Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Y7 Yoga Founder Sarah Levey Demonstrates 3 Gentle Yoga Modifications for Pregnant Women

 


These easy on the body modifications will keep moms-to-be safe during their yoga flow.




Is there any workout as perfect for new moms as yoga? With strength-building sequences and poses that improve flexibility, this low-impact activity is a safe way to feel strong and energized through all the body changes pregnancy brings. Plus, poses can be modified to accommodate extra weight around the middle and protect tender joints and swollen body areas from injury. Y7 Studio founder Sarah Levey shows Health three gentle yoga modifications for expecting moms who want the mind-body benefits of yoga without overextending themselves.

Malasana Squat Pose

The first pose Levey demonstrates is the malasana squat, which can help relax and open the hips in anticipation of childbirth. Start by standing with your feet slightly wider than your hips, toes turned out and all four corners of your feet on the ground. In a traditional malasana squat, you would bend your knees until you're in a full squat, hovering your butt slightly above the mat.

Levey recommends that pregnant women modify this by sitting on a yoga block rather than hovering above the mat. This takes pressure off the knees while keeping that deep, hip-opening stretch intact.

Child's Pose

Child's pose is another hip-opening move that helps deliver a low-impact, full-body stretch. Start in a kneeling position, sending your knees to the sides of your mat and your toes together behind you. Traditional child's pose would have you extend your arms in front of you on your mat, bowing your forehead to touch the floor.

For pregnant women, Levey suggests using a pillow and two yoga blocks to help protect the lower back and hips; the blocks will line up in front of you with a pillow over them, creating a table-like support. She starts by putting one block just in front of her knees and the other a few inches further, resting the pillow on top. When getting into the pose, Levey recommends spreading your knees wide to give your belly room, and then coming down as you would in a traditional child's pose but placing your torso on the pillow this time.

Cat-Cow Pose

This pose helps loosen the spine and engage the core during a yoga sequence. In a traditional cat-cow pose, you begin in a neutral tabletop on all fours, placing your shoulders over your wrists and your hips over your knees. For cow pose, inhale as you drop your stomach to the ground and send your gaze upwards. As you exhale, come into cat pose by arching your back and dropping your head down.

Pregnant women can modify this pose by placing a block between their shins, squeezing it together as they come into a tabletop position. This will help engage the pelvic floor and strengthen pelvic and lower back muscles. Continue with the rest of the pose, squeezing the block as your flo through your cat-cow sequence.

While all of these modifications can help expecting mothers prepare for the birth of their new baby, each one can be taken as intensely or as gently as needed. Remember, you know your body better than anyone!

Yoga To Control Diabetes Efficiently

 

Yoga is like an ancient almighty booster for treating an array of diseases. And diabetes is no different. There are many different yoga poses, which are known to enhance the function of pancreas and liver, along with regular blood sugar levels. They help in releasing enzymes in the body, which help you maintain better health, lose weight and also keep your diabetes in check. Here are some yoga poses you should do combined with 30 minutes of walking a day to control your sugar levels-

1. Vajrasana

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This is one of the simpler poses that anyone can do. Not only will it help you manage your sugar, it aids digestion and controls post meal sugar spike too. For this posture, you should fold your right leg and place the right heel below the butts. The same with your left leg too. Now straighten your back and keep both hands flat on the thighs. It is best to sit in posture post meals — although you can do it as a relaxing posture. This posture is known to relax the Kanda, which as per Ayurveda is located 12 inches above the anal area where 72,000 nerves converge.

2. Sarvangasana

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Do this posture with a little caution, as it is advanced, but not that difficult. Lie down on your back raise both legs together using your hands for support. Raise the legs off the butts and lower back so that you can feel the weight on your shoulders and not anywhere else. Do support the same with your hands to maintain this posture. Hold for 30–60 seconds and repeat 3–4 times. It boosts your oxygen supply; aids weight loss and balance your insulin release too.

3. Setubandhasana

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Also referred to as the bridge pose, this is an asana that is ideal for weight loss, reducing stomach and butt fat and also enhance chemicals in the body that balance your sugar levels. For this posture, lie down flat on the back and bring both heels slightly closer to the buttocks. Hands should be placed on sides and now gradually, using your hands, stomach muscles and feet, lift the entire hips off the floor. Take it as high as you can and hold for a minute. Gradually lower and repeat again.

4. Balasana

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Child pose is a relaxing posture of yoga, which should be done again as a cool down process or in between other exercises to relieve the back. The child pose helps in relaxing and getting rid of anxiety and stress, which trigger the sugar spike in the body. Furthermore, they work on the abdomen muscles that help the pancreas to regulate hormone production and thus manage your blood sugar levels. For this pose, sit on your heels like you do for vajrasan. Now gradually raise both your hands and then lower yourself on the floor so that your palms and your forehead are touching the ground. Keep the spine slightly curved to help it relax. Hold for 30–60 seconds and then slowly come up. Repeat 2–3 times.

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balasana ; setubandhasana ; sarvangasana ; yoga main ; vajrasana

Content source — http://community.askgargi.com/568/top-yoga-poses-to-control-diabetes


Type 1 Diabetes and a History of Disordered Eating Didn’t Stop This Woman From Becoming a Health Coach

Lauren Bongiorno, a type 1 diabetic since she was 7, overcame a "horrible" relationship with food to become a holistic health coach helping others manage the disease.


While home for college over Christmas break, Lauren Bongiorno went for an endocrinologist appointment. At the time, she was a 21-year-old type 1 diabetic. Diagnosed with the condition at age seven, she was no stranger to these appointments: the tests, the anxiety of waiting to find out her A1C result, the potential feelings of disappointment.

