Patience and Persistence will pay off. While many new moms want to emulate celebrities and return to their pre-pregnancy figures as quickly as possible, it is important to remember that pregnancy and birth take an enormous toll on your body. As frustrating as it may be, rushing into an intense workout regime can cause significant damage to your joints and ligaments if not planned properly. Because your body requires time to adjust to the changes brought on by birth, taking it slow is the best way to regain your figure while avoiding serious injuries. There are a number of specific exercises that have been developed for new mothers looking to strengthen their abdominal muscles and begin the process of reshaping their body.
The Importance of Exercise Following Pregnancy
Finding the time and energy to exercise after a pregnancy is a difficult challenge, but one that is very important to your overall health and happiness. Maintaining even a simple exercise regime that can be completed while baby naps can have a positive effect. Some benefits of post-natal exercise include:
Increased energy
Positive body image reinforcement and self confidence
Enhanced muscle tone and weight loss
Assists in relieving stress and post-partum depression
Abdominal Exercises
Following a pregnancy, the muscles that make up the abdominal wall will have considerably less elasticity than their pre-birth condition. Toning these muscles can help to increase your circulation and help you to bring back your pre-pregnancy figure. While your body needs time to recover from the trauma of birth before resuming a regular workout, some simple exercises you can perform include:
Pelvic Tilts. Lie flat on your back, with your knees up and your hands resting on your stomach. Your feet should be flush with the floor. Gently contract your stomach muscles and push your lower back towards the floor, while simultaneously tightening the muscles in your bottom. Hold this position for 5 seconds and release.
Pelvic Crunches. This exercise is similar in nature to the pelvic tilt, with the exception that instead of holding the position for a count of five, the muscles should be tightened and released in rapid succession in increments of five. Pelvic crunches can be alternated with tilts until you begin to feel tired.
As you begin to regain your strength, your workout intensity and the diversity of exercises you can incorporate can be increased. Check with you doctor before beginning any type of rigorous exercise program.
Pre Post Natal Exercise
After the birth of my friends second child, she felt pain in my lower back especially in the evenings after a long day at work and tending to the family. A friend suggested she try Pilates for relief. At first, she scoffed at that. ?What could Pilates do for me?? she was sure she needed back surgery, the most expensive mattress she could purchase for back support, and maybe even run through her cash fast by buying all those promise-to-cure back pain treatments that provided warmth all day long, even if they were uncomfortable. Well folks,she was wrong.
Pilates helped her back pain the very first week she began. In the beginning, she think's she was most skeptical because Pilates was something famous celebrities did and made money off advertising how it helped them. What she learned was that after her second child was born, she began to experience poor posture and her back muscles became weak and stiff from non-use and lifting poorly.
If over 25 million people are using Pilates, there must be something to it right? Beyond her back pain, with her baby weight to lose, she also found that Pilates was a good way to become toned and slimmer all while helping her back pain. Through Pilates, she was taught to target her core muscles deep in her abdomen. By learning to focus on her core muscles and with the Pilates idea that if her muscles are used regularly, her flexibility will improve, her back pain began to decrease. The first thing she noticed was that dull ache was gone?something she thought would never go away.
The stretching techniques and very controlled positions of Pilates concentrated on the weaknesses in her body and helped her mind understand how to be more aware and in tune with her body. Listening to her body and acting upon those calls of ?oh my back,? increased her need for more knowledge about Pilates. Perhaps it's because she became sort of settled in with her body after her children were born? Or maybe she just became lazy. Whatever the reason, she knew she wasn't treating or focusing on how to treat her back which is such an important part of her core muscles!
She always tries to eat a healthy diet and will take a hike with friends and thought that was enough, but her back pain continued. She found through Pilates that she needed to focus more on the muscles, joints, ligaments, and bones in her back and how stretching and exercising these important areas would not only make her more limber, but increase her back strength, thus ridding her of back pain.
Through friends she met online and in her Pilates class, she found that beyond increasing her back strength, She was also helping muscles in her buttocks, spine, and shoulders as well. All of these things connect right? Keeping that in mind, She learned about good stretching techniques versus bad ones. She learned the reason why each Pilates movement is controlled and held for a short period of time'to strengthen and improve flexibility. The best part was the body toning that was an additional bonus of practicing Pilates.
For people who simply say, ?I don't have time to exercise,? think Pilates! It helped her back pain and can help yours too along with strengthening your abs, hips, leg, and arm muscles. Enjoy Pilates!
Both Wendy Wood & Tawana Wall are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Wendy Wood has sinced written about articles on various topics from Low Carb Diet, Lose Weight and Credit Cards. Wendy Wood is a full-time mom in the process of losing extra pounds and loves to show other moms how they can lose weight and be healthier as well. Sign up for your free healthy recipes at. Wendy Wood's top article generates over 12100 views. to your Favourites.
Tawana Wall has sinced written about articles on various topics from Attracting Mate, Cars and Credit Check. There are a range of DVD's on sale at which have been recommended by a leading British Osteopath/Physiotherapis. Tawana Wall's top article generates over 201000 views. to your Favourites.
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