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How to Sit on the Floor, Part 1: Cross-legged Sitting

March, 2019

This is the first post in our multi-part series on floor sitting. For Part 2 on squatting, click here.

Sitting cross-legged on the floor is common in many cultures around the world, and has become popular in some segments of modern Western societies.

 


This Druze woman who I met in Israel has sat cross-legged all her life. She runs a hospitality business — all the food is laid out on the floor and the guests sit along the periphery of the room. She is at ease in this position for extended periods with her back remaining upright and relaxed.
 


In this temple in Bhubaneswar, devotees sit cross-legged for extended periods in performing rituals.
 


These Buddha figures in Thailand show relaxed, healthy, upright cross-legged sitting posture.


For those who grew up sitting on the floor (thus maintaining their original muscle flexibility and joint mobility), sitting on the floor is comfortable and healthy.

 


Babies in any culture have the capacity to sit cross-legged with healthy upright posture. This is Monisha White, Esther Gokhale’s youngest child.

 

It comes in handy at sporting events, in working with young children or with objects on the floor, or in a minimalist context. For people who did not grow up sitting on the floor, though, it can cause a host of problems.

When we are born, our hip, knee, and ankle joints are not yet made of bone, but rather of cartilage. The cartilage ossifies with a timeline that is specific for each joint. The hip socket, for example, is made of three cartilaginous plates at birth. The first pair of these plates ossifies at age 2; the last pair ossifies at age 16. We know that ossification patterns are influenced by mechanical stresses, so it is a commonsensical argument that the habitual positions a person assumes during the ossification period in childhood will dictate how the hip joints (and other lower body joints) set. Someone who has not sat on the floor since being a baby will have a different hip architecture than someone who sat on the floor to eat and squatted to use the toilet growing up. The shape of the joint will be different, as will its range of motion. Some joints have a “use it or lose it” mentality! Additionally, the muscles around these joints will have resting lengths that are adapted to the habitual positions. With muscles, it is simply a matter of stretching to get them to cooperate and be comfortable in new poses. For the bones and joints in an adult, however, things are more fixed. It is unlikely that any amount of practice could find us comfortable and sitting healthily in the lotus position for the first time as an adult.

In this first post of our multi-part series on floor sitting, we will teach you how to modify cross-legged sitting so it is more accessible and healthy for your modern body.

 

How the “pros” do it

Having grown up with this position since early childhood, people like the Thai woman below are able to preserve a healthy base anteverted pelvis and a well-stacked, relaxed, and upright torso.

 


This Thai woman sits through a prayer ceremony sitting cross-legged. Notice her upright and relaxed torso atop an anteverted pelvis.
 


In a tribal market in Orissa, this woman sells pots and roots while sitting cross-legged for hours comfortably.

 

The problem in modern cross-legged sitting

This position tends to tuck the pelvis in people who did not grow up sitting cross-legged. The pelvis is limited by the external hip rotators as well as by the shape of the hip socket itself. Without an optimal alignment of the pelvis, you will be stuck between two poor choices: relaxed and slumped, or upright and tense, each of which causes different kinds of damage.

 


Cross-legged sitting on the floor for modern urban people usually involves a tucked pelvis.

 

     
A retroverted (tucked) pelvis often results in a relaxed and slumped torso (left). Being upright on a tucked pelvis requires tension in the long back muscles (right). This is not a sustainable or healthy position for long periods.

 

The fix: use implements (pillows, wedge, blankets) under your bottom to help facilitate rotation of the pelvis. Allow the legs to be lower than the hips to accommodate tight external rotators and the shape of the hip socket.

 


A support under the sitz bones facilitates sitting cross-legged in a healthy way — upright and relaxed.

 

Do you use any of these techniques? Do you have props that help you sit on the floor more comfortably?

