Backbends· integrated reference

An integrated pose-by-pose reference

The spine is not stretched.
It is made mobile.

Functional anatomy, teaching alignment, and athletic application — synthesized from three traditions into one working guide for the backbends of the practice.

Yoga Anatomy — Leslie Kaminoff & Amy Matthews Yoga Sequencing — Mark Stephens Prana Vashya TAC — Yogacharya Vinay Kumar M.P.
01

Foundational Principles

Five ideas where the anatomy and the teaching converge. Read these first — every pose entry assumes them.

The breath leads the movement

Prana Vashya — Hold roughly 5 breaths, then rest about 4; muscles keep a memory of the stretch, so repetition with recovery deepens range. Inhalation works on the body's structure; exhalation works on the muscles.

Kaminoff — Inhaling into a backbend is standard, but for belly-breathers an exhalation entry frees thoracic extension. In deep backbends the chest is already "inhaled," so the skill is finding deeper support so superficial effort can quiet.

The pelvis governs the spine

Prana Vashya — The pelvic area controls the lumbar spine, which controls the cervical spine. Release pelvic tension before active work; keep a neutral pelvis by tucking the tailbone.

Kaminoff — Eccentric work of rectus abdominis and the obliques prevents overmobilizing the lumbar — the anatomical counterpart to a neutral pelvis and not "feeling it in the small of the back."

Shoulders, not pelvis, lead the backbend

Prana Vashya — All backbends are initiated by the shoulders. Once the thoracic is independent, the shoulders lead. If the pelvis leads, the shoulders won't open and the thoracic can't stay independent.

Kaminoff — This is why latissimus dorsi is unhelpful as an extensor — it flexes the upper back and internally rotates the arms. Deep intrinsic extensors do the work while serratus anterior keeps the scapulae neutral.

Strength and flexibility are inseparable

Prana Vashya — Flexibility-only practice lets shortened muscles grab tendons and joints; strength-only practice loses mobility. A muscle takes roughly 20 days of consistent work to learn to lengthen and return.

Kaminoff — Superficial muscles hijack a pose if the deep stabilizers are weak — strength in the intrinsics is what makes range safe to use.

Counterwork protects the structure

Prana Vashya — Backbends stretch the anterior line; without counterwork the pelvis drifts forward and the core weakens. Within a class, don't insert counterposes until the peak pose is reached — use neutral counter-activities (sit-ups, squats, lunges) between backbends. Reserve the deep counter-stretch (Paschimottanasana, Kurmasana) for closing, then finish with twists so freshly lengthened muscles keep their new range.

On terminology. Kaminoff reminds us the spine is not "stretched" as a unit — it is the muscles around the spine that are made more mobile. Vinay Kumar frames the same idea as lengthening the body's interior line through breath. Both describe spinal extension: the posterior structures shorten while the anterior line opens.

02

The Poses

Each entry runs in up to three layers: functional anatomy (the why, where it can be sourced), teaching & alignment (the how), and where the sources meet. The catalog now spans the full Prana Vashya class — preparatory and warm-up work, the lumbar backbend families, strength builders, and the closing counter-stretch. Search the wiki, or filter by family and level.

Source document

Backbends · An Integrated Reference

The full synthesized reference this wiki is built from — every pose entry, the foundational principles, the athletic season framework, and the complete sequencing method, with source attributions throughout.

Download .docx
03

Sequencing Backbend Classes

The Prana Vashya method, with Mark Stephens drawn on as comparative reference. The logic is specific: every posture prepares the peak, the lumbar stays active throughout, and counterwork is timed deliberately — never pose-by-pose.

The class arc

A backbend class is built so the practitioner feels the peak posture's benefits even if they never reach its full expression. Every chosen posture works at least one muscle group the final pose engages, and the class moves from the most points of contact on the floor toward the fewest.

  1. Sun salutations to warm and initiate — first backbends keep the legs straight to activate the lumbar correctly.
  2. Side bends to engage the obliques and open shoulders and hips, establishing lateral stability before extension.
  3. Posterior-line activation & hip rotations to free the pelvis. (No hip rotations for spinal issues — side bends only.)
  4. Lumbar A / B / C subsequences that progressively open hips & thighs (A), core & spinal awareness (B), chest (C), interleaved with neutral counter-activities.
  5. Peak pose, attempted only once the readiness gates allow.
  6. Closing sequence — the deep counter-stretch (Paschimottanasana, Kurmasana) and twists to reprogram the spinal line and preserve the new range.

