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Anatomy of the Squat

Let thy heels hover!
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by Debbie Daly

If your heels don't touch the floor in your Yoga Squat, you've likely been approached by more than one well-meaning yoga teacher eager to roll a blanket and stick it under your heels. Maybe you've been told your ankles or hips will open up over time. 

And it might be true – but what if you've been doing yoga for years, and nothing has changed? Here's the big news: the inability of the heels to stay on the ground often has nothing to do with tightness in your muscles or tendons, and instead might be a problem of physics and leverage, due to the laws of gravity and the architecture of the bones of your ankles. 

The Yoga Squat, also called Malasana, can be a wonderful pose for anybody, but the misunderstanding about foot and heel positioning is widespread. In a Yoga Journal  article about squatting, Marla Apt tells readers to squat with their feet together and heels on the floor. “If you are tight in your hips, groins, calves, and Achilles tendons, your heels may not reach the floor,” she says.  While her advice might be true for beginners, if you've done yoga for more than a year or two without improvement, you are most likely dealing with a different problem.

PictureImage courtesy of eorthopod.com

Leslie Kaminoff explains the real issue at hand, as he investigates squat pose in his nicely illustrated book, Yoga Anatomy:
"The inability to dorsiflex the ankle deeply enough to keep the heels on the floor can be due to shortness in the Achilles tendon; however, restriction can also be in the front of the ankle.  A quick fix is available by using support under the heels, but it's important not to become too reliant on it, because it will prevent activation of the intrinsic muscles of the feet, which stabilizes the arches, allows deeper flexion in the ankle, and aligns the bones of the foot and knee joint."

I found the holy grail on this issue when Paul Grilley came to my studio for a yoga anatomy workshop.  Paul has become well-known for bringing light to the variations in human anatomy and how they affect our yoga practice.  Years of frustration melted away as I listened to Paul describe what he calls the Principle of Counterbalance, which states that the real problem is one of balance and leverage.

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Debbie's descent from Utkatasana to Squat. The green plumb lines show my center of gravity.
LEFT: Leaning my torso forward and turning my toes out slightly, I can bend just this much; however, I'm seriously stuck here.
MIDDLE: Lifting my heels up partially, I can begin to descend.
RIGHT: Lifting my heels farther, I can approach a squat. Notice my ankles are compressed at the same 90 degree angle through every phase of this. My restriction happens to be right at 90 degrees - but it's different for everyone. Note: I've been doing yoga for 19 years, and my ankles have never made it past the 90 degrees shown. Despite this restriction, I LOVE to squat - it feels great in my spine and hips, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with lifting my heels to make the pose possible. 

In squat, the ankles can only bend until shin bone (the tibia) collides with the topmost foot bone (the talus). This happens at a different angle for everyone. If the angle is not generous, the knees can't go far – unless the heels are allowed to lift from the ground. Then magic can happen – the knees can bend farther, the hips can flex, and suddenly the yogi can squat. But if the heels are forced to stay down, the knees can't bend and the butt can't go back, and the yogi will intuitively want to lean his upper body forward to counteract the danger of falling backward. At this point, our fine subject is probably doing some incorrect-looking version of utkatasana - not quite far enough to even be called a squat yet. Since he's probably being told his heels must stay down, he's stuck here, and most teachers will incorrectly diagnose this the problem as tension in the hips or knees.
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I'd estimate that about half of us have ankle limitations that compromise our squats and other postures, based on observing students in my classes. The student will not feel a strong stretch in the Achilles tendon, but will feel certain that their ankles have gone as far as they’re willing to go.  The term for this bone-on-bone limitation is called compression. Compression occurs in all joints - it’s the reason our knees only bend front-to-back and not side-to-side. Compression determines the range-of-motion in most joints and varies from one person to the next.

I’ve done yoga with limited ankles for years. Before I understood what was limiting me, the standard Malasana squat pose was on my Most Hated Poses list. But these days, I absolutely love to squat – in my own way. If you and your limited ankles are ready for the love, here are some suggestions.

SQUAT VARIATIONS

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Variation #1: Pole Squat
Take that pesky gravity thing out of the equation. Get better acquainted with the furniture, doorknobs, pillars and people around you. Feels great!

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Variation #2: Hill Squat
My absolute favorite variation.  Find just the right little hillside, stand with downward-facing toes, and drop your booty down.  Heavenly!

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Variation #3: Goddess Squat
Take a wider stance and turn the toes out – a variation sometimes used in prenatal yoga. In the picture, notice how the 90-degree ankle angle persists. My heels stay down here because my knees are going out to the sides rather than forward. Therefore my hips can go straight down rather than back, maintaining my center of gravity. This variation doesn't stretch my lower back much, but still feels good. 

