Yoga for Two ... Pre-Natal Yoga

Any google search about yoga, pregnancy and safe forms of exercise throws up a myriad of often conflicting information.  There are no absolutes rules about a yoga practice during a normal pregnancy.  It is a unique experience for each woman, and general guidelines change week to week as your body changes.  It becomes more important than ever to actually practice the clichéd advice of ‘listen to your body’. 

Generally speaking, you can continue with your yoga classes once you find out you are pregnant.   Many women take these precious first three months to acclimatize to the many hormonal changes that take place in their body, and to ensure their body is getting adequate rest. I generally advise women to start pre-natal classes from the 12th week onwards.  If you are fatigued, or nauseous, keep your practice very simple.  You should be supporting your body and mind, not exhausting it.

Don’t assume that your regular yoga teachers know you are pregnant, so please communicate this with us before an open yoga class. There are suggestions we can make to keep you comfortable, and modifications to some postures that may benefit you.   However, I highly recommend beginning Pre-Natal yoga classes early on so that you can learn how to nurture yourself through the practice of yoga.  Connecting with the warm, supportive community of other expectant mothers is probably the single best reason to enjoy pre-natal classes.  

To learn more about teaching prenatal yoga, or practicing yoga when you are pregnant, please listen to an informative podcast I recorded as a guest with the Intelligent Edge podcast.

  • Backbends like cobra or locust pose that are practiced on the belly can be very easily substituted with camel pose on the knees, or other simple spinal extension exercises on the hands and knees. In Pre-Natal class you will learn how to safely modify sun salutations to accommodate your growing belly.

  • Avoid crunch style sit ups and core work that can overwork the Rectus Abdominus muscles (the ‘six pack muscles’). In some cases, this can lead to a separation of these muscles down the front line of the body called Diastasis Recti. Plank and forearm plank with moderate holds remain good for most women throughout pregnancy so long as they aren't holding their breath, and can be easily modified as your pregnancy progresses on the knees. An awareness of recruiting Transverse Abdominis, the muscle that ‘hugs’ across the belly, can help to minimize the separation of the Rectus Abdominus muscles. But, for now let go of the crunches.

  • Standing postures such as Fierce Pose, Warrior 1, and 2, Triangle, Extended Side Angle, Wide legged squats and Wide legged forward bends are great for most women. We want the body, especially the legs to be strong to support the extra weight of another human. Occasionally, women experience discomfort at the front of their pelvis as the softening of the ligaments that hold the pelvic bones together begin to separate in preparation for birth. Unfortunately this can cause most standing postures, (and even sitting and walking in some cases) to be very painful. Seek out a healthcare professional such as a Physical Therapist or Chiropractor who will have some techniques that will help you.

  • Balancing postures such as Tree, and Warrior 3 among others provide an opportunity to remain mindful, day to day, of the changing shape of your body and constantly shifting centre of gravity. They also help to build stamina, strength and focus.

  • Begin to phase out those closed twists where you are forcing the belly against the supporting or lifted leg. This would include postures that encourage you to bind the hands under the legs or behind the back. In other words, give your baby lots of SPACE! Steer your baby towards open space, and enjoy gentle twists of the spine in that direction instead.

  • Minimise lying flat on the back for extended periods of time, to reduce the possibility of the Inferior Vena Cava artery being compressed by the weight of the uterus. This causes vital blood supply to be diminished as it moves from your legs back towards your heart and may cause a drop in blood pressure and dizziness. Savasana, can be enjoyed instead with the back propped up on a 45 degree angle, with blocks and bolsters, or with the use of props, resting on the left hand side where the artery is not compressed. Many of my students prefer to sit with their backs against the wall in a comfortable cross legged position for meditation and relaxation instead.

  • Downward Dog as an inversion is generally safe, though this can aggravate heartburn, and shouldn’t be practiced if there is any dizziness or blood pressure abnormalities. Childs pose is another option to stretch the deep muscles in the back, hips and shoulders. Downward dog facing the wall, with the hands pressing into the wall at hip height to open up the back line of the body from the shoulders all the way down to the heels is another good alternative.

  • Remain cautious with over stretching in all postures. The hormone relaxin can make the ligaments that support the joints unstable. If you are already very flexible, pull back away from your 'edge' and find more places to cultivate strength to avoid injury.

  • Stay hydrated during class and don’t overexert yourself in any physical activity to the point where you can feel your temperature rise uncomfortably. Don’t wait for an invitation to rest. No more hot yoga.

