[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON Feb-09-02 AT 11:58AM (Est)[/font][p]Hi Marisol,
Congratulations on your easy delivery. I am so happy for you. I would advise that you start on your treadmill. The low impact video may be a little much to begin with for now. Now, for a little education......How is your bleeding ("lochia")?
For those moms out there who haven't delivered here is an exerpt from my "Healthy Moms Perinatal Fitness Instructor Training Manual" regarding "lochia:"
Vaginal Bleeding (“Lochia”)
Most first time moms do not realize how much they will bleed after the birth of their baby. Lochia is actually a combination of fluid and tissue from the placental site. It usually lasts from 2 – 8 weeks and fades from bright red to brown and then to yellow or white. If a client’s bleeding returns to bright red after it has started to fade, she has “done too much.”
Another thing to be aware of when you start back to exercise is how your kegel muscles or pelvic floor is "handling" the exercise. The following is my "hard and fast rule" when I counsel new moms on appropriate exercise. "If you cannot maintain a kegel contraction during any particular mode of exercise you SHOULDN'T be doing the exercise." For instance, if you are doing a particular form of cardio (i.e. step, low impact, walking, etc.) and you cannot maintain a kegel contraction you should not be doing that particular form of exercise. You would be further damaging a muscle that has already been "traumatized" by the birth process itself. I often ask women who proudly tell me that they were "running two weeks postpartum" how their kegels responded to the running and also ask if they "leaked any urine" while they were running. The "honest" ones usually admit that they couldn't maintain a kegel contraction and were "leaking a little urine" during their run. Again, let me reiterate... "Let your pelvic floor be your number one guide when it comes to appropriate postpartum weight bearing exercise. If you cannot maintain a pelvic floor contraction while doing the exercise, it is NOT an appropriate exercise until the kegels have been further rehabbed."
OK, I will get off my soapbox now. Good luck Marisol. Let me hear from you!
Sheila Watkins. MLSci.
Founder and National Program Director
Healthy Moms(R) Fitness Programs
www.healthymomsfitness.com