Locust Pose (Salabhasana) is a prone backbend that strengthens the entire posterior chain—back, glutes, and legs—through simple but demanding lifting. It builds the muscular foundation needed for deeper backbends.
Salabhasana comes from salabha, meaning locust or grasshopper. The pose resembles a locust at rest, with limbs lifted behind and body extended. It's one of the fundamental prone backbends—appearing simple but requiring significant back strength to hold.
Unlike Cobra or Upward Dog, which use arm strength to lift the chest, Locust relies entirely on the back muscles. The arms extend behind rather than pressing into the floor. This makes it an excellent diagnostic: if Cobra feels easy but Locust is difficult, your back extensors need strengthening.
The pose is often taught as preparation for deeper backbends like Bow and Wheel. The back strength developed in Locust protects the spine as backbends intensify.
Lift only the legs while keeping chest down, or lift only the chest while keeping legs down. This breaks the pose into more accessible components while building specific strength.
Reach arms forward alongside your ears (Superman pose). This shifts the balance point and challenges the upper back differently.
Interlace your fingers behind your back and lift with hands clasped, reaching knuckles toward your feet. This adds a shoulder stretch and deepens the chest opening.
Flow with breath—inhale to lift, exhale to lower—for 5-10 repetitions. This builds endurance and warms the back for deeper work.
Keep the back of your neck long. Look down at the floor rather than cranking your head up. The lift comes from the upper back, not neck hyperextension.
If you feel pinching in the lumbar spine, you're lifting too high or not engaging properly. Lengthen your tailbone toward your heels and engage your lower belly slightly.
Keep legs together or parallel. The tendency is to let them fall apart, which decreases the work and can strain the sacrum.
Find classes that focus on backbending foundations and proper alignment.
Find classes that focus on backbending foundations and proper alignment.

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