So when her doctor said that her A1C was 5.7, the lowest it had been since she was diagnosed, Bongiorno should have been thrilled. (An A1C blood test monitors diabetes over time; 5.7 is in the range between "normal" and prediabetes.) Her mom was elated, as was her doctor, who labeled her a “star patient.” She had done everything right, and the numbers were proof. But instead of sharing the joy of her mother and doctor, she felt defeated.

“I felt like a fraud,” explains Bongiorno, now 27. “In college I wanted to lose weight, stabilize my blood sugars, and feel more in control of my diabetes. But I went down the path of restriction and obsession, which ultimately got me a near-perfect A1C but left me with a horrible relationship with food, an unsustainably restrictive lifestyle, and feeling less in control of my life than ever before.”

Bongiorno didn’t celebrate her A1C results because of the toll it took to get them. She was eating all her meals at home, often turning down invites from friends to go see a movie so she could avoid being tempted by popcorn. She checked her blood sugar constantly and scheduled her life around the availability of a cardio machine.

“After losing my menstrual cycle for nearly five years because of the stress I was putting on my body, I realized something had to change," she recalls. "Relying on a couple of trips a year to my endocrinologist wasn’t enough to tend to the mental, emotional, and physical demands living with diabetes entailed.”

That endocrinologist appointment became the kickoff for Bongiorno to change her unhealthy eating habits and start approaching the disease with more ease than struggle. “I just felt like there had to be a better way to live with diabetes,” she says. So she shifted her focus to learning about her body and challenging what she’d been taught. The life she wanted was rooted in a more holistic approach to not only her diabetes, but to her overall health.

After years of working to become more empowered and confident, Bongiorno found her calling—she realized that there was a need for holistic health coaching in the health space.

“Before all this happened, I was supposed to go to law school just like my dad,” she explains. “I wanted to fight to improve our food and health care system. But I decided to become a certified health coach instead. I made this pivot because I realized I didn’t want to fight big companies to do better. I wanted to empower people with behavior change and give them the holistic tools they needed to make living with diabetes less of a burden.”

Her drive to become a certified coach was also born out of her firsthand experience with the gaps in traditional type 1 diabetes management. “I wanted [other diabetics] to feel the freedom I’ve felt physically, mentally, and emotionally, removing the burden so they too could enjoy life without diabetes getting in the way,” she says.

Part of Bongiorno's approach to health is rooted in mindfulness—which led her to incorporate yoga into her daily life as well as in her coaching. “I was playing Division 1 soccer in college when I first started practicing yoga. I was simply looking for something to help both my mind and my muscles relax a bit from the mental and physical demands the sport required," she explains. "I had no idea that it would help make me the healthiest, happiest version of myself. And, I absolutely had no idea how much it would help me manage life as a type 1 diabetic.”

Yoga has also helped Bongiorno develop a healthier relationship with food. “Growing up with diabetes, there was always a clear distinction between good foods and bad foods," she remembers. "There was so much outside noise telling you what you should be eating as a diabetic, and the rules caused me to live in a state of extremes. I was either eating really healthy with great blood sugars or I was eating whatever I wanted with numbers in the 300s. Yoga really helped me slow down and examine my relationship with food and find a true place of balance.”

Physical activity in general is a huge part of her life, especially when it comes to managing diabetes. Bongiorno finds that working out in the morning increases her insulin sensitivity throughout the remainder of the day.

“When I get in my daily movement, whether that’s strength training, yoga, or a HIIT workout, the insulin I give myself is able to take the sugar out of my blood much faster," she says. "On days that I want to indulge more, whether that’s having pizza or chocolate, I use exercise as a tool to help my numbers not go as high. This might mean going for a walk after eating, or simply doing 50 bodyweight squats if I notice my blood sugar starting to rise.” Bongiorno eats roughly 200 grams of carbs a day on the days she works out, and she fills up her plate with plant-based foods. “But I make sure to always leave room for some chocolate after dinner,” she adds.

As a diabetes health coach for her eponymous company, her goal is to improve a client's relationship with food and figure out what works best for their body.

“When we’re first diagnosed, most doctors will tell us that you can eat whatever you want as long as you give insulin for it," she says. "The truth is, however, even though we can eat all foods, it makes it much harder to manage our blood sugar numbers with that type of mindset. I’m a big proponent of food logging in the Diabetic Health Journal to see how different meals at different times of day might impact your blood sugars differently. It’s all about finding your own body’s patterns.”

Bongiorno also helps her clients understand their triggers for food cravings, which can lead to a greater sense of self-compassion when they eat something that doesn’t serve them. “Oftentimes we know what to eat, but we have trouble following that through 100% of the time," she explains. "When we don’t, there can be this shame and guilt that follows us. It’s important to understand what might be triggering our food cravings—emotions, restriction, hormones—and more importantly, how to practice self-compassion in those moments.”

Since launching her company, Bongiorno has helped hundreds of people with type 1 diabetes through her coaching programs, online courses, and resources that ultimately give them more support and control over the condition. For these T1Ds, the label “diabetic” no longer holds them back from living a life with more clarity, peace of mind, and freedom.

“I believe though that no word can make us feel inferior without our consent," she says. "Let’s associate the word ‘diabetic’ with strong, warrior, resilient, and unique rather than associating it with broken, imperfect, weak, or different. And let’s accept that diabetes is a piece of us, and we get to decide what that means.”