Seated Inversion


Seated Inversion

Seated Inversion

Alton Towers Keeps Coasting Along

Alton Towers, as the UK’s biggest and most popular theme park, needs no introduction. The park is located near Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire and was built upon the site of an eighteenth-century manor, the historic seat of the Earls of Shrewsbury. The ruins of the original Towers remain and since 2000 have been used as an atmospheric setting for an attraction introducing visitors to the local legend of an ancient oak tree which is mysteriously bound in chains, supposedly because it is cursed.

While ghost stories, fictions and fantasies have inevitably grown up around this much-loved location, the factual history of the park is interesting too. The construction of the house and its splendid landscaped gardens continued throughout the first half of the nineteenth century and several generations of Earls.

The estate was first opened to the public in 1860 and fetes were held in the formal gardens, but as the costs of maintenance climbed the family eventually sold the land and house off to a group of local businessmen. Calling themselves Alton Towers Limited, this consortium restored and maintained the gardens with the proceeds from charging visitors one shilling each to enjoy fairground rides, boating and concerts in the grounds – a rather tame predecessor of the modern park.

During the Second World War, the estate was requisitioned by the Army and the grounds used as a cadet training camp. In the 1950s it was restored again and re-opened to the public with traveling fun fairs in the summer and a tea room installed in the old banqueting hall; soon followed by more and more ambitious attractions such as a miniature railway, adventure playground and a sea lion pool. The real beginning of Alton Towers as we know it was around 1980 with the construction of the UK’s first double-looping rollercoaster, the Corkscrew, which remains popular to this day.

The Corkscrew is now the oldest of 33 attractions at Alton Towers, including eight coasters and three water rides. Its two inversions rather pale in comparison to some of the newer, celebrated rides such as Oblivion, the world’s first vertical drop rollercoaster; Air, the world’s first ‘flying’ rollercoaster; and the thrillseeker’s favourite Nemesis, an intense inverted coaster which features four inversions and speeds underground in several places. Not content with the title of ‘Europe’s first inverted rollercoaster’, in 2004 Nemesis secured the world record for the largest number of naked people to ride at a time!

Along with the rides, there are many tamer attractions for young children, a petting zoo, arcades, a water park and spa, speedboat racing, a climbing wall and even mini bungee jumping. There are two official Alton Towers hotels in the grounds, with bars and restaurants, live music and shows in the evenings.

Alton Towers continues to expand, with a new pirate-themed area including a huge boat ride planned to open for the 2008 summer season. With over 2.5 million visitors a year, the park shows no sign of slowing down and seems bound to keep on entertaining, thrilling and record-breaking for many years to come.

About the Author

Elisha Burberry is an online, freelance journalist and keen traveller and watersports enthusiast. Originally from Scotland, she now resides in London.



Seated Inversion

How To Improve Your Posture And Alignment In Yoga And Beyond

Some Tips for Alignment and Posture in Asanas

Since I am starting to go through various yoga postures (asana), I thought it would be a good idea to give you some tips about alignment, so that you become more aware of your body. Alignment is used to describe the positioning of the body for each posture in yoga. Remember everyone is different so it’s about using these tips for your individual make-up, how you feel in a posture and of course observe your whole posture and piece all the adjustments together to create the asana.

“The posture becomes perfect when the effort of achieving it vanishes” Yogabhashya

Alignment in the various asana has different purposes:

  • to ensure that the postures are practiced in a way that maximizes the benefit of the posture including improvements of more flexibility, strength, tone and radiant health, whilst minimizes the risk of injury
  • to ensure that the postures are practiced to allow the flow of prana (energy) in the body. 
  • to help calm the mind, improve focus, concentration, stability and lift the spirit.
  • to position the muscles, joints and limbs in a comfortable way

So as I go through these alignment pointers remember to be aware of your own body, shape and how you feel when you are in a posture. The “perfect” pose is the pose that best suits you at the moment you are practicing the pose and what you are experiencing. By aligning yourself and using these adjustments, it may mean that you need to come out of the posture, this is good and better to align the body and free the prana (energy) that to be deeper in a posture with no alignment of the limbs, muscles joints and tendons.

