Thursday, May 28, 2026

Single Leg Exercises: 10 Yoga Poses to Build Balance and Strength

 

Can single-leg exercises help runners improve strength and balance and boost performance? After all, running is a single-leg activity. Running uses two legs, right? Yes. However, as we run...

One of our feet is moving through space...
While the other foot is planted on the ground.
Sometimes both feet are simultaneously in the air...
While neither one is rooted as one propels and one sets up for its landing.

In this way, running can be described as a single-legged activity, perhaps even as a series of forward-moving jumps.

When we understand running in this light, the importance of strengthening and balancing our:

  • Feet

  • Ankles

  • Legs

  • Hips

  • Core

Using single-leg exercises in order to translate the gained power and stability to running becomes clear. Enter yoga and single-leg exercises. Within power, flow and vinyasa yoga classes, and some hatha classes like Bikram and Iyengar, a balancing series is almost always taught partway through class. This article outlines 10 practical and transferable single-leg yoga poses for runners.

When to Practice the Poses

They can be completed as stand-alone exercises, but they are best practiced after a yoga warm-up and before a cool down. Warm-ups can include yoga salutations such as these:

  • Sun Salutations A

  • Sun Salutations B

  • Moon Salutations, also known as Sun Salutations C

If doing the poses before a run, and you want to skip the sun salutations, try jogging for a few minutes prior to doing the single-leg poses to prime the body.

If doing the poses after a run, slowly jog around to bring the heart rate down and get the breathing under control, do a few of the above sun salutations, and then start on the balancing poses.

How to practice the poses

  • Option One: Hold each pose for 30 to 60 seconds (five to eight breaths) per side before switching to the other side.

  • Option Two: Hold the poses for one to three breaths on each side and flow to the next pose on the same side, completing all the poses on the same leg before moving to the other leg. This will burn more than switching between legs after each different pose.

  • Option Three: Hold the first half of the poses for one to five breaths on one side before doing the first half on the second side, then proceed to the second half of the poses all on one side before finishing on the other side. 

  • Option Four: Incorporate your favorite poses from the list below into strength routine.

  • Option Five: If you are a regular yoga practitioner who gets on the mat every day, weave a variety of these poses into your routine.

Cues for each pose

  • Time yourself by counting breaths (five to eight long, slow deep breaths), inhaling through the nose and out of the nose.

  • Press the big toe into the mat when balancing on one foot, without gripping the toes into the ground.

  • Spread the toes and soften them - again, no death grip!

  • Hug in the hip of the standing leg so it’s not jutting out to the side.

  • Engage the gluteal muscles of the standing leg.

  • Reach out in opposite directions to aid in balance and traction - for instance, when in Warrior III, reach the crown of the head forward and foot backward.

  • Micro bend the knee of the standing leg and flex the quadriceps muscles so that the knee is not locked or hyperextended.

  • Draw the navel to the spine to avoid flaring the ribs.

  • Look at something that’s not moving to maintain balance.

  1. Warrior III (five versions)

Warrior III, supported

Warrior III, arms along the sides

Warrior III with bent knee and palms pressing together in front of heart

Warrior III, arms reaching forward

Warrior III, cross diagonal balance

Instructions

Within each version:

  • Lower the torso so that it’s parallel to the ground while lifting the floating leg so it is also parallel to the ground

  • Square the hip of the floating leg to the ground so that the hips are both facing down and even.

  • Supported (photo one) - place the fingertips lightly on the ground underneath the shoulders

  • Arms along the sides (photo two) - reach the arms back along the sides

  • Bent knee with palms pressing together (photo three) - bend the knee and press palms together in front of the heart

  • Arms reaching forward (photo four) - reach arms forward along the ears while simultaneously reaching back with the foot of the floating leg

  • Cross diagonal balance (photo five) - reach the arm of the floating leg back while reaching the arm of the standing leg forward

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, hips, gluteal muscles and core

2. Half Moon

Half Moon Pose

Instructions

  • From Warrior III, set the fingertips of the arm on the same side as the standing leg on the mat about 12 inches in front of the foot.

  • Reach the top arm straight up to the sky.

  • Gaze at the ground to help with balance, to the side or up to the sky (as shown).

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, hips, gluteal muscles and core

3. Revolved Half Moon

Revolved Half Moon Pose

Instructions

  • From Half Moon pose, turn the hips square to the ground.

  • Reach the arm on the same side as the floating leg to the ground.

  • Reach the arm of the standing leg up to the sky, creating a twisting action.

  • Gaze at the ground to help with balance, to the side or up to the top arm.

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, hips, gluteal muscles and core

4. Dancer’s Pose, three versions

Dancer’s Pose, upright variation

Dancer’s Pose, supported variation

Dancer’s Pose

Instructions

  • Pick up one leg and bend it into the body, close enough to hook the big toe.

  • Hook the big toe with the index and middle finger, otherwise known as the peace fingers.

  • Touch the thumb tip to the index finger that’s holding the toe.

  • Straighten the leg as much as it’ll go without the torso folding forward and without the shoulder pulling out of its socket. The knee might be very bent, and that’s OK.

  • Press the big toe into the fingers.

  • Draw the outer hip of the held leg down away from the armpit.

  • Hug the hip of the standing leg into the body so it’s not jutting out to the side.

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, quadriceps, hamstrings, hips, shoulders and core.

5. Standing Hand to Big Toe Pose/ Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana A

Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana A

Instructions

Within each version:

  • Kick the foot strongly into the hand that’s holding it to create resistance and balance.

  • If version one feels good, begin to lean forward while reaching the arm straight forward until the torso is about parallel to the ground.

  • If it’s difficult to balance, place the free hand on the ground (photo two).

  • If balance is OK, keep reaching the arm straight forward (version three).

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, quadriceps, hips, shoulders and core.

6. Standing Hand to Big Toe Pose B/ Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana B

Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana B

Instructions

  • From Standing Hand to Big Toe Pose A, move the lifted leg out to the side.

  • Reach the opposite arm out to the side or hold onto the hip.

  • To come out, bring the leg back to center as in the “A” version.

