
These Yoga Poses Help Improve Concentration (Photo Tutorial)

Did you know that there are certain yoga poses that improve concentration?
We've all been there: multitasking, endless to-do lists, and stimuli coming from every direction. These outside distractions drastically alter our ability to concentrate.
Need to focus right now? Breathing is the quickest way to bring your mind back to the present moment and task at hand. Try these one of these breathing exercises!
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) increasingly affects our population as cell phones, TVs, tablets, laptops, and social media absorb our attention and distract us from being fully present in our day-to-day lives.
Constantly being bombarded by stimuli around us can make concentrating feel like an impossible task. Yet being mindful is key to living in the present moment, and presence is key to concentration and staying focused.
Thankfully, yoga can help. Bringing our awareness to the present moment and focusing our attention on our breath, the movement, and challenging poses will in turn improve our concentration.
How Yoga Can Help Improve Concentration
The physical practice of yoga is all about linking breath with motion and becoming fully present in mind and body. The practice itself is centered on concentration - focus on the breath, the alignment, and the movement.
By focusing your gaze on one spot, you can internally find equilibrium.
Balancing postures in particular are a great way to improve concentration. Balancing poses quite literally force us to concentrate on the present moment and the task at hand. With so many factors that could physically and metaphorically make us fall during balances, we are forced to become present, concentrate, and focus on these points to maintain our balance.
The Power of Drishti
Drishti is possibly the most important factor of balance poses. Meaning focus, drishti is the point where you shift your "gaze" during the yoga practice. Drishti is the practice of steadying your gaze.
Where your eyes go, your attention follows. This can mean both the literal place where you look or the metaphorical place that holds your attention (such as your intention). When your gaze begins to wander, so do your thoughts.
While performing balancing postures in yoga, it is super important to find a drishti and stick to it throughout the duration of the posture. I always recommend to my students to find a still, non-moving point in front of them (at eye level) where they can focus their gaze without altering it.
By focusing your gaze on one spot, you can internally find equilibrium. From there, you can focus your attention on just one thing. And honing in your attention allows you to concentrate so much better. This alone can improve concentration!
Practice These 10 Yoga Poses to Improve Your Concentration:
As you practice these poses, notice how they are actively challenging - and ultimately improving your concentration by requiring your full attention.
1. Tree Pose (Vrksasana)
The quintessential yoga balance, and a posture in which you're standing on one leg, Tree Pose really requires attention and concentration to stabilize.
How to practice Tree Pose:
Find Mountain Pose with your feet either touching or hip-distance apartFind your drishti by focusing your gaze on one still point on the floorEither draw your hands to your hips or bring your palms to meet at heart centerAs you inhale, lift your right foot off the floorAs you exhale, externally rotate your hip so that your knee and your toes are pointing outwardAs you inhale, draw your foot to press into your inner left thigh (always be sure to avoid the knee joint)Reach your hands skywardModify or intensify as you like, hold for five deep breaths, and then switch to the opposite leg
How to modify Tree Pose:
How to intensify Tree Pose:
2. Eagle Pose (Garudasana)
Another balance posture that requires you to stand on one leg, Eagle Pose twists and binds your entire body, forcing you to concentrate on the present moment.
How to practice Eagle Pose:
Find Mountain Pose with your feet either touching or hip-distance apartFind your drishti by focusing your gaze on one still point on the floorBring your hands to your hipsBend into your right knee as you lift your left leg up and over, crossing at the knees and crossing again at the calf and ankleSink your hips toward the ground (as if you're sitting low into Chair Pose)Open your arms out wide like wings and cross your right elbow beneath your left, bringing your palms to touchModify or intensify as you like, hold for five deep breaths, and then switch to the opposite side
How to modify Eagle Pose:
How to intensify Eagle Pose:
3. Warrior III (Virabhadrasana III)
This flying warrior pose requires focus and concentration as you stabilize your body on one leg and draw your torso parallel to the floor. This challenging balancing yoga pose improves concentration big time!
Just like your gaze, if your thoughts start to wander, you may lose your balance. Find a mental and visual drishti (a focus point to set your gaze/thoughts on).
