Posts tagged connective tissue
Channeling Our Inner Strength from Birth into Parenthood - Chat with She Births and OBGYN

“We need the sisterhood. We need the village.” In this video above I sit down with my OBGYN and Birthing Educator for a birthing team ‘debrief.’ I would love to hear your birth stories and lessons learned. Leave me a comment on social media.

My OBGYN, Dr. Jan Dudley and doula, prenatal yoga instructor, and creator of She Births childbirth education program, Nadine Richardson, have a lot of great insight on how to make the birthing experience a beautiful one. They talk about what we can learn about ourselves from pregnancy and childbirth. And how to channel that same strength and perseverance right into parenthood.

“Learning in pregnancy to drop the judgment of yourself is such a great way to launch into parenthood. Because the last thing we need is to feel isolated. And that’s what judgment does. If we are judging ourselves, we stay at home in our little bubbles, and we go to mother’s groups and we start judging. And that happens a lot. But we don’t need to. We need women that are empowered and happy. And that’s how you’re going to be the best mom.”

I love the quotes above from Nadine Richardson. During pregnancy, I learned so much. I have always been a go, go, go, go, GO kind of person. Pregnancy and motherhood have slowed me down in the best way possible. Motherhood has taught me patience, acceptance, empathy

I can tell you the deep breathing techniques I learned in the She Births education program helped me to have a an epidural free birth (even with a posterior baby). In the end it was a difficult delivery though. Brooksy’s heart rate dropped from the cord being around his neck and he had to be suctioned / vacuumed out. Breathing techniques and getting in the ‘athletic zone’ are what helped me. Believe it r not, I didn’t even realize it was a “traumatic birth” in a lot of ways. But it did slow down my recovery a bit when I wanted to get back to running and jumping.

My mindset and inner strength is what got me through the birth and the recovery. If you’re about to birth a baby too…. YOU GOT THIS, MAMMA!

Sending you so much love.

Read More
Baby, fitness, medicine, health, TelevisionAnna Kooimananna kooiman, strong sexy mammas, anna kooiman strong sexy mammas, lye evans, elizabeth evans women in focus physiotherapy, women in focus, physiotheraoy, why are crunches bad, are crunches bad, diastasis recti, abs separation, pelvic floor health, baby, pregnancy, postnatal, postnatal fitness, rehab, flat tummy, how to get a flat tummy, TVA, transverse abdominis, bent knee fallout, bird dog crunches, tabletop, cat cow, bridge, bridges, linea alba, womenshealthphysio, womeninfocusphysio, women in focus physio, women in focus sydney, women's health physio, rectusabdominisdiastasis, rectus abdominis diastasis, keep moving the right way, tension, activation, linea nigra, postnatal exercises to stay away from, postnatal abs exercises to stay away from, abs after baby, what abs exercises to stay away from after pregnancy, better sex, better sex after baby, how to have better sex after having a baby, stronger pelvic floor means better sex, sexual satisfaction after having a baby, she births, jan dudley, dr jan dudle, nadine richardson, sydney australia, deep diaphragmatic breathing, belly breathing, deep breathing, DRAM, how to heal abs separation, birth trauma, episiotomy, how to heal after an episiotomy, how to heal after baby suctioned out, vacuum delivery, how to heal after a vacuum delivery, vacuum delivery side effects, reasons for vacuum delivery, posterior delivery, epidural free delivery, vacuum birth, exercise after vacuum delivery, exercise after vacuum birth, progressive overload, connective tissue, abs, how to get abs after baby, flat tummy after baby, how to heal diastasis recti, pelvic floor relationship to diastasis rectiComment