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, quadriceps, hamstrings, hips, gluteal muscles, shoulders and core.

  1. Lifted Leg, two versions

Leg Lifted, no hands and knee bent

Leg Lifted, no hands and knee straight

Instructions

  • From Standing Hand to Big Toe Pose A, release the toe.

  • Keep the knee bent (photo one).

  • If it feels OK to straighten the leg, do so (photo two).

  • Keep the leg lifted as high as is comfortable without leaning backward.

  • Reach the crown of the head high to the sky to avoid leaning back.

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, quadriceps, hips and core.

8. Tree Pose, two versions

Tree Pose, palms pressed together in front of heart

Tree Pose, arm reaching upward

Instructions

  • Bend the knee into the chest while balancing on one leg.

  • Hold the ankle.

  • Place the sole of the foot on the inner thigh of the standing leg.

  • Press the feet into the thigh while pressing the thigh into the foot simultaneously to create strength and balance.

  • Press palms together in front of the heart (photo one).

  • Reach arms straight up to the sky (photo two).

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, adductors, abductors, hips, gluteal muscles and core.

9. Standing Forward Fold Leg Lift, three versions

Standing Forward Fold, leg lift with bent knee

Standing Forward Fold, leg lift with straight leg

Standing Forward Fold, leg lift with straight leg & holding big toe

Instructions

  • Fold forward over two straight legs.

  • Lean the weight into one leg.

  • Pick up the opposite leg with a bent knee and lift it straight out to the side, like a clamshell exercise (photo one).

  • If keeping the first version is easy, try straightening the leg out to the side (photo two).

  • For a more advanced version, try hooking the big toe of the lifted foot and lifting the leg straight out to the side (photo three).

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, adductors, abductors, gluteal muscles, hips and core.

10. Pistol Squat

Pistol Squat

Instructions

  • Stand on one leg

  • Begin to bend the knee and lower the hips slowly toward the ground while kicking the floating leg straight out in front.

  • Keep the heel of the standing leg planted firmly.

  • Lower as far as you can go without compromising the knee.

  • If it feels good, lower until the butt almost reaches the ground.

  • Press back up.

  • Repeat, lowering and pressing back up, as many times as you’d like.

  • If a pistol squat puts too much strain on the knee, try a single-leg squat

Benefits:

  • Strengthens the feet, ankles, lower leg, quadriceps, hamstrings, gluteal muscles, hips, shoulders and core.

by Brynn Cunningham at weeviews.com / all photos credit: Colleen O’Neil

More on yoga for runners:

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Direct Experiencing

 

In truth we are not separate from each other or from the world, from the whole earth, the sun or moon or billions of stars... not separate from the entire universe. Listening silently in quiet wonderment, without knowing anything, there is just one mysteriously palpitating aliveness.

~ Toni Packer

The spiritual life is primarily about direct experiencing. It’s not primarily about philosophy, ideas or thinking, and it’s definitely not about beliefs. But we’re deeply habituated as humans to focus on the realm of abstract conceptual thought. And, of course, that realm has its place — we can’t function without it. But spirituality of the kind that interests me invites a different possibility. It’s an approach that finds liberation not in perfecting the little “me,” but rather, in discovering that we are actually much more and much less than this phantom, and that what we are seeking is right here. It’s about open listening, spaciousness, groundlessness, cluelessness, wonder, curiosity, and devotion to the actuality of here-now, just as it is.

This isn’t about escaping our humanity or always being in a state of bliss. We cannot avoid pain and painful circumstances or the vulnerabilities of these fragile human body-minds. And no matter how much humans may evolve as a species to greater degrees of sensitivity, the world will never be a flawless utopia with vegetarian tigers and only “nice people” behaving exactly as we think they should.

But in this moment NOW, the one and only moment, there is the possibility of waking up to a wholeness in which nothing needs to be different from how it is. There is the possibility of discovering that we are not bound or lacking in the ways we imagine.

We discover this by giving open attention to our actual direct experiencing and to the felt sense of presence or simple being. We can discover experientially that nothing stays the same for even an instant; that everything is dissolving in the very instant it appears; that nothing solid, substantial or persisting actually exists in the way we think it does; that we are at once no-thing and everything.

We can discover that thought always gives us a partial, over-simplified, incomplete, frozen abstraction of what is actually ALIVE (unresolvable, ungraspable, unpindownable). We can discover that the nature of this wholeness, this undivided presence, is unconditional love — that it is always allowing everything to be just as it is, always allowing everything to dissolve and disappear, never clinging to anything, and never seeing anything as other than itself.

What we’re seeking is always right here, but paradoxically, there does seem to be a process of discovery and realization. And as many great teachers have pointed out, much of the transformative process of seeing through the false and relaxing into the real happens outside of our conscious awareness — in other words, we don’t always know it’s happening. Thought is not directing it, and thought is not capable of accurately assessing how it’s going.

Transformation is nonconceptual and inconceivable. It’s not linear. And it’s not personal. It’s a happening of the whole universe. Reading, thinking, listening to talks — all of that has its place. But the most important work happens in silence, in BEING, in experiencing — feeling, sensing, awaring — knowingly being this presence that we are and that everything is, and also discovering that we can actually never not be this... this includes absolutely everything.

We tend to be uncomfortable with absorption in the nonverbal, experiential dimension because it feels unpredictable and out of our control. Language, thinking and conceptualizing give us a sense of control, a sense that we know what this is, where we are, and what’s happening. But the truth is, we don’t. Thought — posing as “me,” the illusory separate, encapsulated, autonomous self — is never in control. It is a powerless mirage.

The only real power is elsewhere (i.e., right here). It is the power of life itself. Of course, life includes thinking. It includes everything. But thinking can never capture or control it. We, as this boundless and impersonal aware presence, this seamless and centerless present experiencing, are not other than this power, but it is not a power that thought controls. We, as apparent individuals, are not doing it; it is doing us. And we are it.

There is nothing else here. Language just can’t ever quite say it! But we can KNOW it — in fact, we always are knowing and being it — it just can’t ever be put into words or ideas... not really.

