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GUIDE FOR YOGA TEACHERS

HANDS-ON
ASSISTS
GUIDE FOR YOGA TEACHERS

HANDS-ON
ASSISTS

Physical adjustments in yoga postures can be an incredible gift to


your students. It helps them to get out of their heads and feel with
their senses. Hands-on assists can give your students more access to
the action in the posture, correct common misalignments, and
promote relaxation by stimulating the parasympathetic nervous
system. Beyond the explainable, the magic of conscious, loving touch
is a powerful tool to use in a world where so many people feel
lonely, isolated and simply don't get enough physical contact.

All of that being said, before you try these manual adjustments in
your yoga classes, it's important to ask for permission first. Some
teachers prefer to ask their students at the beginning of class who is
comfortable with adjustments, some teachers might ask a student as
they're approaching them, some teachers might have students leave
a card near their mat to indicate whether they prefer to be touched
or not. However you do it, you MUST ask for permission before
performing adjustments. As trauma-informed teachings become
more mainstream and studied, we as yoga instructors must honor
that many of our students will feel uncomfortable with touch and
that's ok!

Laura Martini
Savasana/Corpse Pose Assists
1) Kneel or squat near the head of your student. Gently cup the back of their
head with your hands, left their head about half an inch off the floor, and use
your fingers to massage/stroke the back of their neck. I like to shift the weight
of their head into my right hand as I run the fingers of my left hand along the
back of their neck and then switch. Use this adjustment to help your student
relax deeply in savasana.

2) Kneel or squat near the head of your student. Place the heels of your hands
on the heads of your student's shoulders. Gently ground their shoulders
towards the floor. Hold for a few breaths. This assist helps to promote
relaxation and helps to position their spine from flexion to gentle extension. In
our modern western culture, most people spend their days with their shoulders
rounded forward in activities like driving, working on a computer, and carrying
babies and kids! This adjustment helps to counter this 'rounded-forward'
alignment.

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Balasana/Child's Pose Assists
1) Stand behind your student and gently place your toes and the balls of your
feet on the toes and balls of your student's feet. Shift your weight from side to
side as you scrunch and release your toes, massaging their feet in the process.
Be careful not to put all of your weight into their feet; keep the majority of your
weight in your heels. This adjustment facilitates relaxation by essentially giving
your students a foot massage.

2) Stand behind your student, bend over and place your hands on either side of
your student's sacrum. Push their hips towards the floor using your hands. This
adjustment helps to increase spinal flexion and increases the stretch in the
hips. It can be comforting as it creates a greater feeling of groundedness.

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Bhujangasana/Cobra Pose Assist
1) Place your feet on either side of your student's hips facing the same direction
as your student. Bend your knees to come into a squat and place your hands on
the front of their shoulders. Now gently draw their shoulders back towards you
as you place the crown of your head between their shoulder blades. You're
moulding their upper back around your head. This adjustment prevents the
student from over-stretching the lumbar spine and under-stretching the thoracic
spine. It helps create more mobility through the spine between the shoulder
blades and opens up the front facial line of the body.

Uttanasana/Standing Forward Fold Pose Assist


1) Stand behind your student in forward fold and place the heel of your hand on
their sacrum with your fingers pointing up their spine. Slide your other hand up
their spine towards their head while putting pressure on their back. The hand
on the sacrum helps to ground their legs into the earth and the hand that slides
down the spine helps them to round further through the spine and come
deeper into this posture.

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Adho Mukha Svanasana/Downward Facing Dog Pose Assist
1) Stand in front of your student in a lunge with one foot between their hands
and the other foot back. Bend the front knee and place one hand on their
sacrum (the flat bone at the base of their spine). Push the heel of your hand into
their sacrum to send their weight back into their legs. This assist helps the
student get deeper into downward dog without having to do the work! By
pushing on their sacrum, you're taking the pressure off your students hands and
wrists and giving them a greater stretch throughout the entire body.

Baddha Konasana/Bound Angle Pose Assist


1) Stand behind your student and place the outer edge of one foot on the floor
at the base of their spine. Gently lean your lower leg into their back to help
them hinge further forward from the hips. At the same time, place your hands
on the fronts of their shoulders to guide their upper back towards your leg. This
adjustment encourages your students to focus on hingeing forward from the
hips rather than rounding the spine to get further forward.

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Urdvha Dhanurasana/Wheel Pose Assist
1) Have your student lie on their back with their knees bent to prepare for wheel
pose. Stand facing them with your feet about shoulder-width apart at the top
edge of their mat where their head is. Your feet will be either side of their head.
Have them grab on to your ankles with their hands, then push into their feet and
hands to lift their hips and come up into wheel. This assist is a great variation on
the pose and can help students get more grip through the hands. It also lessens
the flexion of the wrist which can help students who struggle with wrist pain and
less wrist mobility.

Virabhadrasana II/Warrior 2 Pose Assist


1) Squat down to the outside of your student's front knee, place your hand on
the outside of their knee and say, "press into my touch". This assist prevents the
student's knee from collapsing inwards which is a common misalignment in this
posture. I LOVE THIS ASSIST because rather than physically manipulating our
student, we're encouraging them to get into the posture on their own through a
press point. These kinds of assists are so powerful!

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Utthita Trikonasana/Triangle Pose Assist: "The Kung Fu Chop"

1) Have your student place their feet like they would for triangle pose, then
stand in front of their front foot, grab their front hand, place the outer edge of
your foot closest to them in their hip crease, and ground through your standing
leg. Pull their hand towards you as you use your foot on their hip to push their
hips back at the same time. The purpose of this assist is to lengthen the side
body (which will feel amazing for your student and they will be able to go deeper
into the pose).

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Adho Mukha Vrksasana/Handstand Pose Assist
1) Have your student come into downward dog and raise one leg. Stand on the
side of their raised leg and take a strong squat stance as you're about to lift
them into the air! Have them lock out the raised leg and place your hands under
their shin. Lift their raised leg up into the air so that it's straight up and down.
Have them raise the other leg to match.

Ensure you're only holding ONE LEG so they can get out of the posture quickly if
they need to by dropping the leg that is not being held up. This is a safe way to
help your students access handstand pose because it doesn't require 'jumping'
into the posture. It provides them with a supported way to feel what it's like to
totally invert.

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Parvritta Trikonasana/Revolved Triangle Pose Assist
1) Stand on the side of your student that is closest to their back foot. With one
hand, brace their hips against your pelvis so their hips stay perfectly square.
With your other hand help facilitate the rotation of their torso and shoulder.  

Use your shoulder to prevent their top arm from over-rotating and essentially
having the 'tail wag the dog'. This adjustment corrects many misalignments
including the twisting of the hips and the rotation coming from the
arm/shoulder rather than the spine/trunk. Make sure to brace your student
against you so they don't lose their balance! And take your hands off slowly for
the same reason:)

©YogaTeacherPrep.com
Dhanurasana/Bow Pose Assist

1) Have your student flex their feet, grab their ankles, and ensure their feet and
legs are hip-width apart so as to create a seat for your bum. Place your feet on
either side of their waist facing in the same direction as they are. Come into a
squat and place your bum on their feet while at the same time grabbing the
fronts of their shoulders with your hands. Slowly place weight on their feet
while simultaneously pulling their shoulders back towards you.

Check in with them to see how it feels and them you can choose to back off or
sit down heavier and pull their shoulders closer to you. Just like the Downward
Dog adjustment, this assist helps your student come deeper into the stretch of
the posture without all the effort! A great way to give them access to the
backbend without overworking. 

©YogaTeacherPrep.com

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