Yoga: For Pregnancy & Beyond

Whether you're five months along, ready to deliver or five months postpartum, these programs were built for you.



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Consider yoga a way to stay physically healthy and emotionally grounded. It addresses challenges inherent to pregnancy and childbirth while nourishing the spirit to set the stage for confident parenting. Pregnant fitness buffs will find that yoga’s asanas (postures) rival any other workout in keeping the body toned and flexible. Women with more difficult pregnancies find physical and emotional comfort in yoga’s gentle, restorative poses and breathing techniques.

Prenatal peace Either way, says Patty Slote, director of the prenatal program at the Movement Center in Portland, Ore., the practice creates a solid foundation of inner strength during pregnancy. “You cultivate an openness to change and a connection to the baby growing within you,” says Slote, who also is the creator of the DVD Prenatal Yoga: A Complete Home Practice for a Healthy Mother and Baby (The Movement Center/Rudra Press, 2005).

Relax and deliver Yoga facilitates more comfortable birthing, with postures that open the pelvis and use gravity to your advantage. Mentally, it enables you to enter into delivery focused and relaxed. “In fostering your natural tendency to turn inward during labor, yogic breathing helps you find peace,” says Kristen Eykel, a kundalini yoga instructor in Los Angeles specializing in prenatal yoga and co-creator (with Lamaze and Yoga Journal) of the DVD Yoga for Your Pregnancy (Good Times, 2004). “You approach the birthing process with confidence rather than a stress response.” She says breathing techniques for relaxation apply even in cases of a planned Cesarean section.

After the baby Yoga’s benefits continue as you cope with the demands of caring for your baby—and the desire to get your body back. “You want exercise that replenishes rather than fatigues you,” says Jo Ann Colker-Arison, a hatha yoga teacher in Los Angeles and creator of the postnatal DVD Yoga Ma Baby Ga: Mama & Me Postnatal Yoga (Tapeworm, 2005). Devote just 10 minutes daily (even incorporating your baby into the routine), and you’ll see significant mind-body benefits. Best of all, it happens naturally and effortlessly, rather than through overexertion.

The pregnancy program

 “Yoga alleviates many of pregnancy’s common discomforts,” says Slote, who designed the following series of poses that are linked together with breath and movement. Do this routine 3–4 times per week in the order shown, resting between poses if needed. When you are ready to progress, try doing the entire program from start to finish without resting.

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By Jennifer Barrett

User Comments:

  1. Yes, good point, yoga does connect the body and spirit and with the help of a pregnancy yoga dvd one can get the training one needs when one needs it. You are also right that yoga is an excellent way to get into shape after child birth.
    — Jill
  2. I loved Jennifer Wolfe's Prenatal Vinyasa Yoga DVD. There were 4 different routines that I used depending on the time I had available...which wasn't very much. I did manage to workout 2-3 times a week for almost 4 months. I felt completely physically prepared for childbirth, and my recovery time was very fast.
    — Kristen
  3. Thank you for this article, Jennifer. I love doing Prenatal Yoga! I feel so great after I workout. Way more energy than days that I do not exercise. Like Kristen, I also use Jennifer Wolfe's DVD, Prenatal Vinyasa Yoga. I LOVE it. I started on the 15 minute version, and now I am up to the 75 minute practice. There is a great partner segment on the DVD that I got my husband to try with me. He was reluctant at first, but now he loves being able contribute to my pregnancy in a very real way. We do the partner routines once a week :) …great stretches that are too difficult for me to get in a solo practice. Congrats to all the other moms-2-be out there. I'm due on March 3rd. I'm nervous and excited at the same time! ~Shea
    — Shea Lynn Baird




 

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