  • Inversions are really at your own discretion and can continue to feel great for experienced yoga practitioners. Remember though, in headstand or shoulderstand there is a lot of extra weight pressing into your head, or shoulders and your body needs to be strong enough to support it. Furthermore, women find that an ever expanding chest can limit your ability to breathe with ease, and, turning upside down does nothing to improve that with the weight of the baby further pressing into the diaphragm and lungs. I don’t teach inversions in pre-natal class, and pregnancy is certainly not the time to begin learning them. But I continued to enjoy them sparingly throughout my own practice when pregnant, with no ill effects.

  • The Pelvic Floor needs to be strong, resilient and pliable. I suggest that all pregnant women see a pelvic floor physiotherapist during their pregnancy to understand this part of their being with great clarity. The days of prescribing Kegels to all women in Pre Natal yoga classes is over! This may even be the opposite of what some women need. Most pelvic floor awareness and strengthening can be done by correct attention to breath, and integrating correct breathing into everyday movement patterns.

  • Fluid movements are fantastic during pregnancy. We are fluid bodies, at least 65% water, and even more than this when we are pregnant. Moving the hips, and shoulders with circular, lubricating motion feels wonderful and helps to connect you with the watery environment that your baby embodies. I often ask my students to imagine the sorts of movements, or embryonic yoga postures their baby is doing, and to move in a similar rhythm and flow. These types of movements are very beneficial for women to help assist them through the intensity of labour and delivery.

  • Your pre-natal yoga practice gives you an excellent space to learn to trust your breath. To learn specific breathing techniques that will help you for pushing in labour, you will need to attend a birthing course. However, the concentration and mindfulness that centres around a breath movement practice served me very well when I was in labour. My birth 'plan' was upended and I found myself in a rather scary emergency situation. All I had was my breath to support me and keep me calm. In the operating theatre, despite the whirring of machines, bright lights, scrambling doctors, and rapidly fading fetal heartbeat I still had my breath. I knew how to keep it steady and calm like the gentle wash of waves upon the shore. That's all I had. That was something that couldn't be taken away from me. That pulled me through. And luckily for us, it was a happy ending.

  • Remember to always follow the advice of your midwife or doctor in relation to the unique circumstances of your pregnancy.  

Summer solstice & Gayatri mantra in a sea kayak & The first place in the world to see the rising sun

The Summer solstice has been celebrated across global cultures for centuries.  Our ancestors were once highly attuned to these cycles of life.  They honoured the busy  season of planting, the cycle of nurturing and tending emerging crops, the busy period of harvesting and receiving the bounty of the earth, and of the darker winter months of rest and retreat.

Most of us, in urban environments continue to move through the year without reflection and pause to the signs that are apparent around us.  The summer solstice is certainly a time for great celebration, especially in climates such as ours here in Canada where the energy of the sun is responsible for such natural beauty, and is in such stark contrast to the contraction and desolation of winter.

With energy tending to run high at this time of year, it is important to balance the excitement of this season with practices that are cooling and calming.  Ayurvedic wisdom indicates that emotions such as impatience and irritation reach their peak in this season and as such we must work extra diligently to stay cool and calm.  In terms of our physical yoga practice, increasing restorative and meditation practices in this season can be very beneficial, even though we may be drawn to fiery types of practices.  These can be overstimulating, as most of us are already in a state of increased heat and agitation.  Increasing our intake of seasonally nourishing fruits and vegetables and staying well hydrated is essential. Our appetite and digestive fire may weaken, and this should be managed carefully; smaller, lighter meals at this time of the year are best.  

Darren Hall and I have collaborated over the years in many Crystal Bowl and Yoga sessions, and we are excited to be sharing what we have learned from many years of solstice celebrations across many cultures with you all.  Join us on June 26th for a beautiful evening of community and togetherness.  We will facilitate a a gentle practice of mantra and restorative yoga.  The mantra we will learn is the Savitri Gayatri – an ancient vedic mantra that honours the power of the sun, and our own inner light to remove obstacles and ignorance from our lives. 

Whilst in New Zealand recently, I paddled my sea kayak out into the Pacific Ocean before dawn.  Completely alone, I watched the rising sun and despite being on a sphere with 6 billion other human beings, knew that I was one of a just a handful who were witnessing this phenomena – the beginning of a new day, from very first place on earth to see it begin.  With the water lapping gently around me, I launched into my yoga practice – 108 quiet repetitions of the Gayatri. Gayatri Mantra has been a very sacred part of my yoga practice since I was first taught it in 1999 and to chant this mantra alone in my sea kayak exposed to all the elements was very special.  I look forward to sharing this all with you.