How to practice Warrior III:
How to modify Warrior III:
How to intensify Warrior III:
4. Half Moon Pose (Ardha Chandrasana)
Another one-legged balance, Half Moon works the hips in the opposite direction of Warrior III, creating openness within the hip joint and concentration of the mind.
How to practice Half Moon Pose:
Find Mountain Pose with your feet either touching or hip-distance apartFind your drishti by focusing your gaze on one still point on the floorHinge from your hips to come into Standing Forward FoldPlant your left fingertips at the top left corner of your mat and bring your right hand to your right hipLift your right foot up off of the floor and bring your right leg to hip levelExternally rotate your hip so your right hip stacks on top of your left. Keep both legs straight and strongLift your right arm skyward, making one long line between both arms, and shift your gaze skywardModify or intensify as you like, hold for five deep breaths, and then switch sides
How to modify Half Moon Pose:
How to intensify Half Moon Pose:
5. Dancer's Pose (Natarajasana)
This balancing backbend takes a whole lot of focus and attention to detail to create openness and expansion while maintaining balance on one leg. Needless to say, concentration is essential to practice this pose, and as a result will improve concentration.
How to practice Dancer's Pose:
How to modify Dancer's Pose:
How to intensify Dancer's Pose:
Interested in learning how to flip your grip? Practice these 8 Yoga Poses to Help You Flip Your Grip
6. Extended Hand-to-Big Toe Pose (Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana)
As if balancing on one leg isn't hard enough, this posture kicks it up a notch requiring strength, flexibility, and a big dose of concentration.
How to practice Extended Hand-to-Big Toe Pose:
How to modify Extended Hand-to-Big Toe Pose:
How to intensify Extended Hand-to-Big Toe Pose:
7. Side Plank (Vasisthasana)
This balance pose has two points of contact with the floor (the feet and one hand), but that doesn't make it any easier . . . Requiring considerable focus to stabilize and align, this pose is a true test of awareness and can help improve concentration.
How to practice Side Plank:
Find Plank Pose with your feet touching and shift your weight into your right handFind your drishti by focusing your gaze on one still point on the floorRoll to the pinky side of your right foot and stack your left foot on top of itPress the floor away from you and lift your hips as you reach your left arm skywardModify or intensify as you like, hold for five deep breaths, and repeat on side two
Need a refresher for your alignment in Plank Pose? Read How to Correctly Perform Plank Pose
How to modify Side Plank:
How to intensify Side Plank:
8. Crow Pose (Bakasana)
This challenging yet accessible arm balance requires attention to many details of alignment within the body, forcing concentration and complete presence within the moment.
How to practice Crow Pose:
New to Crow Pose? Then this Crow Pose Tutorial Video is what you're looking for!
How to modify Crow Pose:
How to intensify Crow Pose:
9. Headstand (Salamba Sirsasana)
Turning upside down and balancing on your head is a true test of concentration and present moment awareness (the key to improving concentration!) since you need to steadily focus your attention fully on the task at hand.
How to practice Headstand:
How to modify Headstand:
How to intensify Headstand:
10. Forearm Stand (Pincha Mayurasana)
Likely one of the most challenging of all balance postures, inverting and balancing solely on your forearms definitely requires intense concentration to be able to achieve.
How to practice Forearm Stand:
New to Forearm Stand? Practice These 4 Yoga Poses to Help You Prepare For Forearm Stand
How to modify Forearm Stand:
How to intensify Forearm Stand:
11. Concentration Bonus! Meditation
A final yoga-based method of cultivating more focus and improving concentration is through meditation. If you already have a steady meditation practice, awesome! And if not, no worries. Even sitting quietly in Lotus Pose or cross-legged and focusing on your breath is an excellent way to increase mental clarity and focus.
You can learn all about the centering benefits of meditation by reading about the Important Benefits of Meditation on the Brain
The Full Benefits of Practicing Yoga to Increase Concentration
Finding balance in our yoga practice symbolically allows us to find balance in our daily lives. When we are able to focus and concentrate on the mat, that can equate to us being able to focus and concentrate off the mat as well.
The next time you find yourself unable to concentrate, I invite you to practice some or all of the poses above to bring yourself back into the present moment, allowing your focus and concentration to improve and become a greater part of your daily life.
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