Structure That Supports Safety
Also called: Proper Positioning, Structural Alignment
Alignment in yoga refers to the precise positioning of the body in each pose—how joints stack, where weight distributes, which muscles engage. Good alignment protects vulnerable structures and creates the physical conditions for awareness to deepen.
Alignment in yoga refers to the precise positioning of the body in each pose—how joints stack, where weight distributes, which muscles engage, and how the spine orients in space. Good alignment protects vulnerable structures (especially the knees, lower back, and shoulders), ensures the intended muscles are working, and creates the physical conditions for awareness to deepen.
But alignment isn't about forcing every body into identical shapes. Human bodies vary significantly—in bone structure, proportions, and flexibility. Intelligent alignment adapts universal principles to individual anatomy, finding each person's version of a pose rather than imposing a single "correct" form.
Joints are designed to bear load in specific ways. Misalignment can stress ligaments, compress cartilage, and create wear that accumulates over years of practice.
When the body is well-organized, the intended muscles can do their work without compensating patterns. Alignment makes poses work better.
Poor alignment restricts the ribcage and diaphragm. Good alignment creates space for full, easy breathing.
Traditional yoga views alignment as affecting the flow of prana through the body. Proper positioning supports energetic integrity.
Practitioners with good alignment can practice for decades without injury. Poor alignment creates problems that compound over time.
Learning alignment trains proprioception—awareness of where your body is in space. This awareness extends beyond the mat.
The most alignment-focused style. Precise attention to positioning, extensive use of props, long holds to refine.
Built on "Universal Principles of Alignment"—emphasizing muscular engagement, organic extension, and heart-opening.
Alignment matters but is taught through doing—adjustments happen within the flow rather than through extended instruction.
Varies widely by teacher. Some classes are alignment-focused; others prioritize flow and breath over precise positioning.
Alignment is about finding the target sensation, not external form. Uses props to support individual anatomy.
Less emphasis on physical precision, more on energy and breath. Alignment serves kundalini flow rather than biomechanics.
Alignment extends beyond the physical body. Traditional yoga speaks of aligning the physical, energetic, mental, and spiritual dimensions. When the body is well-organized, breath flows freely; when breath flows, the mind settles; when the mind settles, deeper awareness becomes possible.
Physical alignment is thus both an end and a beginning—valuable in itself for health and function, and also a gateway to subtler dimensions of practice. The attention required to align well is itself a meditation—a focusing of awareness that prepares the mind for stillness.
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