Tips 12/03/2025 19:33

12 Easy Yoga Poses for Anxiety, Stress and Depression

Lets be honest – we all get a little stressed sometimes. Whether it’s related to an issue at work, a fight with a friend or loved one, or problems with family, stress can creep up on us at the most unsuspecting times. Thankfully, there are coping mechanisms like doing yoga poses for anxiety, stress and depression, which help during these trying times.

In fact, practicing yoga has been shown to have a calming effect on the body, with many poses providing stress-relieving effects. According to Harvard Medical School, “by reducing perceived stress and anxiety, yoga appears to modulate stress response systems. This, in turn, decreases physiological arousal – for example, reducing the heart rate, lowering blood pressure, and easing respiration.”

A small study done at the University of Utah looked at the relationship between yoga and stress by determining the participants’ responses to pain. The researchers noted that those who had poorly regulated responses to stress were also more sensitive to pain. Their subjects were 12 experienced yoga practitioners, 14 people with fibromyalgia (a stress-related illness characterized by hypersensitivity to pain), and 16 healthy volunteers.

When the three groups were subjected to more or less painful thumbnail pressure, the participants with fibromyalgia perceived pain at lower pressure levels compared with other subjects. MRIs showed that they also had the greatest activity in areas of the brain associated with the pain response. On the flip side, the yoga practitioners had the highest pain tolerance and lowest pain-related brain activity during the MRI. The study essentially showed that yoga may be able to help a person regulate their stress, and therefore pain responses.

12 Easy Yoga Poses for Anxiety, Stress and Depression

These stress-relieving yoga poses help alleviate backaches, fatigue, anxiety and depression. Make sure that with each pose you are focusing on taking deep breaths. If any pose looks too difficult, simply skip it or don’t go as deep into the pose as the instructions provide. The more you practice a position, the easier it comes with time.

1. Child’s Pose

How It Calms: placing your head down on the mat has an instant calming and soothing effect on the brain. It sends a signal to the brain that you’re safe and that it’s okay to rest.

 

 

 

1. Kneel on the floor or yoga mat with legs together, sitting back on your heels.
2. Hinge forward from your hips until your chest comes to rest on your thighs. Your forehead is on the floor.
3. Curl your shoulders forward and let your hands rest, palms up, next to the feet. You can also have your arms out in front of you, palms on the floor.
4. Hold for 5 deep breaths.

2. Bridge Pose

How It Calms: since this pose acts as a mild inversion, with the heart higher than the head, it can calm your brain and central nervous system, promoting ease and relaxation in the body and mind.

 

 

 

1. Lying on your back, bend your knees and place your feet flat on the floor, hip-width apart. Slide your arms alongside your body with palms facing down (fingertips should lightly touch the heels).
2. Press your feet into the floor, inhale, and lift your hips, rolling your spine off the floor (keep your knees hip-width apart).
3. Press into your arms and shoulders to lift the chest and squeeze your glutes to lift the hips higher.
4. Hold for 4-8 deep breaths, then release on an exhale, slowly rolling your spine back to the floor.

3. Legs-Up-The-Wall Pose

How It Calms: a deeply relaxing pose, which when combined with slow, rhythmic breathing, will allow you to tap into your “rest and digest” nervous response. Doing this pose consistently may allow you to notice that your body feels healthier overall, and that you are better able to find a calm state of mind.

 

 

 

1. Sit on the floor with your hips against the wall and roll onto your back, bringing your legs up the wall.
2. Your buttocks should be pressed as close to the wall as possible.
3. Sit here for about 5 minutes, focusing on deep belly breaths.

4. Standing Forward Bend

How It Calms: calms the brain and invigorates the nervous system. It balances the energy flow throughout the body and can help you get a better sleep if you suffer from insomnia or feel particularly high strung.

 

 

 

1. From a standing position, feet hip-width apart, exhale forward and bend the knees enough to bring your palms flat to the floor with your head pressed against your legs. If this is too deep, just bend as far as you can go.
2. Feel your spine stretching in opposite directions, while pressing your hips up. Straighten the legs fully to deepen the stretch (if you can, that is. This is difficult even for extremely flexible people like myself!).
3. Hold for 4-8 deep breaths, bend the knees and then slowly roll your torso back up, vertebrae by vertebrae.

News in the same category

News Post