So when we try to “get it” mentally, it never quite lines up, and we end up confused and stuck in apparent paradoxes, trying to reconcile what thought has seemingly divided up and set in opposition. But when we turn to presence and direct experiencing, all the problems, confusions and apparent conundrums evaporate. Nothing is actually in opposition to anything else. No-thing ever actually forms in any separate, persisting or independent way.

Presence is most intimate, closer than close, all-inclusive, limitless, unbound. It is the no-thing-ness, the aliveness, the non-substantiality, the radiance of everything. We discover this by simply giving open attention to whatever is showing up — present experiencing, the sensory-energetic immediacy of this very moment... hearing sounds, seeing colors and shapes, feeling sensations in the body.

Thought, identified as “me,” may try to do this in a very heavy-handed, result-oriented way — which is how we often habitually go about things, employing effort and will-power and then judging how well or how poorly we are doing, while striving for some imagined future perfection. But that approach tends to reinforce the very delusion it is attempting to wake up from... the thought-sense of encapsulation and separation, the belief that we are fundamentally deficient and in need of something different and better to happen so we can finally be okay.

But the little “me” is never okay... or not for long. The only actual okay-ness is in the wholeness, the unconditional love, the total acceptance of what is, and the recognition that EVERYTHING is included, that EVERYTHING is this.

So instead of trying really hard to shift the focus of attention and then keep it shifted, all of which is a losing battle, I recommend a more relaxed and playful approach — exploration rather than practice, with no goal in mind... and if a goal should appear in the mind, simply seeing that for what it is — a habitual, conditioned thought-pattern.

And it might be discovered that even this thought-pattern is nothing other than this presence, this no-thing-ness, this aliveness appearing momentarily as that thought-pattern. Nothing needs to be different from exactly how it is, and nothing will ever stay the same.

Sometimes the weather is clear and sunny, sometimes it is cloudy or stormy. It all belongs. Everything is included. Nothing is personal. So relax and enjoy the show, and if you can’t relax, be tense! That, too, is simply another momentary impersonal shape this presence is taking. And whenever it invites you, explore the possibility of giving open, relaxed attention, with curiosity and wonder, to whatever is showing up — the colors, shapes, sounds, textures, tastes and smells, somatic and kinesthetic sensations, movements of light and shadow — this whole happening in all its infinitely varied detail, as well as the felt sense of presence itself. And when thoughts arise, as they almost certainly will, maybe they can be explored, without logging into the content, as simply ungraspable energetic pulsations, gone before they arrive — knowing that ALL of this, thoughts included, is what is — an indivisible whole in which nothing exists independently of everything else. It can’t be pulled apart. It can’t be other than it is. And how it is can never be captured by thought. The words can only point to what is wordless and utterly free — the infinite here and now, utterly immediate and ever-present, but utterly unresolvable and never the same way twice.

Remember, nothing is ever what it seems to be or what we think it is, and we can’t have the light without the dark, nor can they ever be pulled apart. We contain it all. Awareness resists nothing and allows it all to appear and disappear, as everything instantly and endlessly always does, vastly beyond our attempts to capture or control it. And no two people will see any of it in exactly the same way, so how solid is it?

by Joan Tollifson in a letter shared on Substack in January 2024 at scienceandnonduality.com

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Reset Your Biological Clock

 

Imagine being able to press a button and reverse your aging process. This is a reality lived by over 90,000 people in Japan who are over 100 years old with a vitality that science can't explain. They don't use magic pills or expensive technologies. Their secret is a code of simple movements practiced for a few minutes a day which have been kept hidden from everyone.

These movements are not from Japan. They are an echo of a lost wisdom from ancient Egypt attributed to Thoth, the god who supposedly held the secret to controlling time itself.

Man is his own predecessor and successor.

He creates his future while thinking about the present.

Thoth is characterized as the architect of knowledge, the cosmic intelligence that recorded the secrets of the universe. Legend says he inscribed this wisdom on tablets made from a single piece of emerald, a material that according to the ancients vibrated at a frequency capable of preserving knowledge through the ages. These Emerald Tablets did not contain spells or magical rituals to cheat death. They contained something far more powerful, an instruction manual for human consciousness and its vehicle, the body.

What Thoth inscribed on these tablets was a map for transcending the limitations we believe to be real. He taught that aging, illness, and weakness are not natural conditions, but the result of a body that has lost its harmony with the order of the universe. The secret is not in fighting against time, but in learning to flow with it.

For Thoth, the body was not just flesh and bone. It was a musical instrument, and every cell, every organ, every joint needed to be tuned to vibrate in harmony with the symphony of creation. This attunement was not achieved through brute force or strenuous exercise. The key according to Thoth's teachings lay in vibration, energy, and consciousness. He revealed that specific movements when combined with breath and focused intention could alter the body's vibrational frequency which would allow the body to align with the fundamental principle governing the entire universe.

Ma'at is the Egyptian concept of truth, balance, order and harmony. To live in Ma'at was to live in tune with the truth of the cosmos and this attunement was directly reflected in the health and vitality of the physical body.

This knowledge was considered so powerful, so transformative that it could not be openly shared. It was guarded, transmitted in secret through mystery schools... from master to disciple for millennia. It was believed that humanity was not ready to understand that the power to heal and rejuvenate did not come from outside, from gods or potions, but from within.

The truth that the body is a portal to the unlimited energy of the universe was veiled in symbols and allegories waiting for the moment when human consciousness was mature enough to decipher the code. And now that moment has arrived. Modern science with its instruments capable of measuring the invisible is unknowingly validating these ancient principles. Studies on neuroplasticity, epigenetics, and bio-electricity are beginning to prove what Thoth already knew... Consciousness can, in fact, influence matter. Conscious movement can reconfigure neural networks, activate genes linked to longevity, and optimize the flow of energy throughout the body.

What was once considered esotericism is becoming scientific fact, revealing that the ancient Egyptians possessed a far more advanced understanding of human biology than we imagined. But how could such secret knowledge born on the banks of the Nile River resurface on the other side of the world in modern Japan? The answer lies not in maps or trade routes, but in a universal truth that transcends geography and time.

