there is no issue there. I sometimes get sweaty enough to where my hands and feet slide around. but just wipe down with a towel and you should be fine. And use a mat if you are not. A mat will really help with the sliding. good luck!
  • jennifermcornett
    jennifermcornett Posts: 159 Member
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    I agree. The wrists you will definitely get used to. I have sweaty feet myself, but it's all better with a yoga mat (nothing fancy, just the cheapo kind at WalMart). :)
  • Skeels
    Skeels Posts: 929 Member
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    I wear my Vibram Komodos during Yoga and they give me great grip in all of the poses.
  • HauteP1nk
    HauteP1nk Posts: 2,139 Member
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    I think as you progress you will get stronger and these ailments will go away (for the most part).

    I do like the suggestion about double folding the yoga mat though. :)
  • LaurieEReid
    LaurieEReid Posts: 273
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    I had the sliding problem a lot because I sweat so much (my instructor is kind enough to say that it's because I'm breathing properly). I got one of those suede-like towels to go over the mat and problem solved.
  • djtessatessa
    djtessatessa Posts: 54 Member
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    for sore wrists: make sure your fingers are spread wide and you are dispersing your weight through your fingers and not the ball of your hand, this should take some pressure off your wrists

    for slipping: invest in a yoga mat towel, even in hot yoga where sweat is pouring off me i never slip

    hope that helps!
  • chocolateandpb
    chocolateandpb Posts: 453 Member
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    I have had that problem and found that using a Yogitoes towel on top of my mat helps a lot with my hands and feet slip-sliding around in a pool of my own sweat. Sometimes I'll also use two yoga mats for extra padding for my joints; I'm really bony in some places (like my hipbones, my spine, and my tailbone is still sore after being dislocated six months ago) and having that extra cushion helps a lot. As someone else said, as you get stronger you won't have the wrist and hand pain anymore.
  • Silverkittycat
    Silverkittycat Posts: 1,997 Member
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    I don't know which positions are causing the wrist pain but here's an article from Yoga Journal that might help -
    We ask our wrists for strength and fexibility in yoga. Here are some pointers for keeping these complex joints safe and for rehabbing them if they've been strained.
    By Julie Gudmestad

    Almost every yoga class includes one or two people who complain of wrist problems. Perhaps their difficulties began with long hours at a computer keyboard, or with a hard fall on an outstretched hand, or even with doing asanas. Whatever the cause, the problem may be exacerbated by bearing weight on the hands in yoga.

    Yet such weight bearing is a very important part of asana practice. If you've ever had a wrist problem, you know how much it can interfere with your yoga. Wrist injuries can be especially demoralizing if you prefer a vinyasa-based style, in which you place weight on the hands over and over again as you flow through the classic Sun Salutation series—which includes Plank Pose, Chaturanga Dandasana (Four-Limbed Staff Pose), Urdhva Mukha Svanasana (Upward-Facing Dog Pose), and Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing Dog Pose). If your wrists are strained, such asanas can cause you pain and further injury. Fortunately, a careful and gradual approach to increasing wrist flexibility and strength can help most students avoid problems—or rehabilitate the wrist if necessary.

    A Vulnerable Marvel
    Weight bearing on the arms seems to bring out the wrist's vulnerability. After all, the wrist is a relatively small joint, and a lot of rather delicate tissues are packed into this small area. These tissues include ligaments that knit the wrist bones together, as well as tendons that connect the forearm muscles to the fingers and help give the fingers their remarkable dexterity. Strain or irritation in these tendons can be a major factor in wrist pain.

    To understand what causes this kind of pain, it's useful to consider the structure and function of a normal wrist. The wrist helps with control of the fine motor activities of the fingers and thumb by positioning and stabilizing the hand, which allows us to accomplish uniquely human endeavors like writing, drawing, and sewing. Most of the wrist's movement occurs at the juncture of the radius (one of the two forearm bones) and several of the carpal bones, which sit deep in the heel of the hand. Some movement also occurs at the junctures between the individual carpal bones.

    The movements of the wrist include abduction (bending the thumb side of the hand toward the thumb side of the forearm), adduction (bending the little-finger side of the hand toward the little-finger side of the forearm), flexion, and extension. In yoga, by far the most important of these—and probably the one most likely to bring you grief—is extension. To feel this wrist movement, sit in a chair with armrests and position one of your forearms on an armrest, palm facing the floor. **** your hand up, pointing your fingers toward the ceiling. Your wrist is now in extension. If you let your hand drape over the end of the armrest and your fingers point toward the floor, your wrist will be in flexion.

