Extended Triangle Pose (Utthita Trikonasana) is a foundational standing pose that creates a triangle between your legs and torso. It builds strength and stability while stretching the hamstrings, hips, and side body with expansive, radiant energy.
Utthita Trikonasana combines utthita (extended), tri (three), kona (angle), and asana (pose). The body creates multiple triangles—between the legs, between torso and floor, and in the overall silhouette. It's one of the most recognized yoga poses, appearing in virtually every tradition and style.
Triangle teaches the balance between effort and ease that defines good practice. The legs work strongly to create a stable foundation while the torso lengthens freely, heart opens, and breath moves without restriction. It's simultaneously grounding and expansive.
This pose appears early in most Hatha and Vinyasa sequences because it opens the body in multiple dimensions—lateral flexion of the spine, hamstring stretch, hip opening, and chest expansion—preparing practitioners for more challenging postures.
Keep the front knee straight but not hyperextended. Engage the quadriceps to lift the kneecap. If your knee tends to hyperextend, maintain a micro-bend.
The hinge happens at the hip of the front leg, not the waist. Imagine your pelvis is between two panes of glass—it moves in one plane without tipping forward or back.
Rotate the chest toward the ceiling so both shoulders stack. The tendency is to let the top shoulder roll forward—actively draw it back.
Keep the back of your neck long, maintaining the natural curve of the spine through the neck. If looking up strains your neck, look straight ahead or down.
The most common error. Keep length in both sides of the torso—the bottom side shouldn't crunch. Think of lengthening from hip to armpit on both sides.
If your joints are hypermobile, the front knee may push too far back. Keep the kneecap lifted and maintain muscular engagement through the leg.
It's not a competition. If you sacrifice alignment to touch the floor, you lose the benefits and risk strain. Use a block, or place your hand higher on your leg.
Practice foundational standing poses with qualified teachers who can refine your alignment.
Practice foundational standing poses with qualified teachers who can refine your alignment.

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