The search for harmony, what the Egyptians called Ma'at... cosmic order and perfect balance... found an almost identical mirror in a seemingly distinct culture. In Japan, this same principle is known as Wa, A profound concept that signifies peace, harmony, and the essential balance between the individual, society, and nature. While western civilization was immersed in a philosophy of conquest, competition, and domination over nature, the east followed a different path. Cultures like the Japanese preserved the art of stillness, intention, and movement that heals rather than breaks. They understood that true strength does not come from tension and brute force, but from fluidity and the ability to move in harmony with the flow of life. Japan with its culture of deep respect for ancestors and simplicity unknowingly became a perfect guardian of the wisdom of Thoth.

Rituals practiced by Japanese centinarians are not a direct copy of Egyptian teachings. They are the physical manifestation the bodily expression of the same universal laws that Thoth inscribed on his tablets. It is as if the same seed of wisdom had been planted in different soils and blossomed in unique ways, but maintaining the same essence.

Modern science with its ability to analyze every detail of human movement now serves as the bridge connecting these two worlds, proving what the wise men always knew. What was once considered mysticism is now validated by concrete data. Science can measure how gentle, deliberate movements rewire the brain, strengthen the immune system, and calm the nervous system. It can prove that focused intention during a movement can alter the expression of our genes.

Whenever people seek to live in greater alignment with the laws of nature, what the Japanese did was preserve this practice in its purest and most effective form, integrating it into their daily lives in a way that the West has completely forgotten. They transformed movement into a form of meditation, a way of dialoguing with one's own body.

Forget everything you know about complicated exercises. In Japan, doctors don't just look at blood tests or blood pressure to assess a patient's health. They use a test of disconcerting simplicity... a single movement that can predict your longevity with frightening accuracy... standing on one leg.

It may seem trivial, almost child's play, but behind this act lies a profound truth about how your body and brain are aging. A landmark study from Fukuoka University followed thousands of people for over a decade. The results were shocking. A person's ability to balance on one leg for one minute proved to be a stronger and more accurate indicator of longevity than many traditional medical markers. Those who could perform the test easily and practiced it daily had a 68% lower risk of suffering hip fractures, a leading cause of loss of independence in old age.

But the benefit went far beyond the bones. What happens in your body when you try to balance on one leg? It's not just a test of muscle strength. It's a complex neurological test. To maintain balance, your brain needs to instantly process information coming from your eyes, your inner ear, and hundreds of tiny sensors in your muscles and joints. It then needs to send precise commands so that hundreds of muscles from your foot to your core make constant micro adjustments.

It's an intense workout for your central nervous system. This exercise known as “the sages balance” is a direct application of Thoth's principle of finding one's own center to achieve stability in the universe. By forcing your body to find this point of physical balance, you are actually forcing your brain to create new neural connections.

Imaging scans have shown that regular practitioners had a greater volume of gray matter in the brain areas responsible for balance, cognition, and memory. You are literally building a younger and more resilient brain.

Most people silently lose this ability after the age of 40 without ever realizing it. Modern life with its chairs and flat paths no longer challenges our balance system. And this progressive loss is what leads to falls and frailty in old age. Practicing the sage's balance for just one minute on each leg every day is like pressing a reset button on your neurological clock. It's a simple act that trains your body not to fall, to remain stable and strong in the face of life's challenges. This minute of conscious stillness is much more than an exercise. It's an act of communication with your body, a moment to feel the subtle adjustments and innate intelligence that keeps you upright. It's the foundation, the cornerstone upon which other secrets will be built. By mastering this simple ritual, you're not just improving your balance, you're preparing your nervous system for the next challenge... an even more revealing movement that will expose, without a doubt, your true biological age... your real age.

Now imagine an even more profound test... a movement that not only predicts your longevity, but reveals your true functional age, the real age of your body, regardless of what your birth certificate says. Imagine being able to sit on the floor and stand up again, but with one condition... without using your hands, knees, or any kind of support. For most people in the Western world, raised in a culture of chairs and sofas, this simple task has become an almost impossible challenge. But for Japanese centinarians, it's as natural as breathing.

This humble transition from the floor to a standing position is the second secret. A massive study conducted by the University of Tuba, which followed more than 10,000 people, revealed a shocking truth: Those who could sit and stand up from the floor fluidly and without using their hands had a drastically lower mortality rate in the following years. With each point of support used, such as a hand or knee, the risk of death increased significantly. This is not just a test of strength or flexibility. It's a test of your body's integration.

What does this movement actually test? It assesses a combination of skills that we silently lose over the years. It requires core strength to stabilize the trunk, mobility in the hips and ankles to allow for range of motion, coordination to sequence actions correctly, and most importantly, motor planning.

Your brain needs to plan and execute a complex series of commands to move your body against gravity efficiently. It's a neurological test disguised as a physical movement. Practicing this transition daily is like taking a step back in time. Every time you sit down and stand up from the floor, you are reteaching your body the fundamental movement patterns it was designed to perform. You are nourishing your joints, strengthening the stabilizing muscles that most exercises ignore, and crucially keeping your brain sharp.

It's the guarantee of your independence. The ability to get up from the floor on your own is literally the ability to get up after a fall. The ability to continue living your life without depending on others. This movement is the physical manifestation of Thoth's wisdom on the importance of spinal flexibility, our tree of life as a channel for vital energy. A stiff spine and a body that cannot move freely are signs of a blocked energy flow.

By practicing this transition, you are restoring fluidity not only in your muscles and joints, but in your entire energy system. You are telling your body that it is still young, capable, and resilient. Mastering the art of sitting and standing from the floor is the ultimate preparation for what's to come. You've strengthened your nervous system with balance. And now you've restored your body's functional mobility. You're rebuilding your foundation layer by layer, preparing for the best kept secret of Japanese centinarians... a morning ritual that unites millions of people in a single movement... a three-minute dance that has the power to renew every cell in your body.

Imagine waking up and instead of being greeted by the shrill sound of an alarm, you are invited by a gentle piano melody. Every morning, promptly at 6:30 a.m., this music echoes through radios across Japan. It's not a news broadcast. It's not an advertisement. It's a call, an invitation for millions of people, from children to the elderly to move together in a sacred ritual of renewal. This is “Radio Taiso”, a routine of just three minutes that contains the third and perhaps most powerful secret to a long and healthy life.