The building blocks;

  1. Build the foundation first: If you think of a house the foundations are essential to keep the house erect. So it is essential to pay attention to establishing a confident, stable foundation from which your asana evolves and grows. Whether that is your feet in (standing postures), your sitting bones (in seated postures) or your hands (in arm balances). Once you build your foundation, then you are able to look at the detail of the particular asana.
  2. Finding your centre with stability and ease: All yoga postures should be practiced in a way which aims to balance steadiness with ease. Asana means steady pose in Sanskrit and yoga means union, union of body and mind, so the pose should be steady and comfortable so this union occurs. If it is uncomfortable, ease out of the posture a little to see how the body and mind reacts and observe this.
  3. Balance your feet: For your standing postures, ground your feet into the floor, lift your toes up and spread all the toes so the weight is evenly distributed between the toes, balls of the feet and the heels. Try to distribute your weight evenly across all three points and (in most standing postures) evenly between both feet.
  4. Find your seat: For seated postures, lift the flesh from your buttocks to expose the sitting bones, maybe sit on the edge of a block so that your pelvis tilts slightly forward, bringing the base of the spine on top of the pelvic girdle.
  5. Strengthen the arms: For arm balances bring the hands pointing forward, the wrists in line underneath the elbows and shoulders – do you get the idea?

Let’s now works upward through the body;

  1. Toes: In general, when standing and sitting with one or more legs extended out, ensure that your feet are parallel to each other. For many there is a tendency to turn our toes out when standing (– this main mean your hips are out of alignment and you need to see a chiropractor), this in practice means focusing on turning the toes inwards slightly. Aligning the feet in this way ensures that your knees are in the same alignment as your feet and the legs are active and this protects our lower back. The latter is particularly important when bending forwards or backwards.
  2. Knees: The knee joint has limited rotational movement and especially when standing or lunging, so it is important that the knee points in the same direction as the foot of the same leg and does not twist inwards or outwards. It is also important in standing postures like the Warrior postures, to ensure that the knee does not move forward of the line of the heel and to actively keep the knee in line with the foot, so actively using the thighs and keeping the outside of the knee in line with the little toe. The exception to this is lunging with the back knee on the floor for Crescent Moon pose, Anjanasana, where the knee can come over the line of the heel if it is comfortable. In postures such as Standing Forward Bend, Uttanasana and Downward Facing Dog, Adho Mukha Svanasana, the alignment is achieved by keeping your feet about as wide apart as your hips. Finally, the knee should not lock, or hyper-extend, consciously maintain a softness, rather than simply pulling the kneecap back. This can be achieved by engaging the thigh muscles and will avoid straining the hamstrings. Using the fronts of the thighs muscles help support he knee and the hamstring as these two muscles work in synergy.
  3. Your spine: The spine has three natural curves – the lower back (lumbar spine) and neck area (cervical spine) curve into the body; the middle back (thoracic spine) curves outwards. Since everyone is individual these curvatures can be different or more emphasized, so you need to be conscious of your spine. Observe when move where your shoulders are; are the hunched up toward the ears, if so lower them, are you letting your neck go or do you lengthen through the neck, is the chest open and the shoulder back, is your abdomen engaged activating your core and when you bend forward are you hinging forward to protect the lower/lumbar back and using all of the other observation mentioned before; shoulders, core, chest. All of these help support the spine which is essential in alignment for yoga.
  4. Twist: The upper spine has more rotational movement due to the structure of the vertebrae, discs and joints of the spine, so for twisting posture you should focus the rotation on the middle and upper back, not the mower back. This is done by starting the twist from the core of the body. Try to turn from the navel first, then the chest, then the chest, then the shoulders, and finally the head and neck. Be aware not to lead with your head in an effort to appear deeper in the posture; allow the twist to evolve naturally with the breath. Use each inhalation to lengthen your spine upwards and tailbone downwards, creating more space between your vertebrae, and each exhalation to deepen the rotation.
  5. Backbends: Your spine is designed to bend both forwards and backwards. While the lumbar spine has the least ability to rotate, it is often the easiest part of the spine to bend. In backbends, try to create space between the vertebrae as the spine lengthens. As you go into a backbend, consciously bend as evenly as possible through the whole spine, rather than just the lumbar spine. This means lengthening your upper back and your neck as you stretch your head back. Finally with backbends try not to clench your buttocks, they should be lightly engaged, but not clenched as this too will inhibit the spine’s ability to move.
  6. Upside down: In inverted postures such as Shoulderstand and Headstand your stability in the posture is improved by engaging your abdominal and leg muscles. Keeping an upward movement of the leg muscles and pushing through the balls of the feet and the heels and activating your core all help with your inversion postures and balance in them.

 These are all tips for alignment in your yoga practice, however you can use a lot of these tips in your everyday life to help stand tall, creating great posture and allow the energy to flow freely through the whole body.

If you’d like to learn more about Yoga Poses please follow my blog for The Yoga Pose of the Month http://yogarelaxationm.blogspot.com/

About the Author

Michelle Cross has over 18 years experience in the health and wellness industry, practicing various complementary therapies and teaching Hatha Yoga. She uses her experience to treat, teach and guide people to live a more positive, healthy and fulfilling life. http://www.yogarelax.co.uk http://www.michellecross.co.uk

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