Yoga For Pregnant Women
When you're pregnant, there's an almost obsessive protectiveness and an overwhelming desire to do everything you can to foster healthy prenatal development. You may have heard about yoga for pregnant women, but may have also wondered, "Is it safe?" or "What can I or can't I do?" This article will tell you a little about this new craze sweeping the nation and seeks to explain the obvious (and not so obvious) benefits of taking a yoga class during those nine months.
Pregnant women practice yoga for physical benefits. For instance, its practice can teach techniques that will be helpful during labor, such as breathing and relieving tension around the cervix and birth canal. Additionally, prenatal physicians recommend combining a light cardiovascular exercise (like walking) with a relaxing, muscle-toning exercise (like yoga) to maintain your physique, in spite of the intense cravings and normal weight gain associated with pregnancy.
Other pregnant women practice yoga for mental benefits. For one, it can be a great support to meet other women going through the same thing you are. Also, there is much emphasis on focusing on the moment and deriving happiness from each and every day, which can be vital when your hormones are out of whack. It has been known to stimulate beta-endorphins, which also brings comfort and a sense of relief.
During the first trimester, standing poses help circulation, strengthen legs and increase energy. Avoid bikram yoga classes that heat up the room or any kind of back/belly/inverted positions. In the second and third trimesters, yoga for your pregnancy will include more sitting positions and breathing techniques.
To find prenatal yoga classes, check Yoga.com. If you're looking for yoga videos you can do at home, here are some suggestions. "Yoga Zone: Postures For Pregnancy" is a good start for beginners. "Yoga Journal's Prenatal Yoga with Shiva Rea" gives you yoga for each trimester in short 15 minute segments with a guided relaxation / meditation part to help insomnia or depression. "Dr. Christine Anderson's Dynamic Prenatal Yoga" is highly recommended, with a more spiritual focus that encompasses baby bonding, energy flow, meditation, poses and 90 minutes of total preparation for the months to come.
Explanations are given for beginners and modifications are discussed for seasoned yoga pros. Another great video focusing equally on movement, breath and relaxation is "Prenatal Yoga: A Complete Home Practice for a Healthy Mother and Baby," which was selected as an Editor's Pick by Fit Pregnancy magazine in 2006.
On the "Yoga Journal and Lamaze present: Yoga for Your Pregnancy" DVD, prospective moms can find: part 1 featuring energizing and strengthening, part 2 featuring relaxing and rejuvenating, as well as Pranayama breathing techniques, a guided meditation segment, birthing room techniques and postnatal workout. "Tantric Yoga For Blissful Pregnancy" combines more authentic yoga practices with pregnancy-safe poses.
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Today's Tip On Yoga
Hatha yoga (pronounced "ha-tuh") literally translates to "sun-moon," referring to the two different energy channels within the body. Most Americans know yoga as the combination of breathing techniques and posturing, but in traditional Indian religion, it is one of the paths that leads to Raja Yoga (or the "contemplation of One Reality.") The practice of this yogic form was widely spread by 15th Century Indian sage Swami Swatamarama and was designed to assist individuals in finding and unblocking internal chakras (or energy centers). Through true understanding and meditation, it was believed that disease and disorders could be prevented and treated in this way.
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