Radio Taiso is not a workout. There are no weights, no jumps, no exhaustion. It is a sequence of 13 smooth and fluid stretches more akin to a dance. Arm circles, side bends, knee raises, all executed with a grace and intention reminiscent of ancient martial arts.

Each movement has been carefully designed to gently awaken the body, moving each joint to its maximum range of motion, but without forcing. It is the embodiment of Thoth's principle that fluid and continuous movement is the key to vitality.

Modern science once again confirms what Japanese tradition has practiced for almost a century. A massive study with over 8,000 elderly people revealed impressive results. Daily practitioners of Radio Taiso experienced 40% fewer falls and a 55% reduction in chronic back and shoulder pain. The secret lies not in strength but in lubrication. The rhythmic and gentle movement stimulates the production of synovial fluid, the body's natural oil that nourishes and protects the joints.

It is the perfect antidote to the stiffness that sets in with age. The timing of the practice is crucial. Performing Radio Taiso right after waking up when growth hormone levels are naturally at their peak maximizes its effects. You are essentially taking advantage of your body's biological repair window. These three minutes not only warm up the muscles, they send a signal to every cell in your body to awaken, repair, and renew. It's a way of telling your system that the day has begun and that it needs to operate at its maximum capacity. It's cellular renewal set in motion.

This collective ritual also has a powerful psychological component. Knowing that millions of other people are making the same movements at the same time creates a sense of connection and purpose. You are not just exercising. You are participating in a tradition, a communal act that reinforces habit and discipline. It is the union of Japanese Wa, social harmony with individual care, a practice that nourishes the body, mind, and spirit simultaneously in less time than it takes to prepare a cup of coffee.

With the nervous system fine-tuned by balance and mobility restored by the transition from the floor, the Radio Taiso dance acts as the catalyst that integrates everything. It prepares your body for the day, lubricating its gears and filling it with energy.

Now that the foundations have been laid, we are ready to delve into the heart of this ancient wisdom. We are ready to reveal the final three exercises, the movements that form the core of Thoth's power to, in fact, reverse time.

Now we arrive at the core of this ancient wisdom. The three movements you are about to discover are the essence of what Thoth taught about mastering life force. They are the rituals that, combined with those you have already learned, complete the code for reversing aging.

This journey of rediscovery begins with something you do every day... an act so fundamental that you never stop to think you might be doing it wrong. Walking is the first key to unlocking this ancient code... a movement that can be the fundamental difference between aging marked by pain and dependence and a long life with grace, strength, and independence. The first movement is Sampo, the art of mindful walking. Forget walking as an exercise to burn calories. Sampo is a meditation in motion. You walk at half your normal pace in silence, focusing on each step and your breath. The technique is simple. Inhale for two steps, hold your breath for two steps, and exhale slowly for four steps.

This deliberate rhythm does more than just calm the mind. A Kyoto University study followed Sampo practitioners and found that within a few months, they experienced a 62% reduction in arterial stiffness, a key marker of cardiovascular aging. By forcing the foot into full and deliberate contact with the ground from heel to toe, you activate all 33 joints in the foot, sending a cascade of neurological signals that reprogram your balance and posture system. It's the fine tuning of the body, a daily realignment that prepares the ground for the next ritual.

The second movement is the deep squat rest. In a world dominated by chairs, we have lost one of the most natural and restorative postures for human beings. The deep squat with heels on the ground and back straight is how the body was designed to rest. For the Japanese, squatting is not an exercise. It's part of life.

Maintaining this position for just 2 minutes a day has a profound impact. A 12-ear study revealed that older adults able to maintain a deep squat were 70% less likely to need assisted care in old age. Biomechanically, the deep squat is a miracle. It opens the hips, decompresses the lumbar spine, strengthens the pelvic floor, and nourishes the knee and ankle joints with synovial fluid. It's the perfect counterpoint to the hours we spend sitting, reversing the damage caused by the chair. Recovering this ability is recovering the independence and mobility of youth. It's a return to our primordial posture. An act of grounding that reconnects us with the energy of the earth, a fundamental principle in Thoth's teachings on drawing vitality from our environment.

The third and final exercise is the towel twist. This may seem the simplest of all, but its effects are incredibly complex. Holding a towel stretched at shoulder height with your hands apart, you slowly twist your torso from side to side, maintaining tension on the towel. This tension activates deep stabilizing muscles along the spine that conventional workouts simply ignore.

But the real magic happens in the brain. The twisting of the torso while the arms create an opposing force forces the two cerebral hemispheres to communicate intensely. This movement improves coordination, reaction time, and memory.

A 20-year study with elderly Japanese people showed a result that seems like science fiction. Those who practice the towel twist for just two minutes daily lived on average seven years longer and with a higher quality of life. It is the ultimate integration, the movement that unites body and mind, the perfect closing of the cycle together.

Sampo, deep squat, and the towel twist form the pinnacle of the practice, the direct application of Thoth's knowledge. But why exactly are these simple movements so incredibly powerful? Why do these six movements, which seem so simple, almost too basic, have such a profound power to reverse aging? The answer lies not in magic or mysticism, but in advanced physiology and the way our bodies are designed to function.

What ancient sages like Thoth knew intuitively, modern science is now decoding in the laboratory. The key lies in how these rituals communicate directly with our body's control system, the nervous system, and the endocrine system.

Let's start with the brain. Exercises like the sage balance and the towel twist are a feast for neuroplasticity... the brain's ability to reorganize itself and create new connections. Every time you challenge yourself to find balance or coordinate a complex twist, you're forcing your brain out of autopilot. This stimulates the production of brain derived neurotrophic factor, a protein that acts as a fertilizer for neurons, helping them grow, connect, and protect against age-related degeneration. You are literally building a younger brain.

