Wild Thing, a yoga pose to make your heart sing! Unleash your “Wild Thing” for a liberating heart opener.
FLIP YOUR DOG!
Wild Thing, or camatkarasana in sanskrit, is a challenging pose that turns a downward facing dog into an expressive backbend. “Flipping your dog” opens up the chest and shoulders, the front of the legs and hip flexors, and builds strength in the shoulders and upper back. It’s the perfect counter pose to a day at a desk! Pumping up the adrenaline with a back-bendy Wild Thing can also be therapeutic for fatigue and mild depression.
A staple of vinyasa or flow classes, Wild Thing invites an exploration of transitions both into and out of the pose. There’s no really direct entry into Wild Thing. It requires a degree of kinesthetic awareness and proprioception—knowing where your body is in space—to turn yourself upside down, spinning on one arm and one leg, and twisting a linear strength posture into a side body lengthening backbend.
TWO APPROACHES
Camatkarasana can be approached two ways: either from downward facing dog or side plank.
From downward facing dog, lift your right leg into three-legged dog, or down dog splits. From there, bend the right knee and begin to flip your dog, dropping your right leg toward the floor behind you while your left foot pivots to allow your body to turn. While in motion, lift your right arm off the ground as your chest spins toward the ceiling. When you right foot lands, you are in your Wild Thing! Lift your chest toward the sky and feel the expansion throughout your heart.
The side plank version looks and feels a little more like a back bendy side plank, but is equally liberating and expansive in the middle of a strong flow. From side plank, lift your top leg, bend the knee toward the ceiling and drop the foot toward the floor behind you while you turn your chest toward the sky. Your base foot and hand stay in side plank, while you’ve added an open twist and back bend to the top side.
THE FEELS ARE EVERYTHING!
MBS Heated Vinyasa Yoga Instructor Mary Choplin explains how doing this fun pose makes her feel:
“Wild thing literally makes my heart sing! The pulsating rhythm of my heart radiating throughout my body, gives me an overwhelming feeling of love. This invigorating heart opening posture breaks down the walls that shield my heart. It invites the freedom to feel my own tenderness and embrace my strength. This is a posture that makes my soul come alive.”
Catch Mary teaching Wild Thing on Mondays and Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m. at the beautiful MBS Yoga Studio in King William. Visit mbsfitness.com/yoga for a full schedule of classes!