Study of Hands
by Albrecht Durer

by Barrie

Did you know that each hand has 27 bones, with 8 in the wrist and 17 in the hand and fingers? This means that out of the 206 bones in the human body over 25% of them are in the fingers, hands, and wrists! Isn’t that amazing? Plus, there are 34 muscles and over 100 ligaments and tendons in each hand, which gives them an incredible range and precision of motion.

Why am I telling you this? Not only because I think it’s interesting to know but also so you can take a moment to recognize and appreciate the incredibly refined structure and architecture of this part of your body that enables you to do all things you do every day, including  like typing, texting, writing, cooking, driving, knitting, gardening, and, of course, much much more.

There are few places in the body that could likely benefit more from some care and attention than our dear, and often overworked, fingers, hands, and wrists.

Here’s a sequence of simple stretches you can do any time to give your wrists, hands, and fingers some love:

Wrist Rolls

  • Sitting or standing, hold your hands at a comfortable height in front of you. Interlace your fingers.
  • Make fluid figure-8 movements with your wrists, moving at a comfortable speed with as little tension in your fingers as possible.
  • Repeat 5-10 times and then change directions and repeat.

Clasped Hands Overhead

  • Sitting or standing, interlace your fingers, turn your palms to face forward, and stretch your arms above your head.
  • Make your palms as parallel to the ceiling as possible by drawing the pinky-finger sides of your wrists down and stretching the thumb sides of your wrists up.
  • Keeping your shoulders relaxed, make your arms as straight as possible by drawing your elbows toward each other. Stay here for a few breaths.
  • Release, change the interlacing of your fingers, and repeat on the second side.

Wrist Curls

  • Stand with your palms facing forward.
  • Make fists with your thumbs on the outside so they’re curled on top of your index fingers.
  • Keeping your upper arms alongside your body, curl your fists toward the underside of your wrists. Repeat this movement a few times.

Popeye Arms

  • Sitting or standing, make fists with your hands. This time, curl your thumbs under your fingers so they’re touching your palms.
  • Raise your arms up out to the sides until your upper arms are in line with your shoulders and roughly parallel with the floor. Bend your elbows to 90 degrees with your palms facing your head.
  • Tilt your fists in toward your head, bending at the wrists.
  • Keeping that angle of the wrists slowly straighten and bend your arms. Repeat a few times.

Wrist Stretches

Part 1:

  • Stand facing a wall, far enough away so your arms can be straight when you have your hands on the wall.
  • Place your palms on the wall in front of you at shoulder height and approximately shoulder-distance apart with your fingers pointing up and your wrists roughly parallel to the floor.
  • Spread your fingers slightly, so that there is roughly equal space between all of the fingers.
  • Stretch up through the sides of your torso to lift your chest, draw the tops of your arms back, and gently firm your shoulder blades against your back.
  • Keeping those actions, press your hands into the wall as fully and as evenly as possible. Pay particular attention to pressing the base of all of your fingers (where your fingers meet the palms) evenly into the wall, as well as the tips of your fingers, as well as and the inner and outer heels of your hands.
  • Keeping your hands and fingers pressing against the wall like this, extend evenly out through all your fingers, as if you were trying to make your fingers longer.
  • Stay here for a few breaths.

Part 2:

  • Still working with your palms at the wall, turn your fingers to face down (or out to the sides if they don’t turn down all the way).
  • Keeping your shoulders in place, press through as much of the hands as possible, starting with the finger pads and knuckles, then then the base of the fingers, and finally gradually moving weight toward the heels of the hands. Stay here for several breaths.

 

Download Barrie’s free Guide to Home Yoga Practice right here. Learn more about her book Evolving Your Yoga: Ten Principles for Enlightened Practice and her online classes at www.barrierisman.com.

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