Next, we have the hormonal system. Fluid and conscious movements like Radio Taiso and Sampo have a profound effect on reducing cortisol, the stress hormone. Chronic stress is one of the biggest accelerators of aging, causing inflammation, damaging DNA and suppressing the immune system. By practicing these gentle movements, you activate the parasympathetic nervous system, the body's rest and repair mode. This lowers cortisol levels and allows the body to direct its energy toward healing, cell regeneration, and tissue maintenance.

And what about our joints and muscles? The pain and stiffness we associate with old age are not inevitable. They are to a large extent the result of lack of movement. Rituals like the deep squat, rest, and floor transitions ensure that our joints move through their full natural range. This stimulates the production of synovial fluid, the lubricant that keeps joints healthy and pain-free. Furthermore, they activate deep stabilizing muscles that support our posture and protect our spine, muscles that most conventional workouts completely ignore.

The true genius of these six rituals lies in their holistic approach. They don't isolate a muscle or system. They treat the body as an integrated whole. The Sage's Balance trains the brain. The floor transitions ensure functional mobility. The Radio Taiso lubricates the joints and balances hormones. The Sampo improves cardiovascular health. The deep squat restores posture and the towel twist integrates both sides of the brain. Together they form a complete system of maintenance and rejuvenation.

It's not magic. It's intelligent physiology. It's using movement, the most fundamental tool we possess, to send our bodies the right signals. Instead of signals of stress, sedentary lifestyle, and decline, you send signals of repair, strength, and vitality. You are taking control of your biology using the same principles that Thoth codified millennia ago. The question now is not whether it works, but how you can integrate this power into your daily life in a simple and sustainable way.

You've received the map. Science has validated it. And now you understand the power behind each of these six rituals. The big question is, how do you transform this knowledge into real practice?...into a habit that integrates seamlessly into your life without feeling like just another obligation in an already busy routine.

The beauty of this system is that it doesn't require hours at the gym or super human will power. The power lies not in intensity but in consistency. The complete journey takes less than 15 minutes a day.

Let's draw up a simple plan. Start your morning not with your phone, but with your body. As soon as you get out of bed, dedicate three minutes to Radio Taiso. Use soft music and flow through the movements to gently awaken each joint. This will be your new breakfast for the body.

Right after, while the water for your coffee or tea heats up, practice Sage Balance. One minute on each leg. It's the perfect time to focus on your breath and find your center before the day truly begins. Next, find two minutes for the towel twist. You can do this right after the Sage Balance or during any other short break in the morning.

These first six to seven minutes of your day will have already activated your brain, lubricated your joints, and prepared your nervous system for a calm and focused day. You've already done more for your rejuvenation than most people do in an entire week of conventional workouts, and the day has barely begun.

The other three rituals can be integrated even more organically. During the day, whenever you feel stiff or tired from sitting, instead of just stretching in your chair, get down to the floor and practice the deep squat, then rest for a minute or two. Use this time to breathe deeply and feel your spine decompress. And practice floor transitions a few times throughout the day. Instead of asking for help to pick something up from the floor, see it as an opportunity to practice the movement.

Finally, Sampo. You don't need to set aside an hour for it. Turn a small part of your daily walk into a Sampo. It could be the first five minutes of your commute to work or a short walk after lunch. Turn off the music, put your phone away, and just walk, breathe, and feel. Five minutes of mindful walking is more powerful than 30 minutes of distracted walking. It's not about adding more tasks to your life, but about transforming existing tasks into opportunities for renewal.

Remember, the goal isn't perfection. There will be days when you only do one or two rituals. That's okay. What's important is the intention and consistency over time. Every minute you dedicate to these movements is a deposit into your longevity and vitality account. It's not a workout you have to do. It's a dialogue you choose to have with your body... a choice that repeated day after day becomes your new reality, a reality of strength, grace, and independence.

You have reached the end of this path and now the map is complete in your hands. The wisdom of Thoth, which has traveled through the millennia, has been validated by the most rigorous science and is lived daily by Japanese centinarians. This knowledge is no longer a secret. It is here, available to you.

The truth is that painful aging, loss of mobility, and mental decline are not an inevitable sentence. They are to a large extent the result of a life disconnected from the natural movement patterns for which our bodies were designed. What you have discovered is not a quest for immortality or a promise of eternal life. It is something far more real and valuable... the chance to live each year of your life independently with a clear mind and a strong capable body. It is

the opportunity to change the narrative of aging...

to transform it from a process of decline

into a process of continuous wisdom and vitality.

The choice as always is yours. You can file away this knowledge and continue on the standard path or you can make a new choice. You can dedicate less than 15 minutes of your day to honoring the incredible project that is your body. There's no need for expensive equipment, gym memberships, or miracle supplements. All you need is your own body, the ground beneath your feet, and your willingness to move consciously.

The journey doesn't begin with a grand over-night transformation. It begins with a single step, a single minute of balance, a single conscious breath. This small decision when repeated tomorrow and the next day and the day after that begins to create a cumulative effect. It's like a drop of water that day after day manages to sculpt the hardest rock. Each conscious movement is a message you send to your cells telling them to repair, strengthen, and renew themselves.

You are taking on the role of architect of your own biology, using the simplest and most powerful tools that exist. The elderly in Japan don't perform these rituals because they fear death. They do them because they love life. They want to savor each moment with presence, actively participate in the lives of their families and communities, and maintain their dignity and independence until their last breath. That is the true reward... the vitality that doesn't come from outside, from a pill or a procedure, but awakens from within, from the core of their being.

The journey begins now, not tomorrow, not next Monday. It begins with your next action. Choose one of the six rituals, whichever seems simplest or most appealing to you, and practice it right now. Feel in your own body the truth of what has been shared here. If you've made it this far, it's because you're no longer the same person who started reading this post. You felt the calling and understood that the power to transform your body and your life has always been in your hands. Say goodbye to old age. This first step, this first experience is the true beginning of your journey to reverse time and reclaim the vitality that is your birthright.

from You Tube @VibrationalPortal on November 7, 2025

Tree Touching Ritual

 

There is a reference tracing back through the hermetic tradition attributed to teachings associated with Thoth, the ancient Egyptian keeper of sacred knowledge, describing a 90-day practice of deliberate daily tree contact... not as symbolism, not as metaphor, but as a literal frequency attunement, a structured protocol for tuning the human bio-field the way you'd tune an instrument. (That word attunement stopped me cold because the texts didn't treat this as spiritual decoration. They treated it as technology.)

