Healthy Aging Master Pose: Downward Facing Dog
Eliminate stiffness, develop spinal agility, and slow down some signs of aging.
By Suza Francina, certified Iyengar Yoga instructor
Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Photos by Jim Jacobs
Practicing with wall ropes makes Downward Facing Dog easier.
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These days more and more doctors are recommending prescriptions that include taking a yoga class. Yoga teachers, physical therapists, chiropractors, medical doctors and other health professionals are working together to conduct studies on all areas of yoga and health, including the benefits of yoga for an aging population.
Our posture affects the health and well-being of every system of the body, including the cardiovascular system. Poor posture and the degeneration of the spine are the source of many physical problems, contributing to illness and fatigue by restricting our breathing and circulation to vital organs, and interfering with digestion and elimination. Yoga prevents and can even reverse the most visible symptom of aging―one that cannot be disguised or transformed cosmetically―the shortening and rounding of the spine. In our culture, many people spend long hours doing desk work, driving and other activities that tend to pull the upper body forward. As a result, a rounded back, forward head and collapsed chest are so prevalent it is almost considered a normal part of aging. When our spine begins to stiffen and degenerate, we lose height, and experience back and neck pain, balance problems and many other health concerns.
A key pose for maintaining the health and integrity of the spine is the Downward-Facing Dog Pose. Stretching daily in Downward-Facing Dog removes a lifetime of stiffness from the body and develops spinal strength and agility, slowing down and even reversing the common degenerative changes found in people later in life.
The Downward-Facing Dog Pose is named for the way dogs and other animals naturally stretch their bodies several times a day. The shape of the pose resembles a dog stretching, with the arms and hands stretched out like a dog’s forepaws, the shoulders, spine and chest stretching and the pelvis and tail bone high up in the air, stretching as far back away from the hands as possible. I often remind my students that when dogs stretch, they do so with great enjoyment, “with all their heart and soul and a smile on their face!” We humans should stretch throughout the day, in a similar way.
In my classes for people over 50, even octogenarians new to yoga, who may not have stretched for many years and who may initially have trouble kneeling and getting down and back up from the floor, can begin to enjoy this pose very early in their practice.
Downward-Facing Dog Pose is a halfway-inverted position that almost everyone can safely practice. This pose inverts the internal organs and increases blood flow to the head. A weight-bearing pose, it strengthens the bones and muscles of the hands, wrists, arms and shoulders and stimulates bones to retain calcium, thus helping to prevent osteoporosis. Downward Facing Dog Pose removes a lifetime of stiffness from the shoulder joints, wrists, hands and fingers. The whole spinal column is lengthened, abdominal muscles are strengthened and neck tension is released.
Older students often report that they regain lost height after consistently practicing Downward-Facing Dog and other yoga poses. My students of all ages practice it almost every class, either from the floor, or with their hands on a chair or hanging from yoga ropes, as illustrated.
It is not unusual for people who start yoga in their 70s or 80s to discover that their arm muscles quiver when they first try to stay in the pose for a few breaths. Older beginners may have arthritis in their fingers, or wrist problems that make it painful to bear weight on their hands. Practicing the Downward-Facing Dog with the help of yoga props, such as blocks, chairs and yoga wall ropes, as illustrated (and described in my previous column), makes it possible for almost everyone, at any age, to safely enjoy the benefits of this rejuvenating pose.
Downward-Facing Dog can be practiced by itself, or before or after many other yoga poses, or before or after walking, bicycling or other forms of exercise you enjoy.
Yoga postures such as Downward-Facing Dog Pose build flexibility and strength in the hands and wrists. A careful, gradual approach, with the intelligent use of props, will allow most students with arthritis or other health issues to practice the pose in a manner that rehabilitates the joints and does not exacerbate existing problems.
Students with wrist problems can start with preparatory positions in which less weight is placed on the hands, such as spending a few minutes simply on hands and knees. If your wrists are already sore or injured, you may need to wait and allow the inflamed tissues to heal. It may take up to several weeks for pain and soreness to subside. Each situation is different.