2-FOR-1 GA TICKETS WITH OUTSIDE+

Don’t miss Thundercat, Fleet Foxes, and more at the Outside Festival.

GET TICKETS

BEST WEEK EVER

Try out unlimited access with 7 days of Outside+ for free.

Start Your Free Trial

Foster Aparigraha (Non-Grasping) on the Mat

Use asana, mantra, and mudra to help bring into focus the unique ways this yama plays out in your life.

Heading out the door? Read this article on the new Outside+ app available now on iOS devices for members! Download the app.

Aparigraha translates to “non-possessiveness” or “non-grasping” and helps us detach from strong feelings such as jealousy. It helps us to remember not to covet what isn’t ours. To incorporate aparigraha into your own life and practice, start with the posemudra (hand-and-finger gesture), and mantra (a sacred utterance repeated continuously) below. Do this practice on its own, add more poses with the accompanying 10-minute video sequence, or link all of the yamas and niyamas together, one pose as a time, forming a sequence.

Aparigraha Yoga Practice

Hold the pose, with its mudra, for 3–5 breaths, mindfully chanting, aloud or internally, its accompanying mantra.

coral brown, aparigraha

Asana: Pasasana (Noose Pose)

From Tadasana (Mountain Pose), bend your knees and lower your hips to your heels. Rotate your torso to the left and bring your upper right arm to the outside of your left leg, with your hands in Anjali Mudra, or prayer position, at the heart. Inhale to lengthen your spine and exhale to twist deeper, wringing out that which you do not need and being grateful for what you have.

See also Three Prep Poses for Noose Pose (Pasasana)

aparigraha, coral brown

Mudra: Ganesha Mudra

To come into Ganesha Mudra, named after the Hindu deity who removes obstacles, swivel the hands so that the fingertips point toward opposite elbows, with your right palm facing your heart. Bend the fingers and slide the hands away from each other until the fingers lock.

See also Gestures of Awakening: 5 Mudras for the Summer Solstice

Mantra: Om gam ganapatayei namaha

With each exhale, invoke Ganesha (gam or ganapatayei) and his powers by chanting his name: Om gam ganapatayei namaha. (Om is the sound of the universe, and namaha means “name.”) Repeat on the other side.

Watch the video

To tie it all together or to deepen your work around aparigraha, try this 10-minute twisting practice with Coral Brown.

See also Coral Brown’s Do-Anywhere Daily Mindfulness + Gratitude Practice

PREVIOUS YAMA PRACTICE Asteya (non-stealing)
NEXT YAMA PRACTICE 
Brahmacharya (maintenance of vitality)
RETURN TO Live Your Yoga: Discover the Yamas + Niyamas

Popular on Yoga Journal