Mountain pose yoga is a great way to get you into your daily groove in more ways than one.
Mountain Pose for starters can be a morning pose to wake up your body. You can do wherever you have a floor or ground to stand on.
Standing tall with hands in the air helps additional blood circulation and Ayurvedic Kapha stimulation especially when you’re in a tired season (that can rob any imbalanced Kapha mind-body of excited feelings).
This article is about how to use Mountain Pose yoga this season, both in yoga and climbing your mountain top or hill.
Yoga Mountain Pose
To get the most out of your yoga Mountain Pose, swoop swan dive arms gracefully down like your arms are eagle spanning wings. And then forward fold your hands to your yoga mat or your ankles grounded on the floor. 🦅
And then weightlessly reverse swan dive your arms back up into the air. That’s a good way to be purposeful in your daily moves.
Mountain Pose yoga can be part of your Vinyasa flow.
It’s a way to finesse your ways as you grow, and is a good metaphor for personal growth moves with intentional motion today.
Repeat your Mountain Pose, but next time, coordinate your deep breaths, with inhales up and exhales down in going up and down your pose. This keeps you purposefully engaged from head to toe.
Remember this Mountain Pose and your breath practice when you’re outdoors on a walk, hike, or journey up a mountain.
This outdoor practice is a great way to get energy flowing when you’re lacking energy, need new calm headspace, or just a ‘lil motivational push. It’s great exercise for your entire body.
And when you challenge yourself to get up a mountain if you’re nearby to one, you’ll get all the mind-body benefits.
If you’re feeling tired, stop and take a sip of water to refuel. Look around at your surroundings in awareness and mindfulness. Maybe do your stretching Tree Pose.
“They will soar on wings like eagles, they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.” – Isaiah 40:31
Mountain climbing is a great way to accompany a mini-sabbatical journey. What’s interesting about each hike, is that there are different trails to choose from.
And every day, each trail is slightly different because the nature elements change… everything from the trees, sky, and ground you walk and rely on with each step.
Changing foliage reminds us that this moment is just a blink.
When you come back around, leaves and twigs have fallen and flowers and fruit change up the scenery.
Selecting a path or trail that suits you is fun. Take the hike that inspires you or sounds inspiring. The first time will always be a surprise. 🎉
Usually people who’ve never been on a trail, listen to what others have told them who have walked the trail. Sometimes it’s better to listen to your heart and nature as guides instead of other’s opinions.
Because we all interpret differently…
One time, I kept hearing the message about how much more difficult a specific trail would be. That reminds me of younger years when we didn’t have info. at our fingertips.
And so I avoided that one as a first-timer, so I could build up.
And then when I actually did the hike, I found it was the easier one than the long winded one. The “strenuous” reputation trail had hundreds of steps at the end, and that’s what was meant by “harder.”
But, steps to me actually shortcut the climb process because it provides interest and variety that keeps present awareness. So fully engaged, that feels like the process is sped up.
Mindful about your uneven steps, you’re already at the top before you know it.
The alternative is to take a longer trail path without a steep incline and as many steps. And that’s where natural Kapha tendencies differ from Vatas.
Know Your Individual Strengths
There’s a general fork in the road in body types.
Kaphas naturally prefer the endurance exercise which means longer courses and duration over steps that is perceived as work.
Vatas prefer the shorter, variety trail with different interest points that doesn’t seem like work.
And Pittas just want the challenge, so either trail is fine as long as there’s a little sprinting up and down the hill that wouldn’t hurt either. 😉
Each of us have our body strengths.
Climbing trails is an individual journey.
And in each season, we’re holding onto an imbalance even if just a smidge that we can course correct on our individual journey.
The first steps are the ones that can be mentally the hardest to get going on. And a part of you might be wondering: is it too late to turn around?
But when you focus on the baby steps of each step, it’s easier. You remove the blocks. And actually that’s what little kids on the trails do on their steps. They enjoy the climbing challenge and play with the immovable Lego blocks.
We need more of that in our everyday, where we look forward to trying a healthy challenge as part of our play.
It’s great natural exercise in the process.
With every step and turn, you can find your balance and appreciate how your body assets work for you.
Having a nudge motivation like seeing the mountain top view helps us get to the goal. The cherry on the top of the mountain doesn’t disappoint. And that’s a general consensus for all…
The ending is predictable. But the getting-there journey is not. The middle changes as you get different perspectives. And the next time, you’ve grown some. So you see life from a different lens and that can help you maneuver this season.
Balancing Kapha On Your Trail
If you’re needing a little push out of a tired mind that can make a tired body, on your trail, look for pops of color like fiery red leaves in autumn. Or berries on trees.
Wear a pop of color on your arm or shoes… (if you’re drawn to the bright or neon colors, that could be why as your body is intuitive). Just a pop of color though because bees are attracted to bright clothing and mountain air. 🐝 We can share the calm space.
Find a pine cone or forest fresh scent. Some natural bug spray scents have lemongrass and rosemary that help to wake up the senses. They’ll keep the certain bugs away and keep you awake.
Take energy food and water. Great snacks are nuts and energy bites. So, ready to get your Mountain pose on? ⛰️
Gluten-Free Carrot Bread Squares
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup gluten-free almond flour or coconut flour
- 1/2 cup oats
- 2 eggs
- 1 tbsp coconut oil
- 2 tsp honey
- 1/2 cup raisins and chopped walnuts (optional)
- 1 cup finely grated carrots
- 1/2 tsp of cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg each (optional)
- 2 tsp lemon juice
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
- Mix ingredients and bake on 350°F for about 40 minutes.