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Comments

Thank you for this blog, it's very freeing! I've never been able to comfortably sit crossed-legged, especially with my tight hamstrings, yet I've tried for years to do so in yoga. I can't do it without being uncomfortable and quickly getting a backache. I thought I could make it happen with diligent practice and stretching but you've set me free to stop being miserable trying. I do sit on a small yoga cushion but always feel like a baby or that I'm somehow cheating by doing so. Good to know!

So glad to hear you are no longer going to feel miserable while attempting this!

Thank you, Esther, for another practical and highly informative piece. As always, your use of beautifully illustrative photos is so effective in conveying your message. I had a momentary sense of grief for my childhood self who never got the chance to develop the proper body architecture to comfortably sit on the floor. But more important is the gratitude I have for the opportunity to build healthier posture now through mindful application of your methods. Thank you again.

Each childhood has its own richness. The same people who sit effortlessly on the floor have no shortage of challenges in areas where we are fortunate...

What a timely subject! I have recently been practicing meditation, and in our sitting meditation, I often find that I can only maintain a sitting position on the floor for a few minutes before I am horribly uncomfortable. I have tried blankets and pillows, but so far have found that they only provide minimal assistance and for minimal additional time. It's good to know that I'm probably not the only one in our modern culture with this problem! Thanks Esther!

Recently, in the meditation class I am taking, I tried the instructor's "Zafu" meditation cushion. It worked wonders! I felt like I was able to relax my back, antevert my pelvis, and remain upright with little effort. It allowed me to stay seated on the floor much longer than I ever have before. You can find Zafu cushions online (example: https://www.huggermugger.com/meditation/zafu-meditation-cushion-solids.html) and probably at your local yoga-type stores. 

Thank you again!

Zafus are really handy. Because they have a circular shape, they give your thighs plenty of clearance to angle down. And I really like straddling them sideways with a modified seiza position (coming in a future blog post). 

What a wonderful post, Esther, thank you so much!  I agree wih the posters before me.  I have  been doing yoga for 30 years and meditating for 20 and have never been comfortable sitting cross-legged on the floor and now I understand why and can forgive myself my inflexibility in this regard.  For my 20 years of meditating I have been either sitting with a special meditation cushion or using a seiza bench.  Now, I tend to use a buckwheat zafu cushion but sit on it seiza style.  I find this extremely comfortable for long periods of time.  I also have a "Cloud Bench" which is delightful (see SamadhiCushions.com) and is another way to sit comfortably in meditation.  With all these type of sitting you can properly antevert your pelvis.

Right on!

When I started going to school at age 6, I did not want to sit in the chairs at school like a "lady," as they wanted me to, with both feet on the floor.  I was always trying to sit cross-legged in my chair: it seemed a lot more comfortable to me. But I was always being reprimanded about it.  This was the case until about 8th grade probably.  "Shannon, put your feet on the floor!"

For this reason I can sit cross-legged a little more easily than most people in America, but I didn't realize that the anteverted pelvis was the key.

Thank You for this fascinating post. I have shared it with sisters who have children under 16 so they can help them have a better range of motion.

I'm wondering what this means for doing squats at the gym. Can adults improve their ranges of motion or are we kind of stuck with how low we can go before butt wink happens in squatting position?

 

Most adults can improve (by stretching tight muscles) AND most adults in modern cultures will probably run into some limitations (owing to their joint structure). 

I am working on a habitual sway low back, and sitring on the floor is easy for me, but for extended periods (longer than 1 hour) still causes me aches and pains, I think because my back muscles are overly tight for too long... I am doing your inner corset work to strengthen my core to help correct this,  but I'm wondering what other tips you may have for me regarding floor sitting.... I have occasions that require me to sit on the floor for a few hours at a time regularly (once or twice a month) I have tried elevating my hips but honestly that seems to make it worse for me. lately I am resorting to a back jack but I would like to be able to sit on the floor without it. thanks so much!

I think this would be best addressed in a consultation with any of our teachers. It's not easy to get all the relevant information in writing, and it wouldn't be responsible for me to make scattershot recommendations. Good luck!

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