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Some Yoga DVDs to Help You Through Your Pregnancy

Yoga For Your Pregnancy

A 45 minute DVD broken up into two segments, Yoga For Your Pregnancy, is designed to limber up women who are expecting a child and revitalize their energy level. Yoga Journal’s DVD is great for beginners, featuring alternate poses for women who can’t stretch, and doesn’t expect you to be a Yoga guru.

The first section, entitled “Energizing and Stretching,” is 30 minutes long and is designed to create strength and stamina. The goal is, of course, to prepare you for the intense efforts required during labor. It is also, however, meant to help you cope with your constantly changing body.

Section Two, “Relaxing and Rejuvenating,” is focused on meditation and concentration. It is designed to help you relax and learn how to breathe in preparation for labor. This section also contains a Lamaze interview.

While this DVD is likely to disappoint regular Yoga practitioners, it is great for women who are looking for physical relief during their pregnancy and labor. With clear explanation and a relaxing teacher, Yoga For Your Pregnancy is a wonderful way to reduce the pain and stiff muscles you experience as a pregnant woman. However far along you are, you are certain to find some poses and techniques that relieve some of your problems.

Prenatal Yoga

A fantastic Yoga DVD designed for women experiencing pregnancy. This video is broken up into three 45 minute sessions, each corresponding to a trimester of your pregnancy.

Each session is hosted by a different women and is set to some nice, flowing music to really get you in the Yoga mood.

The poses are specially modified for your changing body, so you’ll be able to follow the DVD through without worrying about hurting yourself or your baby.

If you’re an experienced Yoga master, this DVD might not be your cup of tea. For those pregnant woman who are looking for a way to keep fit and relieve some of those new aches and pains, give this DVD a try.

Ian Byrd runs yogaondvd.com, a resouce for helping you find the perfect Yoga DVD for you. Read more reviews of Yoga DVDs for Pregnancy.

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Yoga for Pregnant Woman - Journal, Exercise and Position - Control of the Body, Part 2

If you eat ghee and butter, you become fat, but in yoga the more ghee and butter you take, the thinner you become. Yoga is a course of related exercises and postures intended to promote control of the body and mind and to attain physical and spiritual well being. Yoga’s preserving effect of body is so profound that daily yogic routine can make a huge difference to one’s ageing process. In case of time constraints you should try and practice Maha Bandha and Vipareeta Karani Mudra daily.

Maha Bandha

Sit in padmasana : place your palms on your knees.

Exhale from your mouth.

Bend your head forward till your chin presses against your chest.

Straighten your arms,lifting and locking your shoulders.

Contract the perineum.

Pull in your stomach.

Hold the posture.

Release the perineum, then the stomach and finally the shoulder lock.

Lift your head and inhale.

Relax and repeat the procedure 5-9 times.

Vipareeta Karani Mudra

Lie down on your back .

Supporting the trunk with your hands, throw your body upwards.

Straighten your legs to a vertical position.

The body should be at an angle of 45 degrees.

Breathing normally, hold the posture as long as comfortable.

Slowly lower your body to the floor.

Random Tip- Benefits of Exercise!

a) Prevents Osteoporosis: Exercise builds strong bones. Running and walking helps lower the odds of getting osteoporosis as you grow older.

b) Lower High Blood Pressure: Exercise is good for your blood pressure, no matter what your age or weight is. And it really doesn’t matter whether you get exercise from a brisk walk or a swim.

Must Read - Exercise Schedules to combat different health problems of woman at http://www.weightloss-health.com/health%20exercise.htm

Mudras and bandhas are very powerful and should be attempted after a year of practicing asanas and pranayama. Asanas are the yogic postures and pranayama refers to the proper breathing technique. The delicate tissues of the lungs can be damaged due to undue strain of these are practiced in advance. When you are used to the internal and external retention of breath for extended periods only then should these practices(mudra and bandhas) be taken up. The correct sequence asanas, pranayama, mudra and bandha must also be followed. Asanas clear the energy pathways, pranayama generates energy, while mudras channelize it and the bandhas lock it in. The affect of stress on ageing is well known. So practice yoga nidra and keep stress at bay.

Random Tip- Yoga Exercises- Headache Cures - Yoga is probably the most ancient science that deals with every kind of mental, physical and physiological ailment while keeping one fit and supple.

The best thing to do when encountering a headache due to excessive heat is practicing the two pranayamas- Shitali and Sheetkari.

Shitali- Roll the tongue into a tube (as best as you can) and stick the tip out of the mouth. Inhale through the tongue and hold the breath in for 4-5 seconds with the shin pressed against the chest. Exhale using Ujjayi Pranayama through the nose. Repeat 5-10 times.

Sheetkari: Curl the tongue touching the roof of the mouth as far back as you can to the soft pallet. As you inhale clench the teeth together and slightly part the lips making a hissing “ssss” sound. Exhale through both nostrils. Repeat 5-10 times.