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Variation #4: Wall Squat
Defy the laws of physics by doing it with your hips and back against a wall. The wall keeps you from falling backward and enables the heels to reach the ground.  I've also turned my toes out here, which is optional.

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Variation #5: Hover Squat
For practical purposes, that is my go-to squat. Since my squats often happen as part of a flowing sequence, I rarely take the time to prop. This variation stretches all the same regions as the heels-down pose: the lower back, the knees, the hips, the Achilles tendons and the footsoles.

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Variation #6: Propped Squat
It's no carnal sin to squat with your heels off the ground, but still, you might enjoy using a prop under them, which can help you rest back into space a little more. A rolled or folded blanket works. I prefer the rolled mat as pictured, because it's firmer which makes me feel more confident leaning back toward the unknown. In a flow sequence it can be awkward to halt the flow to arrange a prop, so in my classes I only suggest propping the heels if I'm planning to do a longer hold. 


Other postures affected by ankle compression

PictureUtkatasana, also known as Awkward Pose or Chair Pose. Awkward, indeed!
​Utkatasana 
In the pose shown, this is as far as I can squat without lifting my heels from the ground. Seriously, I'm not exaggerating. My toes are even trying to creep outward and I'm straining to stop them. The dumb expression on my face reveals how pointless this pose feels to me.  And where do I feel it?  Is there a stretch in my hamstrings?  Hips?  Knees?  Am I just stupid?  Perhaps, but I know one thing - I feel this pose entirely in my feet and in my ankles, which stay at 90 degrees because of bone-on-bone compression.  This prevents my knees from going any farther forward, which in turn makes it impossible to bend at the hips more without the weight of my torso causing me to fall backward (the Principle of Counterbalance).

Downward Dog
You've heard it before: "With enough practice, your heels will touch the ground." Twenty years of yoga, and I'm still counting. It has nothing to do with tight hamstrings or calves. Let thy heels hover. 

Revolved triangle and revolved side-angle 
If you force the heel of your back foot to stay on the ground in the standard alignment, there are two things that restricted ankles might cause: 
1) The toes of your back foot will go more sideways than forward, and 90% of your teachers will try to correct this. After 6-12 months of this, your teachers may gently begin to wonder if you have poor hearing or learning problems.
2) The twist in the upper body will also be harder for you, because your back leg is forced into external rotation, which locks the hips, pelvis and lower spine away from the direction of the twist. There will be more demand on the middle and upper back to twist enough to achieve popular arm positions. Good luck with that! Or, if you just allow your back heel to lift... the kingdom of parivrtti is yours. Put it down when the teacher walks by.

​​Why this is important
Beating yourself up about your inability to do a certain posture is not what yoga is about.  The Art of Yoga involves getting to know your body, learning to appreciate its abilities *and* honoring its limitations.  Most experienced yogis reach a point at which they’ve been doing yoga for a few years, and the same problem persists in a certain posture with no improvement.  At this point, it often means tightness in your muscles is not causing the problem - instead, you're fighting with your  own skeletal structure.

As someone with many such bodily quirks, about five years into my yoga practice, I began to learn that my yoga teachers often didn’t know nearly as much as I did about my own body. I was ready to quit yoga numerous times, tired of the infuriating, misinformed "universal" alignment instructions that pervade yoga culture. But in many ways, this was where my yoga - and my best teaching - began. My own practice has evolved that is unlike anybody else's - a practice that is uniquely suited to my own body. My teaching has matured as I've learned to accept the fact that I can't really know what a student is feeling, and that their wild and weird variations could very well be an expression of a highly evolved, or deeply intuitive, sense of their own body.

So how to squat? How to teach it? I don't know. Can I tell by looking at a squat-challenged student if the problem is their ankles, knees or hips? No, I can't. What's important to know is that yoga teachers can do a great service to their ankle-challenged students if we cultivate alignment language that is less concerned with how the feet look, and more concerned with what we want students to feel, whether it's to stretch the low back and hips, to fire-up the quads, or something else. 

Novice squatters are encouraged to find their own functional variations of foot positioning so they can enjoy this wonderful position without feelings of frustration and incompetence.  If you come up with anything I haven't mentioned, drop me a note or send me a picture!

If you want to learn more, I highly recommend the DVD Anatomy for Yoga with Paul Grilley. 

For more information on the Principle of Counterbalance, read the following article:
Assessing Range of Motion in Squatting Poses by Paul Grilley

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Devi Daly
PO Box 722, Point Reyes Station, CA 94956
415-663-4018
devi@devidaly.com
www.devidaly.com
  • Home
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  • Classes
  • Training
  • Learn
    • About Yin Yoga
    • A Sample Yin Practice
    • Assisted Yin Yoga
    • Yang Yoga for the Upper Body
    • Anatomy of the Squat
    • Bone Pictures
    • Yang Sequences
    • More Resources
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