
Postpartum Training TipsIf you have difficulty breathing, it is because you are “sucking up” your diaphragm. Try to isolate the contractions below your belly button. Remember, the TvA does not move bone. Keep you spine—particularly your upper body—completely still. Use mental imagery. Imagine that you have on an old fashioned corset, that is getting tighter and tighter as you compress your abdominal wall. |
So you’ve had your baby and now it’s time to do crunches, lots of ‘em, to get your abs back in shape again. Right? Well, actually no. In fact, exercises like crunches may do more harm than good in the initial postpartum period.
One of the problems with crunches, and its’ cousin, oblique curls, is that these exercises primarily work the external layers of the abdominal wall. (The muscles that flex the spine to the front and side.)
After pregnancy these muscles easily overpower the relatively weaker internal abdominal muscle—the Transverse Abdominis, or TvA—during traditional exercises like crunches. This causes the abdominal wall to bulge out, (Yikes!) which is exactly what you don’t want to happen after you’ve had a baby.
The secret to flattening the abs after pregnancy is to recondition from the inside out—by building strength and control in your TvA first. This muscle compresses the abdominal wall, draws the belly button closer to the spine, and is the body’s most important core stabilizer.
Here’s a terrific postnatal TvA exercise that is safe to do right after pregnancy, even if you’ve had a “C.”
After this muscle has become strong again, (in about three weeks or so) you can progressively add in exercises that work the external layers, while maintaining a flat abdominal profile. Using this method, you’ll not only whittle your waist and flatten your tummy, but just as importantly, develop deep core strength and spine stability.