Half Moon Pose

Half Moon Pose (Ardha Chandrasana) is a standing balance that radiates in all directions—grounding through one leg while the lifted leg, torso, and arms expand outward like a crescent moon. It builds strength, stability, and the courage to extend beyond your usual edges.

What Is Half Moon Pose?

Ardha Chandrasana combines ardha (half) and chandra (moon). The body creates a half-moon shape—standing leg rooted, lifted leg extended back, torso rotating open, and arms reaching in opposition. It's a pose of expansion and luminosity, asking you to shine in all directions at once.

Half Moon often enters practice from Triangle Pose, transitioning when the front hand reaches to the floor and the back leg lifts. This progression teaches how standing poses build upon each other—each one preparing the body for what comes next.

The pose challenges balance in a particularly dynamic way. Unlike standing balances where the body remains vertical, Half Moon opens horizontally, making equilibrium harder to find and more rewarding to discover.

How to Practice

  1. Start in TriangleFrom Trikonasana with your right leg forward, bend your right knee slightly.
  2. Shift your weightBring your right hand about 12 inches in front of your right foot (use a block if needed).
  3. Lift the back legStraighten your standing leg as you lift your left leg parallel to the floor. Flex the lifted foot.
  4. Stack your hipsRotate your left hip open so it stacks above the right. The front of your pelvis faces the side wall.
  5. Extend your top armReach your left arm toward the ceiling, stacking shoulders.
  6. Find your gazeLook at the floor, straight ahead, or up at your top hand—whichever supports balance.
  7. Radiate outwardExtend energy in all directions: down through standing leg, back through lifted leg, out through both arms, up through crown.
  8. Hold and breatheStay for 5-10 breaths, then bend your standing knee and step back to Triangle. Repeat on the second side.

Key Alignment Points

Root down through all four corners of your foot. Keep a micro-bend in the knee if you tend to hyperextend. Engage the quadriceps to support the pose, but don't lock or grip.

Reach actively through your lifted heel. The tendency is to let this leg drop—keep it parallel to the floor or higher. Flex the foot to engage the whole leg.

The top hip tends to roll forward. Externally rotate the lifted leg to stack the hips one above the other. This is where the "opening" of the pose lives.

Spin your chest toward the ceiling. Draw the bottom ribs in slightly to prevent overarching, but let the heart turn skyward.

Benefits

  • Balance and coordinationBalance and coordination — Challenges stability in an open, extended position
  • Leg strengthLeg strength — Builds standing leg strength and endurance
  • Hip openingHip opening — Opens the groins, hamstrings, and hip flexors
  • Core engagementCore engagement — Requires subtle but continuous core activation
  • Spinal rotationSpinal rotation — Opens the chest and thoracic spine
  • FocusFocus — Demands present-moment awareness to maintain balance

Common Challenges

Everyone wobbles. The practice is finding steadiness within the wobble—making micro-adjustments rather than fighting for rigid stillness. Soften your gaze, breathe steadily, and let the small movements happen.

The temptation is to focus so much on balance that you forget the opening. Keep rotating your chest toward the ceiling. If you can't maintain the rotation, you may need a higher block or to bend the standing knee more.

Your hand should touch the floor (or block) lightly. If you're leaning heavily into it, you're missing the core and leg engagement that should support the pose. Try lifting the hand briefly to test where your weight actually is.

Practice standing balances with qualified teachers who can help refine your alignment.

Find Your Balance

Practice standing balances with qualified teachers who can help refine your alignment.

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Lisa Marie
Lisa Marie|E-RYT 500 | 20+ Years Teaching
February 2026
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