About the Author:

Ashley Green: for http://www.weightloss-health.com/muscle_building.html your complete and most comprehensive guide on Muscle Building.

Look out for highly effective women muscle building programs at Weight Training for Women- Workouts and Tips

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Learning to Let Go

I started practicing yoga nine years ago because I wanted to look sexy. I bought B.K.S. Iyengar’s Light on Yoga, and taught myself the asanas, following his suggested courses in the appendix. Within a few months of regular practice, I could see and feel the results. I was strong, limber, and best of all, my stomach was flat — a state it hadn’t enjoyed since puberty. I was an immediate convert.

But a convert to the sport of yoga, not its practice. I treated yoga almost exclusively as an athletic discipline. I held each pose for the longest period of time suggested and pushed myself to progress to the most advanced poses rather than deepen my understanding of the basics. I didn’t even bother to read Iyengar’s introduction, in which he articulates some of the basic philosophical principles of yoga practice. Nor did I bother to find a teacher until a good six years after I bought the book. I was doing Sirsasana (headstand) for years without instruction. Once I did find a teacher, I still ignored her advice: I practiced inversions at home at all times of the month, figuring that the rationale that kept women from going upside down while menstruating was a sexist holdover from ancient Indian culture. I did standing poses when I was sick, and if I felt at all pressed for time in my practice, Savasana (corpse pose) was the first to go. When I got pregnant for a second time, I kept up my athletic sequence, dismissing the idea that I might try taking things easy for a while.

Then at ten weeks of pregnancy, I went in for routine checkup and listened in vain for that rapid fetal heartbeat. The nurse squirted on more gel and pressed the Doppler wand into my belly at every conceivable angle, and still, the only sound was the slow drumbeat of my own stubborn pulse. The fetus had died inside me weeks earlier, and I hadn’t even known. Two days later, I was in the hospital for a D&C.

Still, a week later, I was back at my goal-oriented practice, pushing myself as hard as ever. I had to lose the extra pounds I’d put on, weight I felt I’d gained for no good reason. I didn’t tell my yoga teacher that I’d miscarried until a month after it happened. When I did tell her, she suggested I focus on restorative poses for a while, to help myself heal, but I ignored her advice. Enough time had passed, I figured. I felt fine. And besides, restorative poses wouldn’t help me lose any weight.

I was also determined to get pregnant again, as soon as possible. I charted my cycle fanatically, taking my temperature every morning, monitoring my cervical fluid and checking my cervical position each time I sat on the toilet. When the signs indicated that ovulation might be close, I insisted that my husband and I “try” every night. Sex became a chore, and when O-week, as we called it, was over, neither of us was interested in making love for the rest of the month.

Over a year later, I still wasn’t pregnant. Yet I continued to ignore advice to focus on restorative poses during ovulation. I’d gotten pregnant before and had a healthy daughter while swimming, biking, jogging, and practicing yoga — why couldn’t I again?

Finally, after sixteen months without success, I went to my yoga teacher for help. She suggested I enroll in her therapeutics class, and there she taught me an asana sequence, which included a series of supported backbending poses, supported Sirsasana, and supported Niralamba Sarvangasana (shoulder stand). She forbade me from continuing my regular practice, and generally discouraged me from participating in any truly vigorous physical activity, and for once, I followed her advice. I was not breaking a sweat in class, but I did leave feeling healthy and restored.

Two weeks later, I found out I was pregnant. I still am, eight months later: my baby’s due at the end of May.

It’s tempting to attribute the pregnancy to my yoga teacher’s advice and my altered practice, even though I know I ovulated just before the first session of the new class. Still, who knows? There is a week between the fertilization of an egg and its implantation in the uterus — maybe those first two weeks of gentler practice created a friendlier environment for that tiny blastula to find a home. It’s impossible to say. But whether or not I can credit yoga for my pregnancy, I know it’s taught me a valuable lesson. I now see the value of a gentler practice. Now, when I wake up feeling extra tired or with a tickle in my throat, I’m more inclined to practice restorative poses and pranayama, rather than plowing ahead through standing poses. I now see yoga as a source of healing, rather than solely a means toward strength, flexibility, and achieving a flat stomach. Yoga is about health — mental, spiritual, and physical — and sometimes being healthy means letting go of a goal. It means attending to the intelligence of the body, and taking into account the particular moment you’re living in. Pregnancy requires a kind of physical devotion to the child inside of you, and yoga — responsible, attendant, respectful yoga — requires a devotion to the body, mind, and spirit, wherever they happen to be on a given day. Yoga’s taught me something about my tendency toward bull-headedness; I’m hoping it’s a lesson I can take into my life as a parent as well.

Copyright © 2006 Amy Hassinger

Amy Hassinger is a graduate of Barnard College and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She is the author of The Priest’s Madonna (April 2006; $24.95US/$35.00CAN; 0-399-15317-9) and Nina: Adolescence. She teaches in the University of Nebraska’s MFA Program in Creative Writing and lives in Illinois with her husband and daughter.

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