The Extended Side Angle Pose, or Utthita Parsvakonasana, is a grounding and energizing yoga posture that combines strength, stretch, and alignment. It targets multiple muscle groups while building body awareness, making it an essential move in both beginner and advanced yoga practices.
How to Practice and How Long to Hold
Start in Warrior II (Virabhadrasana II). Bend your front knee to 90 degrees, keeping the knee stacked over the ankle. Extend your front-side arm downward, resting the elbow lightly on the bent knee or placing the hand on the floor or a block outside the front foot. Stretch the opposite arm overhead, reaching past your ear, palm facing down. Rotate the chest open and keep both feet grounded.
Hold the pose for 30 seconds to 1 minute per side. For strength and mobility gains, repeat it 1–2 times per side per session, ideally once a day or 3–5 times a week.
Posture Tips
- Keep the front thigh parallel to the floor without collapsing into the knee.
- Press down through the back foot to stabilize.
- Open the chest toward the sky rather than leaning forward.
- Engage the core to support the spine and avoid compressing the lower back.
- Keep the neck in line with the spine; gaze up toward the top hand or forward if it strains the neck.
Muscles It Affects
- Strengthens:
- Quadriceps
- Glutes
- Hamstrings
- Core (especially obliques)
- Shoulders
- Stretches:
- Groin and hips
- Spine and side waist
- Chest and shoulders
- Ankles and calves
This pose builds both lower body endurance and upper body openness, making it one of the more holistic standing poses in yoga.
Flows That Transition Well After It
- Reverse Warrior (Viparita Virabhadrasana): Maintain your foot position and sweep the top arm back.
- Triangle Pose (Trikonasana): Straighten the front leg and shift into Triangle to continue the lateral stretch.
- Half Moon (Ardha Chandrasana): Shift forward onto the front foot and transition into balance.
- Low Lunge (Anjaneyasana): Lower the back knee and transition into a gentle hip opener.
- Side Plank (Vasisthasana): For a strength challenge, pivot and place your hands on the mat, stepping into side plank from the front leg.
Conclusion
Utthita Parsvakonasana is more than a stretch—it is a full-body integration posture. Practicing it regularly improves mobility, balance, strength, and alignment awareness. When performed with mindful breath and attention to detail, it becomes a powerful anchor in your yoga flow and a foundation for advancing your physical practice.