Q: I have a question about hip openers. I teach to mostly middle-aged and older populations. Some folks are more physically active than others, but almost all of them spend a lot of time sitting, either in a car or at a desk. Many of them experience tightness in the hips and a smaller sub-set also have issues with painful knees - arthritis, meniscus issues, etc. I was taught that externally rotating the leg can be problematic for the knees, especially if they are already vulnerable. However it seems as though most of the best and most direct hip openers involve external rotation. Do you know of any postures that effectively stretch and release tension in the gluteals and the external rotators of the hip without compromising the safety of the knee?
A: Thanks for this question! I want to begin by reminding all of us that in yoga circles “hip opening” sometimes gets reduced to the combination of hip flexion, abduction and external rotation of the femur bone (thigh bone) in the hip socket, as in Cobbler’s pose (Baddha Konasana) and Lotus pose (Padmasana). But the hip obviously moves in many other directions, so “hip opening” should reflect the improvement of the full range of motion of the hip joint! So, in general, for yourself and your students, focus on good overall hip opening, which will have positive impacts on posture, locomotion, balance, and agility.
To open the front of the joint—the area your sedentary and seated students need mostly—you want to stretch the front thigh muscles, such as the quads and the psoas by extended the joint, so High Lunge (Vanarasana), including the classic and chair versions, and the Dropped-Knee Lunge, and Warrior 1 (Virabradrasana 1) for the back leg can effectively work those areas.
To open the inner aspect of the joint, you want to lengthen the adductor group of muscles via poses that take your legs wide apart, such as Standing Wide-Legged Forward Bend (Prasarita Padottanasana), Pyramid pose (Parsvottanasana), Triangle pose (Trikonasana) and Extended Side Angle pose (Utthita Parsvakonasana), and Wide-Angle Seated pose (Upavista Konasana).
To open the outer hip joint, you want to adduct the hip joint via poses that bring your leg across the midline of your body. You can do this movement with Reclined Leg Stretch (Supta Padangusthasana), bringing your lifted leg across the midline.
Opening the Back of the Hip Joint
You can also get a nice stretch of the posterior gluteal muscles in all your Downward-Facing Dog (Adho Mukha Svanasana) variations, even Half Downward-Facing Dog at the Wall.
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