01/03/2023
When cleared for exercise by your doctor at 6-12 weeks postpartum, you should be intentional about the exercise you choose.
Your body took many months to grow and birth your baby. Your entire anatomy and physiology transforms, organs shift, expand and contract to accommodate your baby, muscles separate, connective tissues stretch, hormones fluctuate. Your brain cognition even changes! These changes are profound and your amazing postpartum body requires the same patience and love as you give your beautiful baby during this time. There really is no rush to do anything but care for you and your baby.
When you do feel ready to exercise - ease into it. Exercises that served you pre-baby may actually exacerbate postpartum symptoms, prolong recovery or make you more vulnerable to injury.
This also applies to new and avid yogis. While yoga is beneficial for postpartum recovery, for mummas still experiencing abdominal separation, diastasis recti, pelvic floor conditions, healing from caesarean or other procedures, postures should be chosen with caution and modified to suit.
Full expressions of common poses like cobra, upward dog and cat/cow for example, can potentially exacerbate abdominal separation or place stress on c-section scarring. In this case, skip cobra and try alternating between cat and table-top (i.e. avoiding cow pose) or try seated cat/cow, easy alternatives for finding a moderate front-body stretch while avoiding over extension of the midline and abdominals. Similarly, postures such as plank, chaturanga dandasana and navasana (boat pose) can place significant loading on the abdominals and pelvic floor, potentially compromising core function and stability. Lowering knees to floor for plank and chaturanga or opting for wall-based planks will still engage your core with far less abdominal loading.
Mummas, the point here is - be patient. Don’t leap back into advanced exercises. Instead, focus on resuming gently and progressively. You can still work on strength, stability and flexibility with modifications that are safe for your beautiful postpartum body.
Ultimately, let your body be your guide as to what feels right for you.