Stephens, comparative — the same shape as a five-stage arc: initiating, warming, pathway to the peak, peak exploration, integration. The agreement is structural: warm thoroughly, build deliberately toward one peak, integrate on the way down.

The Lumbar A / B / C framework

Prana Vashya organizes backbends by which segment of spine they target and which joints anchor the movement. Classes are assembled by choosing subsequences (commonly A-B-B, A-A-B, or B-C) leading toward the peak.

A

Hips & thighs

Legs are the fixed foundation; the torso moves. Ankle/wrist activated. Cobra is the signature pose — and first backbends keep the legs straight to set Lumbar A correctly.

B

Core & spinal awareness

Extremities join; the pelvis draws toward the shoulders. Elbow/knee activated. Fish, Bow, small Bridge live here. Reduces stress on the joints.

C

Chest

Shoulders are the fixed reference; the legs move. Hip/shoulder activated. Camel is the signature pose; gravity-assisted and inverted postures trigger it.

Lumbar B is accessible only once A and C are open enough and spinal awareness is gained — so the framework also encodes a teaching order, not just a catalog.

Sequencing principles

  • Every posture prepares the peak — pre-open each muscle group an advanced pose engages, so the benefits are felt even without the full expression.
  • Most foundation to least — Cobra with bent knees before Kapotasana; among advanced poses: Pigeon → Kapotasana → Wheel → Chakra Bandhasana.
  • Start with what the practitioner can already do — use simple poses to observe capacity, then build.
  • Keep the lumbar active throughout — no counterposes until the peak; they flatten the pelvis and undo the work.
  • Use neutral counter-activities between backbends — sit-ups, squats, high lunge, bow; avoid ones that overload the knees for a given peak.
  • Match counterwork to what was shortened — after Kapotasana the posterior line is short, so follow with a hamstring stretch that tilts the pelvis forward.
  • Close with twists — the spine releases rotational tension only through twisting, locking in the freshly lengthened range.

Stephens, comparative — his pratikriyasana warns against the literal pose-by-pose opposite. Place contraction backbends (Locust) before leveraged ones (Bow, Wheel); never deep-backbend straight after deep core work; symmetrical foundations before asymmetrical; build drop-backs slowly through Laghu Vajrasana. His contraction / traction / leverage grouping complements the Lumbar A/B/C lens.

Readiness gates

Readiness is diagnostic, not aspirational. Specific simpler poses reveal whether a practitioner is prepared for the peak.

Cobra with bent knees "inverted Kapotasana"

If the shoulders surpass the hip line and face the sky — ready. If not, Lumbar C isn't open. If shoulders pass the hips but legs aren't near 90°, Lumbar A isn't open. Weight on the knees rather than upper thighs signals Lumbar C still closed.

Camel second test

If abdomen, shoulders, and thighs are on one line — not ready (needs more Lumbar A to isolate torso from legs). If the head lifts toward the chest, Lumbar C isn't open enough.

For Pigeon two prerequisites

Squared hips and an independent thoracic — tested in Camel (independent chest, head free to bend back) and Lunge (back-leg thigh close to the floor, hips not dropping sideways).

Worked sequences

Three peak-oriented sequences from the method, each assembling postures that prepare its specific peak.

Pigeon-oriented

Because Pigeon stretches one side at a time, the warm-up emphasizes side-body stretch and strength.

