Manawatu Standard

Finding your abs after childbirth

- Raewyn Ng Raewyn Ng is a movement and wellness coach at mybod.co.nz

Things are never quite the same after childbirth – and that includes your ‘‘core’’. While there’s no official medical definition of ‘‘core muscles’’, it’s generally accepted that we’re talking about those muscles around the trunk – all the abdominals, the diaphragm, pelvic floor and those muscles around your back. How these muscles function can have an impact all around your body.

How you feel around your mid-section after childbirth depends on lots of things, from the kind of birth you had to your strength before pregnancy and how you maintained this part of your body during pregnancy.

This tissue has been continuous­ly stretched for up to 10 months, so it’s not surprising that neural links to that area are affected, requiring a conscious effort to ‘‘find’’ them again.

Before you start pumping out the crunches and planks to get these muscles working again, consult a women’s health, postnatal or pelvic floor specialist, as these exercises could make things worse, especially if you have a diastasis recti, that alltoo-common separation of the superficia­l ‘‘six-pack’’ rectus abdominis.

However, here’s some things that may get help you wake up those core muscles.

Nutrition

Ensuring a nutritious diet with lots of fresh fruit and vegetables, good protein, fats and water not only gives you better quality energy, but will help your muscles be more responsive and function more efficientl­y.

If you eat foods that cause digestive upsets like bloating and discomfort, it will make it more difficult for your brain to connect with those surroundin­g abdominal tissue – no one wants to hang around and experience pain, and that includes your brain.

Stress

There’s no question adjusting to a new family is stressful and that some things, like interrupte­d sleep, can’t be avoided.

However, there’s other stresses that may be easily reduced or minimised, improving your health and recovery and increasing the responsive­ness of your muscles to movement and exercise.

Your body treats all stress the same. The same hormonal release occurs whether the stress is real or perceived and whether that stress is mental/emotional, physical, chemical or environmen­tal.

To help reduce your overall stress load, consider taking a few moments each day to focus on slow-breathing into your belly. You can change your stress or ‘‘fight and flight’’ response to a relaxation response in as little as three minutes of slow-breathing.

Movement and sensation

Sensory activation of the midsection area with light strokes can help to draw the brain to the area, encourage circulatio­n and reconnecti­on with the tissue.

Post-natal exercise specialist Lynda Lovett also emphasises the importance of engaging your pelvic floor to help re-establish connection with the deep abdominals.

‘‘When you place your fingers just inside your hip bones and engage your pelvic floor with a gentle squeeze, you’ll feel your deep abs contract, without any tension in your six-pack muscle or butt.’’

When you start your exercise routine, take your time and go slow. Walking and day-to-day activities are a great start, but listen to your body. If in doubt, check with a women’s health specialist before launching back into your pre-baby routine, or join a programme specifical­ly for post-natal women where you can be monitored and guided to engage the right muscles at the right time.

 ??  ?? How you feel around your mid-section after childbirth depends on how you maintained this part of your body during pregnancy.
How you feel around your mid-section after childbirth depends on how you maintained this part of your body during pregnancy.

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