Baby Yoga and
Me
Having carried a sizable bump
around for a very long, very hot summer, I really wasn’t in
the mood for a work out.
As Gwyneth Paltrow and all of
my other coat-hanger thin celebrity peers snaked their way,
all skin and bone about the tabloids, I scowled and knew that,
even if the mood did ever take me as I sat covered in powered
milk, I would just never have the time to get back in shape
now that I always had my baby in toe. After all, its not as if
I could balance Harry on the rowing machine as I made for the
nearest treadmill – I didn’t think they’d like that down at
the health club.
I did try the gym. Once.
Inspired by Gwynnies size eight flat chestedness I did deposit
Harry at my mums’, and went for one swim amongst the well
toned – but my self-esteem could just not cut it. Having been
a large pregnant woman and having had a difficult birth, my
body was not as it should be, and I didn’t stay for long. I’m
sure no one cared about my having varicose veins now, but I
did, and I suddenly felt very much like a mum, and nothing
else.
Loosing faith in the idea
that I’d ever have a waist again, I pooled my NCT friends to
see if they had any tips on how to regain a good shape,
without the embarrassment.
There was no way I was doing
yoga. It turned out after speaking to the girls that they
already had a fitness plan, and were meeting to go to some
yoga class the following week. I’d only ever seen yoga on
television, and I wouldn’t have even considered trying it
pre-Harry – I was never that skinny and stealth. The women all
looked like they hadn’t eaten for at least five years, and
there was no way I was ever learning how to be a ‘delicate
lotus’ with all of the cellulite I’d accumulated now. I lied
and told them I couldn’t get a babysitter…
Turns out you can take your
little ones to baby yoga. I was worried it would be new agey,
but our first session soon dispelled all the worries I had
about that. Friendly and chatty, the class was only for
parents, and I met a whole gaggle of new local mums. We
chatted about our babies, their first rolls, nappies and
missing socks, and Harry played merrily with the other tots
that were there – something which really made me smile as he’s
an only child and I was worried that when it came to mixing
with other babies he’d wouldn’t cope. Turns out he’s a bit of
a socialite – that’s my boy!
A qualified baby yoga
teacher, our leader, Sue, started us off with some very simple
stretches, which were fine for any physical type. Her training
with Birthlight means she knows exactly what our bodies have
been through, and so nothing was too much. I was petrified
that Harry would cry when it came to including him in the work
out (the baby isn’t put under any stress either by the way –
there’s just lots of great, gentle skin to skin contact and
muscle stimulation, no sun salutations just yet!) but he just
smiled. It must feel good, after all, to have the shouty tired
woman who’s been harassing you for all this time give you some
proper, physical warmth and lavish attention.
The stimulation that babies
receive doing yoga releases endorphins in the brain, and so
they clearly glow after a session, just as we do after a turn
at the gym. It was great to know he felt so cared for.
As time went on, our classes
did become more adventurous. The stretches we learned started
to actively include our babies (they are fabulous weights!)
and we all became far less inhibited, and felt happy to move
onto the more complex movements.
To calm the babies, Sue
introduced music into the classes, which soothed them no end –
in all the time I’ve been going now, I don’t think we’ve ever
had a baby have to be taken out for crying. After Harry’s
bath, I often do yoga with him at home now, and the heat of my
hands and the slow, rhythmic nature of the movements send him
to sleep with much greater ease than a simple cuddle and a
song tape ever could. He started sleeping through the night
months before a lot of other babies that we know, and I’m in
no doubt that that has sonething to do with our yoga.
Being an enthusiast now, I’ve
read up on the later benefits of what baby yoga can do and I’m
excited. It’s clear from the fact he rolled early that Harry
has good spatial awareness, and plenty of confidence in what
his body is capable of. When we took him for his eight-month
check my health visitor told me he will miss out crawling
stage – his spine is strong, and having been made aware of the
limitations of his body through yoga, he doesn’t need to go
through the exploration that crawling allows.
As well as the very evident
physical benefits of baby yoga, it’s also been a lifesaver for
me. On maternity leave I was a bit of a lonely mum, and now I
have something of a network. Size ten again and happy, there
is never a morning goes by when Harry and I do not have a play
date. It’s turned things around. I think I'll go down the gym
tomorrow …
To find details of Baby
Yoga activities in your area visit
www.busylittleones.co.uk
Lucy Curran
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