    Most likely, you spend a lot of time every day with your wrist in mild extension. The hand has its most powerful grip in this alignment, and this position is the one we use most often in daily activities. So your wrist probably spends very little time in full flexion or full extension. Since the wrist, like any joint, will lose any part of its range of motion that isn't used regularly, most people gradually lose the ability to move easily and safely into full wrist extension (a 90-degree angle between the hand and forearm).

    But as soon as you take a yoga pose in which you bear most or all of your weight on your hands, you demand extension from your wrists. Several of the postures in Sun Salutation—Plank, Chaturanga Dandasana, Urdhva Mukha Svanasana—require full extension, so performing the series over and over can put a cumulatively heavy load on the wrists. Arm balances like Bakasana (Crane Pose) and Adho Mukha Vrksasana (Handstand) add insult to injury by pressing all of your body weight into your wrists while they are fully extended. Combining extreme range of motion with a heavy load and multiple repetitions can easily add up to strain.
    Under such conditions, it shouldn't be too surprising if the wrists send up a red flag: pain. I believe that a substantial part of yoga practitioners' wrist pain is caused by soft-tissue strain that occurs when the ligaments and tendons are forced into extension beyond their customary range.

    Wrist Rx
    If your wrists have become sore from practicing poses in which you bear weight on your hands, you may need to eliminate these poses for a while to allow the inflamed tissues to heal. It will probably take several weeks for the pain and soreness to subside; then you can begin a program of gently stretching the wrists and gradually reintroducing weight bearing.

    Before resuming the poses that require 90 degrees of extension—or before embarking on them, if you're a beginning yoga practitioner—it's a good idea to check the range of extension of your wrists. You can do this by coming to your hands and knees with the heels of your hands directly under your shoulders. Your wrists are now at 90 degrees of extension. Are they completely comfortable in this position? If not, you should work to gently and gradually increase your wrist extension.

    An easy way to do this is to put your hands together in Namaste (Prayer Position) in front of your chest. Keeping the heels of your hands together and your fingers pointing up, gently press your hands down toward your waist. Don't let the heels of your hands come apart; if you do, you'll lose the wrist stretch. If you regularly hold this stretch for a minute or two as part of your daily routine, you'll gradually be able to move the wrists into deeper extension.

    I also recommend that beginning yoga students and anyone with wrist injuries or problems begin weight bearing on their arms slowly. Rather than suddenly launching into dozens of Sun Salutations, start by spending a little time almost every day on your hands and knees. In this position, there is relatively little weight on the hands, so the wrists can become accustomed to weight bearing.

    On hands and knees, you can also vary the degree of extension of your wrists. If placing the heels of your hands directly below your shoulders feels too intense, you can move your hands out a little in front of your shoulders, reducing the amount of extension.

    As your wrists stretch out over time, begin to work them back beneath your shoulders. Also, as your wrists gain range of motion and endurance, you can put more weight onto them by modifying the position, lifting your knees up briefly into Plank Pose. Gradually build endurance in Plank, then you can begin carefully exploring Sun Salutations.

    Other positions can also introduce the wrists to weight bearing. Adho Mukha Svanasana puts some weight on the wrists but doesn't force them into 90 degrees of extension, so the joints feel more open and are less likely to be painful than in full-extension poses. Downward Dog provides an excellent way to build arm and shoulder strength, thus helping prepare you for Plank, Handstand, and other arm balances.

    Props to the Rescue
    If you are weak not just in your wrists but also in your arms and shoulders, you may find it helpful to begin with modified versions of Downward Dog and Plank using a chair. Pick an armless chair with a firm seat. Put a folded sticky mat over the seat to lightly pad the heels of your hands. Then place your hands on the seat with the fingers pointing out to the sides instead of forward and wrap the fingers around the sides of the seat. Walk your feet back until your body forms a straight line from heel to hip to shoulder to ear, and you will be in the modified Plank Pose.

    To avoid wrist strain, make sure the heels of your hands are under or in front of your shoulders. Take a few breaths, then pull back with your thighbones into Downward Dog. As part of your daily routine, a few repetitions of this sequence will build strength in your wrists, arms, and shoulders, and will gently familiarize your wrists with weight bearing.

    Other props can also help with weight bearing on the hands. You can take a lot of pressure off the wrists in Urdhva Dhanurasana (Upward-Facing Bow Pose) by elevating the heels of your hands on the wide face of two yoga blocks placed shoulder width apart against a wall; place one edge of each block on a sticky mat on the floor and lean the blocks at an angle against the wall. Using a rolled-up sticky mat or a foam or wood wedge under the heels of the hands similarly reduces the sharp angle of extension of the wrist in Plank Pose and arm balances.

