When can you start exercising?
This varies from person to person. The first 3 - 8 weeks after childbirth should focus on bonding with your baby and establishing routines. Go for walks if it feels ok and rest when the baby is asleep.
Pelvic floor exercises
Around three weeks after giving birth you can start doing pelvic floor exercises. Pelvic floor exercises are just as important whether you had a vaginal or caesarean delivery. A tip is to alternate between tightening the muscles for short and long intervals. Your pelvic floor sessions should be short, but can be done several times a day. Do the exercises in different positions: lying down, standing, on all fours. Think of the whole pelvic floor area as a unit when you tighten the muscles. The urinary, vaginal, and anal openings should interact. So, the advice to tighten your muscles as if you needed to urinate is not really correct unless the aim is to only practise ’closing’ the urethra. The feeling should be of lifting the pelvic floor within your body.
Many women have pelvic floor muscles that are over-tense. It’s a good idea to actively relax the area, perhaps while you nurse or when you are resting. There are many useful apps with exercises and information about the pelvic floor area.
Exercises for the new mother
Time to start exercising? You’re comfortable in your role as a mother, you’ve established new routines, and if you had a caesarean section, it should have healed. You may have been for a postnatal check-up and been given the go-ahead from your midwife to start exercising. Start gently and listen to your body. Work with breathing and avoid using heavy weights. Start by strengthening the back of your body: bottom, back, and shoulders. Here are three good exercises to start with.
Start by doing 6-10 repetitions of each exercise, building up to 2-4 sets of exercises, either one after another or one at a time. It’s important that you don’t experience any pain or discomfort during or after the exercise.
Good luck!
Exercise 1 – Knee bend against chair
Come close to the seat and imagine that you’re going to sit on the chair. Stand with your feet at hip width (or slightly less) apart, push your bottom back a little when you sit down, and then push “through” your heels to stand back up. Feel the whole foot against the floor, but have most of the weight on the heels. Lower yourself slowly and tighten your bottom on the way up.