Fitness / Yoga

6 Yoga Poses That Relieve Period Pain

Try these moves next time your time of the month pops up.

Cramps, bloating, and PMS can make you want to curl up into the fetal position. Fortunately, there are plenty of more effective, meaningful yoga poses for period pain to try when discomfort strikes. In fact, a recent review of 15 studies concluded that yoga offers relief from common monthly cycle complaints such as cramps and premenstrual syndrome. Try these traditional yoga poses for period pain the next time your Aunt Flo arrives.

Interested in incorporating yoga into your life? Try yoga with Aaptiv, an on-demand audio fitness app with thousands of workout classes for all fitness levels. 

Pose 1: Child’s Pose (Balasana)

Helps with: cramps, lower back pain

Variation: Place a bolster beneath your belly for extra support.

Why it works: “We naturally want to curl into our cramps, so this pose fits the bill while still opening up the lower abdominal area—especially the wide-knee variation,” says Charlynn Avery, RYT 200, yoga instructor and aromatherapist with Aura Cacia.

Pose 2: Bridge Pose (Setu Bandha Sarvangasana)

Helps with: cramps, lower back pain

Variation: Place a block under your sacrum (tailbone area) for added support, especially if your back pain is intense.

Why it works: It helps make the pain feel like it’s being drawn up and away from your lower core.

Pose 3: Knees-to-Chest Pose (Apanasana)

Helps with: bloating, excess bleeding

Variation: Beginners can do one knee at a time, keeping the other knee bent with the foot pressing into the mat.

Why it works: In Sanskrit, Apana is the downward flow of energy, explains Roni Shapira Ben-Yoseph, Ph.D., CYT 200, CCYT95, a yoga instructor based in Highland Park, Illinois. This pose facilitates the elimination of various bodily byproducts, including carbon dioxide, urine, stool, and menstrual blood. “Your knees end up gently massaging your abdomen, and as your low back rocks against your mat, it gets its own little massage, too,” she says. Apanasana pose will move anything that may be bugging your belly, including gas, so it may be best to save this one for home if you’re feeling skittish.

Pose 4: Reclining Hand-to-Big-Toe Pose (Supta Padangusthasana)

Helps with: digestion, stress, lower back pain

Variation: Loop a yoga strap over the sole of your foot, holding both ends of the strap with the same side hand. This is helpful for less flexible yogis.

Why it works: “This pose relieves stress and calms the mind while supporting digestion and relieving low back pain,” Ben-Yoseph says, adding that in the yoga tradition, “touching a teacher’s foot is a sign of reverence, and this pose is a great way to show yourself some love.”

Pose 5: Bound Angle Pose (Baddha Konasana)

Helps with: cramps

Variation: Sit on a bolster or folded blanket if your hips or groins are tight.

Why it works: Opening the hips and pelvic area allows for deep belly breathing, which can alleviate intense pain. This is also a good pose to diffuse the ache that can travel down into the legs with cramping, Avery says.

Bonus tip: Consider diffusing clary sage essential oil as a pairing to this pose “to bring a dose of positive, happy, feminine energy into this sacred time of the month,” Avery suggests.

Pose 6: Garland Pose (Malasana)

Helps with: anxiety, stress

Variation: Extend your arms in front of you. Then, wrap them in front of your shins, grabbing opposite hands or a strap, or cupping your heels. For a gentler variation, put a wedge or folded blanket under your heels, and keep your hands at heart center.

Why it works: “This pose works wonders for anxiety and stress while sharpening focus,” Ben-Yoseph says. “It [also] alleviates menstrual discomfort and low back pain while improving balance.”

Yoga has so many healthy benefits. Start feeling them today with Aaptiv.

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