    You might also find relief from wrist pain in Plank and arm balances by grasping dumbbells placed on your mat, pointing toward the front edge; they allow the wrists to be in a neutral position. (It's best to use dumbbells with square weights, not round ones, so they can't roll around.) A foam-covered yoga prop called Gripitz, which is shaped like a dumbbell, was recently designed for just this purpose; you can buy it at www.gripitz.com. Be very cautious when you begin to explore arm balances using wedges or dumbbells—the props shift your center of gravity and your alignment, so the poses may seem a little unfamiliar or awkward for a while.

    Working with the alignment of your shoulders, arms, and hands can also help take strain off your wrists. In Downward Dog, for example, many students take virtually all of their weight on the heels of their hands. Instead, press down with the knuckles where the fingers join the palms. Stretch the fingers forward and at the same time visualize that you are lifting the forearms up out of the wrists. Try to apply this action whenever you're bearing weight on the hands.

    The wrist is a complicated structure and can develop many problems other than the soreness that comes from unaccustomed extension. If you have more serious wrist problems—like carpal tunnel syndrome, arthritis, or previous fracture or surgery sites that are still stiff and painful—please consult your health care provider before attempting weight-bearing poses.

    Carpal tunnel syndrome is a fairly common, painful condition caused when the narrow tunnel formed by the carpal bones and adjacent ligaments puts pressure on the median nerve and finger flexor tendons that pass through the tunnel. If you think you may have carpal tunnel syndrome, it's important to get an accurate diagnosis from a health care professional. Conventional medicine usually treats the syndrome with medication, splints, or surgery, but you might also want to seek out the asana sequence created by Iyengar Yoga teacher Marian Garfinkel, director of the B.K.S. Iyengar Yoga Studio of Philadelphia. In a medical study published by the Journal of the American Medical Association (November 11, 1998), Garfinkel documented that the program she developed helped the carpal tunnel sufferers who tried it.

    Whatever the status of your wrists—currently painful, in recovery, or blessedly problem-free—remember that yoga is meant to be a beneficial, healing practice. Make sure you aren't straining your wrists through yoga. If you have done so, integrate some of the gentler poses mentioned in this article into your routine and give your wrists a chance to build strength, flexibility, and endurance before you take on more advanced or strenuous weight-bearing poses.
  • rybo
    rybo Posts: 5,424 Member
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    for sore wrists: make sure your fingers are spread wide and you are dispersing your weight through your fingers and not the ball of your hand, this should take some pressure off your wrists

    for slipping: invest in a yoga mat towel, even in hot yoga where sweat is pouring off me i never slip

    hope that helps!

    ^^ Saved me typing
  • AmandaLou4319
    AmandaLou4319 Posts: 73 Member
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    As my intstructors say in Bikrum- There is power in the grip.
  • dinosnopro
    dinosnopro Posts: 2,179 Member
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    I hear that if you have been doing yoga for a long time, you actually will be able to lick your elbow.
  • MeMyCatsandI
    MeMyCatsandI Posts: 704 Member
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    I have trouble with my wrists too which was preventing me from doing some of the moves, specifically side plank. I could only hold it for a couple seconds before my writs were screaming! I'm sure it doesn't hlep that I'm doing yoga on wood floors. I started to use a block under my hand to add some cushion. I can hold the pose for as long as the instructor as long as my hand is on a block.

    There are socks you can buy to help your feet grip the floor. I find that they kind of rotate though, mostly around my big toe, so I don't like to wear them very often. I just use a mat. I tried a really cushiony memory foam mat, but it actually made it harder to do the poses and much harder to balance. Now I just have a thin mat and my block. If your hands get sweaty you can get some grippy gloves. I like to keep a fan blowing on me the whole time because I DRIP sweat when I do some serious yoga.
  • yoginimary
    yoginimary Posts: 6,784 Member
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    I have trouble with my wrists too which was preventing me from doing some of the moves, specifically side plank. I could only hold it for a couple seconds before my writs were screaming! I'm sure it doesn't hlep that I'm doing yoga on wood floors. I started to use a block under my hand to add some cushion. I can hold the pose for as long as the instructor as long as my hand is on a block.

    Regarding side plank - if you have your hand slightly ahead of your shoulder line, so there is a slight angle between your wrist and your shoulder, you will be able to press down more with the front of your hand and have less pressure on the wrists. (I just realized my profile pic is side plank :laugh: - you'll see my hand slightly ahead of my shoulder if you look carefully - you can use the dots on the mat to judge distance)

    Same is true for dog pose, btw. If you put more pressure on the base of your knuckles it will take some pressure off the wrist. Most teachers, including myself, say to put more pressure on the base of the thumb and index finger - but this is a correction - most people put too much pressure on the little finger side of the hand.