Cobra (A)Camel (C)straight-leg-forward / bent-leg-backDhanurasana leg-to-head (B)square lungessplitsFishPurvottanasanatwisted bent-leg CobraPigeon

Kapotasana-oriented

Needs the central torso line and Lumbar A, with side bends avoided so the centre stays neutral.

sun salutationsneutral warm-upA–B: Cobra fwd/back · Fish · Dhanurasanaknee-sparing counter (squats / Sirsasana padangusthasana)B–C: King Cobra · Camel · Kapotasanaposterior-line counterSetu Bandhasanaclose

Vamadevasana-oriented

Targets the thighs to release tension built by prolonged sitting.

side bendsWarrior II bound armsPrasarita bound armsCobra A/B/C · single-leg Camel · Bakasanathigh-stretch counterKapotasana · standing backbendshamstring counterVamadevasanaScorpion / Wheel

04

Backbends for Athletic Performance

Backbends train the posterior chain to contract and the anterior line to lengthen — the opposite of what sport and daily life reinforce. Periodizing the work to the competitive calendar lets it serve different goals across the season.

The principle that carries across all phases: never train the anterior line in isolation. Pair backbends with the posterior- and side-line work (twists, forward folds, the Trikonasana family) the sources call mandatory, and respect the strength/flexibility balance — if a block is flexibility-heavy, add strengthening; if strength-heavy, add mobility.

Pre-Season

Build capacity & correct imbalance

  • Reverse the sport posture. Camel and Cobra restore length to psoas, rectus femoris, and pectorals — the muscles shortened by cycling, rowing, sprint starts, seated travel.
  • Prioritize strength postures. Locust and Bow build the spinal extensors and posterior chain — the Lumbar A / strength phase before chasing range.
  • Establish pelvic control. Drill neutral-pelvis mechanics so the lumbar is protected once high-intensity training resumes.
  • Volume: 2–3× per week on consecutive days, always sequenced with counterwork.
In-Season

Maintain, mobilize & recover

  • Favor supported, low-intensity backbends. Bridge and Fish open the chest and counter forward-flexed sport posture while demanding far less than Wheel.
  • Use backbends as active recovery. Bridge as a counter-activity fits between sessions; gentle Cobra restores the spine after compression and travel.
  • Respect the breath ratio. Short holds (~5 breaths) with rest (~4) deliver mobility without the deep fatigue or cramping to watch for.
  • Brief and frequent rather than long and heavy; avoid introducing new peak poses in-season.
Post-Season

Restore, decompress & rebuild range

  • Decompress the spine. Inverted and supported backbends let the lumbar release; inversions allow L4–L5 tension to release when the lower spine is free.
  • Rebuild range progressively. With competition pressure gone, work toward Wheel and deeper poses — grounded foundations toward fewer points of contact.
  • Address the emotional load. Deep anterior-line work can prompt emotional release; post-season is a natural time to use it for decompression.
  • Close with twists and forward folds to rebalance and lock in restored range.
Worked application

Tailored to soccer

Soccer loads the body in a repeating pattern: hip flexors and quads fire constantly (sprinting, striking, decelerating), the thoracic rounds over a ball-focused posture, and the anterior hip stays chronically short from the running stride.

The soccer-specific target: the kicking motion is a violent, repeated hip-flexion-to-extension whip driven by rectus femoris and psoas — the very muscles listed as "lengthening" in Cobra, Camel, Bow, and Wheel. Backbends restore the length the kick keeps taking away, supporting stride power and reducing the hip-flexor and lower-back tightness that plague midfielders and strikers.

Pre-Season

  • Camel & Cobra restore psoas and rectus femoris length — directly supporting stride length and shot power.
  • Locust & Bow strengthen the posterior chain for deceleration, direction change, and aerial duels.
  • Neutral-pelvis, eccentric-abdominal work protects the lower back through striking and cutting loads.
  • 2–3× per week, paired with twists and forward folds.

In-Season

  • Bridge & Fish between matches — reverse the ball-watching posture without fatigue cost.
  • Bridge as active recovery the day after a match; thighs take load while the lumbar releases.
  • Short holds (~5 breaths) to protect sprint capacity; avoid the knees-flexed Cobra cramp trap on match-fatigued legs.
  • Don't introduce new peak backbends — maintain, don't build.

Post-Season

  • Supported & inverted backbends decompress a season of running, jumping, and contact.
  • Address left/right asymmetry from the dominant kicking leg — one-leg Bridge, Pigeon's folded-forward variation for the dominant-leg hip.
  • Rebuild toward Wheel and deeper poses, grounded-to-fewer-foundations.
  • Close every session with twists and forward folds.