Prenatal Yoga Blog 14 Poses

Poses for Pregnancy

Pregnancy Yoga Poses

NOTE:  Always consult with your healthcare provider before starting a yoga practice while pregnant.

Why yoga is optimal for pregnant women

When your body is healthy, it provides a better atmosphere for your baby to grow and develop… Prenatal yoga practice is an amazing way to stay healthy and strong… From an emotional perspective, yoga supports us by turning off the rational, thinking mind and allowing the body to lead instead. Further, the connection with breath, a cornerstone of yoga, allows you to go within, dropping away from the mental chatter and gaining clarity on what really matters, especially as you traverse the magical journey of pregnancy.

Following is a list of safe yoga poses for pregnancy. These are just suggestions and not by any means an exhaustive list of poses.

Best yoga poses for pregnancy: Basic yoga poses that emphasize building strength in the back and legs, lengthening the pelvis, and bolstering expectant mama’s sense of self and connection with her babe.

Here are a few suggestions for yoga postures that emphasize healthy prenatal exercise. These poses can be foundational for beginners just starting yoga, or poses to integrate with an already existing practice.

Safe Prenatal Yoga Poses

    1. Cat-cow pose

Benefits: Helps to lengthen the spine and creates space in the upper back and stimulates the abdominal muscles. When practicing these poses, place emphasis on rounding of the upper (versus lower) part of the back.

    2. Standing poses

  • Warrior II pose
  • Extended side angle pose
  • Triangle pose

Benefits: These poses not only work to strengthen the legs, open the hips and relieve the back, but also encourage healthy circulation to prevent cramping as blood pressure starts to drop during pregnancy. Triangle creates an open twist, which relieves back pain and promote a healthy posture, especially with tendency to round shoulders and upper back due to increase in new breast tissue.

    3. Squats

Benefits: Squats help to shorten the birth canal; baby has a shorter distance to travel when coming out of the body. Squats also help to strengthen the legs and open the hips. When doing squats, consider using a blanket, with heels on the blanket, toes off the blanket at a 45 angle. The support of the blanket maintains length in the spine and overarching in the lower back.

    4. Balancing poses

  • Tree pose
  • Warrior III pose
  • Standing half moon pose

Benefits: Similar to standing poses, these are great for building strength in the legs and increasing circulation to prevent swelling in the feet and ankles (Note: If you feel loss of balance or dizziness, consider practicing at the wall or with a chair).

    5. Seated poses

  • Sitting Side stretch pose
  • Easy pose with twist (“Seated twist”)

Benefits: Open twists opens the sides of the waist, pelvis, and stretches the hips to create more space through the torso.

    6. Hip openers (seated)

  • Bound angle pose
  • Wide-legged forward bend pose

Benefits: Relieves aches in the lower back, opens the hip joints, and creates space around the pelvis.

    7. Savasana

It is recommended to lie on the left side to encourage the baby into the optimum position for birth and supports the heart and blood flow. Around 34 weeks, expectant mamas should avoid lying flat on the back for any extended length of time due to the weight of the baby on the vena cava (a major vein carrying blood from the lower body to the heart). Savasana lends itself nicely to the theme of pregnancy, which is to slow down as the pregnancy progress, rest and sink into that place of stillness and relaxation.

While not considered a specific pose per se, facilitating connection with breath (think Ujjayi, alternate-nostril breathing) is powerful throughout pregnancy and a major player during childbirth. It not only facilitates the connection with physical sensations and the growing life force within, but also functions to support mindfulness as it serves as a focal point for us to come back to whenever we get sucked into the mental chatter of our minds. As if this isn’t enough, the breath also supports relaxation by slowing down the mind and body via activation of the parasympathetic nervous system (aka “relaxation response”).

The practice of yoga during pregnancy can support expectant mamas in tuning into their bodies and trusting their intuitive wisdom. Whether it’s the physical or emotional benefits you are deriving from your prenatal practice, work to stay open to the experience, living from a place of acceptance and non attachment. Finally, self-compassion cultivated through your practice can be a pillar of strength as you traverse the many changes, both emotional and physical, that come with pregnancy and beyond.  –Melissa Mercedes

Home4Birth clients, pick up a free prenatal yoga pass at our office for Source Yoga’s Sunday 1:30 p.m. classes. After that first free class, Home4Birth will pay for part of the first three class bundle. You pay just $15 (reg drop in rate is $15 per class). So, it’s like getting another two classes for free!

Prenatal Yoga Blog 13 Gratitude

Yoga and Gratitude

“How does yoga help… express… gratitude? Why do we practice yoga? The common answer is health and/or wellness. What detracts from wellness more than stress? What is the opposite of stress?” “Gratitude..! “Yoga and gratitude” are “like parent and child. Gratitude is a byproduct of yoga… The goal of yoga is awareness, as we become more aware we start to see how blessed we are and it” begins “to seem really silly that gratitude is not a larger player in our mind state. Especially when we understand the negative effects of stress and gratitudes” ability to “reverse those effects. Yet in the rat race… everyone is running around trying to get somewhere and trying to accumulate more somehow feeling like we are not good enough… Feeling like something is wrong or… missing… Business 101 teaches us to create a need for what we are selling. An industry called marketing blossoms. The key to marketing is creating a need and one way to create a need is to make people feel inadequate… like we are not good enough the way we are.” In ads people “see how beautiful we should be and what we should have to be cool and what we need for a good time, we see what we are missing and … even how we should act. Over time this stuff has an effect. It’s like we are being programmed.” As a result, “our mentality dwells more in lack than abundance. We become more focused on what we want than grateful for all we have. We believe our salvation will come from accumulation instead of appreciation. Accumulation has no end. Appreciation is the end, it’s the foundation of contentment and satisfaction.

Gratitude yoga is when you consciously attempt to be grateful… Within our yoga practice… remember the trillions of reasons… to be grateful. Yoga poses that inspire gratitude and yoga sequences for cultivating gratitude are simply poses and sequences where your priority is to keep gratitude in the forefront of your mind. A yoga class… dedicated to cultivating gratitude is lead by a person who values gratitude and is constantly reminding… the class… to focus on gratitude.

Gratitude is like a muscle, if you use it, it will grow and if you don’t… it will atrophy… Bringing gratitude back into one’s life means taking the time out of one’s day and developing it… The meditation of gratitude… To cultivate gratitude you need to use it.”

Bryan Kest

Home4Birth clients, pick up a free prenatal yoga pass at our office for Source Yoga’s Sunday 1:30 p.m. classes. After that first free class, Home4Birth will pay for part of the first three class bundle. You pay just $15 (reg drop in rate is $15 per class). So, it’s like getting another two classes for free! Postnatal clients are also encouraged to attend!