(For more information on the Solstice, yoga and 'living in flow with the pulse of life' I wholeheartedly recommend my teacher Shiva Rea's wonderful new book Tending the Heart Fire.)

Year of the Horse, Mayan temazcal and a photographic memory in Old Montreal

I know, rather an odd title, but let me tie those three things together for you.

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In 2013, I travelled to Mexico, to Chichen Itza. This pilgrimage on ancient Mayan lands was for a week of purification, ritual, yoga with Shiva and local Shamanic priests. Among the many incredible things I experienced there was a traditional sweat lodge ceremony called a Temazcal. 

On the evening of the Spring Equinox, myself, our mayan shamaness and a handful of others underwent a purification ceremony on the white sands of Tulum beach calling in the winds of the four directions, and preparing for the visions that may come to us inside the lodge.

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I simply cannot do justice to this sacred experience with words alone.  But one thing did happen that I will do my best to describe, as it ties in to the energy of this day, Jan 30, 2014.  

We had ducked through a small door into the sweat lodge a few hours earlier.  We were completely sealed in, a not so subtle visceral linkage back to our time in the womb.   We had been singing, banging drums, meditating, breathing, wailing.  It was so dark I couldn't see my hand in front of my face. I could feel inner rivers running like a streams over the topography of my body.  We were sitting cross legged on scratchy palm leaves. I could hear the people right beside me breathing, but couldn't see them.  

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Our guide invited us focus our eyes on the dark space above the hot coals in the middle of the hut.  She explained that as she threw some sacred herbs on the rocks steam would rise through the darkness, and if we were lucky, our animal guide would be revealed to us.  Now, I'm a spirited sceptic by nature, always open minded to these things but remain quite rational and calm about the power of suggestion in such an invitation.  But what happened next I wasn't prepared for.  

As the herbs burned in the centre of the mandala, the face of a beautiful white horse appeared right in front of me, and turned to look at me, softly blinking but very still.  This was SO real, that I was reaching out my hands in the darkness to try to stroke her beautiful nose.    She stayed with me for many minutes, and then turned and galloped into the distance with her tail swinging behind her, followed by some other horses that suddenly appeared out of the darkness.  Family and Freedom.   I was so completely unprepared for such a magical encounter and so confused by the whole experience. No where in my deepest parts of my psyche could I ever recall having any affinity or adoration for horses.  In short, I'm not a horse person, so that made the image even more suprising and significant.

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A few months later on the day of the Summer Solstice I was wandering through Old Montreal and stopped to browse through some random photographs a traveller was selling on the street.  Halfway through the pile I came across a photograph, lifted and printed from directly from my memory.  A remarkable photograph of something only I could have possibly seen.  I shared my story with the photographer who gave me the print, refusing to take any money from me despite my protests. It's on the wall of my bathroom, where I gaze upon it every time I am meditating in the bath.

And so, today I am again drawn into contemplation of the significance of why this horse that came to me, and what she means.  Today is of course the year of the Wooden Horse in the Vietnamese/ Chinese lunar calendar, and these traditions of listening to the wisdom of these archetypes run deep in my Vietnamese family.  

From what I have come to understand over the past few months the symbology of the Horse in the lunar calendar and the meaning of a Horse as a spirit animal in Native Indian mythology are very similar.  

Native Mayan mythology and meaning

  • A swift driving force, what you thrive for or carries you in life.

  • The need for balance between the instinctive and tamed part of your personality.

  • On the positive side, a horse running free is a sign that your drive to be free and express yourself freely is strong and alive. On the negative side, a horse running wild could symbolize a part of your personality or emotions that are hard to manage and are running your life instead of you running it.

  • Represent your headstrong energy or drive to express your authentic self and succeed in life

  • The horse is a strong symbol for sexual expression.

  • A white horse on particular is a symbol for developing awareness of your instincts and intuition.

Chinese/Vietnamese mythology and meaning

  • It is thought that decisiveness not procrastination brings victory and success.

  • In Chinese mythology, the Goddess Kwan Yin (an incarnation of Tibetan Buddha of Compassion, Avaloketeshevara). has a white horse as her sacred vehicle.  This white horse flies through the heavens, bringing peace and blessings…”

  • The year of the horse is time to act fast.

  • This year is about freedom, returning to nature, and enjoying life and life’s adventures.