A reblog that you will want to read! Thank you DANIELLE PROHOM OLSON!!
From Danielle Prohom Olson of bodydivineyoga.wordpress.com
The Psoas muscle (pronounced so-as) is the deepest muscle of the human body affecting our structural balance, muscular integrity, flexibility, strength, range of motion, joint mobility, and organ functioning.Source: http://bodydivineyoga.wordpress.com/2011/03/23/the-psoas-muscle-of-the-soul/
The psoas is connected to the diaphragm through connective tissue or fascia which affects both our breath and fear reflex. This is because the psoas is directly linked to the reptilian brain, the most ancient interior part of the brain stem and spinal cord. As Koch writes “Long before the spoken word or the organizing capacity of the cortex developed, the reptilian brain, known for its survival instincts, maintained our essential core functioning.”
A tight psoas not only creates structural problems, it constricts the organs, puts pressure on nerves, interferes with the movement of fluids, and impairs diaphragmatic breathing.A relaxed psoas is the mark of play and creative expression. Instead of the contracted psoas, ready to run or fight, the relaxed and released psoas is ready instead to lengthen and open, to dance. In many yoga poses (like tree) the thighs can’t fully rotate outward unless the psoas releases. A released psoas allows the front of the thighs to lengthen and the leg to move independently from the pelvis, enhancing and deepening the lift of the entire torso and heart.
Koch believes that by cultivating a healthy psoas, we can rekindle our body’s vital energies by learning to reconnect with the life force of the universe. Within the Taoist tradition the psoas is spoken of as the seat or muscle of the soul, and surrounds the lower “Dan tien” a major energy center of body. A flexible and strong psoas grounds us and allows subtle energies to flow through the bones, muscles and joints.Source: http://bodydivineyoga.wordpress.com/2011/03/23/the-psoas-muscle-of-the-soul/
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I had a horse fall in 1985 and tore my Psoas muscle. The doctors could not find the problem with my "pain traumas" over four years, I was in the emegency rooms with excruciating pain…. until I went to a Mind, Body, Chiropracter in Ross, California. She sent me to a physical Therapist who found the tear. (17 doctors could not figure out what was wrong)and four years later I was able to actually run. It still is easy to tear if I lift and reach at the same time. So happy you posted this wonderful article. Yes, it is a VITAL muscle.