Sarah Tucker, travel journalist and broadcaster turned yoga instructor, has been constructing a series of asanas (postures) that are easy to at the airport before you board the flight.
Sarah’s website includes tips on yoga for travellers (jet lag, insomnia, puffiness) with five postures that can be done to ensure airport boredom is kept to a minimum.
Mountain pose:
This is a gentle way to get acquainted to your current atmosphere and improve posture. Stand with feet approximately hip-width distance apart, with spine tall and shoulders relaxed away from ears. Feel feet on the Earth as you press them firmly into the ground, balancing your weight evenly. Align centre of skull over centre of pelvis and release arms on either side of torso with palms facing forward. Relax facial muscles, throat and tongue as you begin to focus on inhaling and exhaling. On the inhale, breathe down into diaphragm and fill to top of lungs. On exhale, release breath from top of the lungs to the bottom, releasing your diaphragm last. This is called diaphragmatic breathing. Repeat 12 times until you feel grounded and connected to the present moment , taking in the environment around you, feelings, sounds, etc.
Tree pose:
Improves focus and sense of balance. Supports a feeling of connection with the Earth and current environment. Starting in mountain pose (above), begin to shift weight into left foot, bending right knee to bring your right foot and ankle to your calf or inner thigh of left leg. Focus eyes on the ground three to five feet in front of you. If you have a hard time balancing, rest one or both hands against a wall. Encourage both hips to be in a neutral position, parallel to floor. Bring palms to touch at your heart’s centre, interlacing middle, ring and pinkie fingers, leaving index fingers and thumbs extended. Press left foot firmly into the ground. Inhale and extend arms overhead, lengthening up. Hold for eight to ten diaphragmatic breaths (see mountain pose), then on an exhale return to mountain pose and repeat on opposite side.
Star pose:
From a standing position, step feet out about three-and-a-half to four feet apart, coming into a wide-leg stance with feet parallel. Firmly press both feet down as you lift kneecaps up firming thighs. Inhale, reach arms overhead, and then exhale releasing arms to a “T” shape parallel to the ground. Draw bellybutton up and back toward spine, activating your core and helping to keep bottom rib cage from bowing forward. Hold for eight to ten diaphragmatic breaths, and then release arms and heel-toe feet together coming back into a comfortable standing position.
Wide legged forward bend:
This pose is restorative for fatigue, headache, anxiety and mild depression. It also helps to soothe the nervous system because it elongates the spine and re-balances the pressure of the meningeal system around the spinal cord and brain. From star pose (see above for how to reenter into star pose), pivot toes slightly inward, firmly press the inside edges of feet down as you lift kneecaps up firming thighs. Place hands on hip creases. Inhale, lengthen spine and slightly lift chest, and then exhale and fold forward bringing hands to the ground in line with toes. Lift hip bones up and lengthen spine down. Relax neck and jaw, releasing head toward the Earth. Hold for five to eight diaphragmatic breaths.
Triangle pose:
Triangle pose supports digestion and is therapeutic for stress and anxiety. From star pose, pivot your right foot forward to face the front, short end of the mat. While grounding down firmly through the outside edge of your back foot, begin to firm both thighs, lifting kneecaps up. Reach arms to a “T” shape parallel to the floor, gazing over the right middle finger. Inhale and reach right arm forward, lengthening torso over right leg. Exhale and release right hand to the Earth, ankle, shin or yoga block. Draw the left shoulder down and back while extending left hand up parallel with the right. Right hand stretches down while left hand stretches up spreading chest, heart and lungs. Focus on rotating the torso and belly organs toward the sky twisting from the solar plexus. Keep both thighs engaged and kneecaps lifted. Hold for five to eight diaphragmatic breaths, and then on an inhale, press down with right foot and lift up as if the left hand is pulling you up.
Sarah Tucker is a qualified yoga instructor and award-winning travel writer and broadcaster, and decided to combine her two passions to create a website, retreats and classes made to measure for those wanting to rid themselves of ‘emotional baggage’. Her book, The A to Zen of Travel, is published on August 1, 2014.
If you’d like to do yoga with Sarah, those who book via the website will get extra personal training tuition when booking – but you must quote ‘TNT’.