So I committed 90 days, no skipping, and three things happened that I was completely unprepared for... something physical that I noticed first in my body before I had words for it, something psychological that quietly rearranged the way I'd been moving through the world for years, and something else entirely... something I still don't have a clean, rational explanation for, and I've stopped trying to find one.

I'm not going to tell you what they are yet because the context matters and the sequence matters. What I discovered on the other side of those 90 days wasn't what I went looking for. It was something I didn't even know I'd been missing. What I found changed something in me I didn't know needed changing.

You've probably had that experience where something sounds ridiculous the first time you hear it, but something underneath the ridiculousness keeps pulling, like an itch behind your thoughts that won't resolve no matter how many times you dismiss it. The idea of standing barefoot next to a tree every single day with your hands pressed against the bark, trusting that something real is happening... that was exactly that kind of idea for me... absurd on the surface, impossible to fully release.

So before I tell you what happened, you need to understand what this practice actually is, because this isn't folk superstition dressed up in modern language. This goes back considerably further than that.

The ancient Egyptians called Thoth the scribe of the gods, the master of all knowledge, the figure through whom divine intelligence was transmitted to humanity. Thoth, whose teachings were later encoded in what became the hermetic tradition, is widely considered the philosophical backbone of western esotericism. His most concentrated expression survives in the Emerald Tablets, a document so dense with implication that serious scholars have spent entire careers unpacking a single line.

The principle at its core is one you've almost certainly encountered... “As above, so below. As within, so without.” Most people hear that and treat it as a decorative phrase, a bumper sticker for the spiritually inclined. But here's what it actually claims and the implications are staggering.

The principle of correspondence, as the hermetic tradition deploys, states that the natural world is not backdrop, not scenery... it is a living frequency-emitting system with which human consciousness can actively interface.

The world is not around you. It is in correspondence with you.

Now hold that thought... because here is where the trees come in. According to hermetic and related traditions, trees are not passive organisms. They function as what could be called biological frequency anchors. Their root systems penetrate multiple layers of the earth's electromagnetic field. Their above ground structure interfaces with atmospheric frequencies. And in the oldest layers of Thoth's transmitted teachings, trees were described as standing pillars between worlds... beings that exist simultaneously in the below... the earth, the root, the dense... and the above... the sky, the light, the subtle. They straddle what the hermeticists called the vertical axis of consciousness, the axis that connects matter to spirit, ground to cosmos.

Most things in your life exist horizontally, moving through time, through circumstance, through one thing after another. A tree stands still, vertically, always. Picture a tuning fork. When you strike one tuning fork and hold it near a second tuning fork, tuned to the same frequency, without touching it, without any physical connection, the second fork begins to vibrate in sympathetic resonance. The frequency moves through the air between them and the second instrument responds because it is built to respond to exactly that signal.

Now ask yourself this: What if the daily practice of intentional physical contact with a living tree sustained over time is not superstition, but a resonance practice? What if the tree is the tuning fork and you are the instrument being tuned?

Here's something worth knowing quietly. Researchers studying Shinrin-yoku, the Japanese practice of forest bathing, have documented measurable reductions in cortisol, improvements in natural killer cell activity and shifts in brain wave states in subjects who spend regular time in contact with trees. Phytoncides, volatile organic compounds released by trees, have been shown to directly influence human immune and neurological function. The science is not metaphor. Trees are chemically and electromagnetically active participants in the environment they share with us.

The 90-day ritual as transmitted through the tradition is precise... daily physical contact... both hands placed on the same tree... bare feet on the earth when possible... for a minimum of seven minutes. Same tree, same time each day. And the quality of presence matters.

This is not passive proximity. This is what the tradition calls 'active receptivity', a state of deliberate openness as opposed to distracted presence. The distinction sounds subtle. In practice, it is everything.

Why 90 days? In the hermetic framework, the number is structural... three cycles of 30 days each, reflecting the triadic foundation at the heart of hermetic philosophy... body, mind, and spirit. Each layer requires its own full cycle to complete its attunement.

You cannot rush the third layer by forcing the first. The structure is the teaching theory received framework in place. But knowing what this is and living through what it does are two entirely different experiences.

What happened in those first 30 days was not what I expected at all. I want to be honest with you about something that most people who write about practices like this leave out. The first 30 days were not peaceful. They were disorienting. That surprises people. They expect the softness to arrive immediately. They expect the tree to deliver some cinematic moment of stillness, some gentle exhale of the universe. And in the early days, there is none of that. What arrives instead is something closer to static, becoming audible for the first time.

Think about what happens when you turn up the brightness on a screen. You don't just see the beautiful things more clearly. You see every smudge, every hair-line crack, every fingerprint you trained your eye to ignore. That is exactly what intentional daily stillness does to a human nervous system that has been running in chronic low-grade noise for years.

The tree doesn't add anything to you. That's the thing people misunderstand. It doesn't introduce calm like a sedative. It simply stops the interference. And in that sudden quiet, you hear everything that was already there.

On day 11, I stood in front of that tree and felt a wave of grief move through me with no apparent cause... not sadness about anything, just grief... old, structural, like something that had been stored in the walls.

On day 19, the opposite... a rush of clarity so clean it almost felt borrowed, like a frequency I'd accidentally tuned into and knew I hadn't earned yet.

Have you ever sat in total silence and found that the silence was somehow louder than the noise you'd escaped from? That's exactly what was happening. The thoughts that surfaced weren't new thoughts. They were the thoughts you'd been successfully outrunning, the ones you'd buried under scheduling and scrolling and the low hum of chronic busy-ness. They were always there. The practice just stopped the shaking long enough for them to rise.

This is what phase 1 actually is... not awakening, but surfacing, and then something shifts around day 31.

Picture a jar of muddy water. You've been carrying it, shaking it, adding things to it your whole life, hoping the right addition will finally make it clear. But you don't purify muddy water by adding something to it. You set it down. You stop shaking it and gravity does the rest. The sediment sinks... not because you fixed anything, but because you finally stop disturbing it. That is phase 2... days 31 through 60. The sediment begins to settle, the quality of thought changes... not dramatically, not in ways you could easily describe to someone else, but noticeable in the way that a low-grade fever breaking is noticeable... something quieter, a reduced urgency in the mental noise.

You might mistake it for boredom, if you weren't paying close attention. But in retrospect, and only in retrospect, you recognize it as the first experience of genuine baseline calm you'd had in years.

Now, here is the part that skeptics will resist most, which is exactly why it's worth addressing directly. The grounding research, specifically the work of Clint Ober and the studies published in the Journal of Environmental and Public Health, documents what happens when human skin makes direct contact with the earth. The body equilibrates to the earth's negative electrical charge, inflammatory markers measurably reduce, and circadian cortisol rhythms normalize. Direct contact, including through the bark of a rooted living tree, functions as a conductor for this transfer. The body is a bio-electrical system, the earth is an electrical system, and a living rooted tree is a conductor between them. This is not mysticism. This is basic bio-physics.

Somewhere around day 45, something shifts in the practice itself. The effort required to return to the tree each day, which had been real in those early weeks, begins to reverse. Returning stops feeling like discipline. It starts feeling like returning to something familiar, and familiarity in this context is not boredom... it is something closer to recognition.

Remember the tuning fork? the way a matching frequency doesn't have to try? It simply responds. By day 45, I wasn't trying to vibrate anymore. Something in me had already begun to match the frequency without effort. The practice was doing me rather than the other way around.

Thoth's teaching about the living intermediary, the rooted system that bridges worlds, had described exactly this... not as poetry, but as mechanics. The ancient understanding wasn't mystical language wrapped around a vague feeling, it was a precise description of a process that has a biological substrate, a measurable pathway... and as I was now discovering... a predictable timeline. 60 days in, I understood the architecture. I could feel the structure of what was happening. I had language for it, frameworks for it, the grounding of both ancient teaching and modern research to hold it steady.

And then somewhere in the final 30 days, something happened that I genuinely did not have a framework for... something that made me go back to Thoth's teachings with completely different eyes, something I had no category for. I want to be careful here because the moment I reach for dramatic language, I risk losing the thing itself, and the thing itself is too important to lose to performance. So let me just tell you what happened.

Days 61 through 90 felt like a shift in the quality of attention itself... not what I was noticing, but how the noticing felt. During the daily practice, something changed. Not in the tree, not in the environment, but in the texture of the silence between me and it. I want to be precise about this because the wrong framing ruins it. The tree did not speak. I did not receive a vision. There was no anthropomorphic moment, no face in the bark, no whispered instruction. I am explicitly rejecting that framing... not because it isn't poetic, but because it isn't what happened.

What happened was subtler and therefore more disturbing in its implications. When you sit in a truly quiet room, not silent but genuinely quiet, you may notice that the silence itself has texture. It has a quality. It responds somehow to the quality of your listening. That is the closest I can come to describing what began happening around day 63.

Attention, sustained and genuine, appeared to move in both directions. Something was noticing back. Here is where the hermetic framework does the real work... the work we laid down earlier in this piece when we talked about what Thoth actually encoded in the principle of mentalism, the first and most foundational of the seven hermetic principles.

The All is mind. The universe is mental. This does not mean reality is imaginary. I cannot say that clearly enough. It means consciousness is not produced by matter. It is the medium in which matter occurs. A brain is not the origin of awareness. A brain is a receiver. Consciousness is the signal. And every living system from the oldest tree to the smallest organism participates in that field... not because it thinks the way you think, but because consciousness does not require a brain to be present. It was here before brains... it will be here after them.

The tree is not aware of you the way a person is aware of you. But you and the tree are both occurring inside the same field, and when you make yourself genuinely quiet, not performatively quiet, but genuinely still day after day in the same place, that field becomes perceptible. What was always present becomes something you can actually feel. That is what the 90-day practice does. That is the mechanism.

The ritual is not about the tree. The tree is the occasion. What Thoth encoded was not a nature ceremony. It was a training protocol for the human nervous system, a method for teaching the body to tolerate increasing degrees of stillness, receptivity, and expanded awareness without the habitual retreat back into mental noise.

Trees are the anchor because they are among the few things in the natural world you can return to in the same place day after day that will not change, will not demand, and will not leave. They hold still long enough for you to learn to hold still.

Three things changed. I promised you this in the beginning. And here it is.

Physically, by week six, sleep quality shifted measurably... not dramatically, not miraculously, but consistently. I was falling into deeper rest, waking with less residue, and this remained stable through the end of the 90 days and has not reversed.

Psychologically, the quality of my decision-making changed... not the decisions themselves, but the ground beneath them. There was less reactive urgency, a longer pause between stimulus and response, a felt sense of steadiness that I had previously associated only with luck or circumstance, but which was now somehow structural. It had been built.

And then the third thing, the one I cannot explain cleanly and will not pretend to. Beginning on day 67, I had a recurring dream. It came back on days 71, 78, and 83... each time, the same image... the tree I had been visiting, seen from above with roots that extended impossibly deep... not into soil, but into a luminous structured grid beneath the earth... geometric, ordered, alive with a light that had no obvious source.

I am not telling you this as proof of anything. I am not interpreting it for you. I am simply reporting it... because sometimes the most honest thing a person can do is say, "I don't know what this was, but it happened." And it changed the question I'm asking. Which brings me to you.

What if the reason this kind of practice sounds absurd to most people isn't because it is absurd, but because the world we've been handed runs entirely on the assumption that stillness has no value, that nature is inert, and that consciousness is an accident???

Thoth disagreed, and now you're sitting with that, not as someone who is reading about an ancient ritual, but as someone holding a question that cannot be unasked. You cannot go back to the version of yourself who hadn't considered that the silence between you and a tree might be something other than empty... that attention might be relational, that consciousness might be the ocean and you've been spending your whole life studying the wave.

The question is alive in you now. What you do with it is yours.

from YouTube @LibraryofThoth on April 27, 2026

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