5 Yogic Ways to Have an Easier Pregnancy

Yoga Teacher - Katie Manitsas

For some mothers-to-be pregnancy is a dreamy time of happy anticipation and nesting. For others it is much more challenging – whether because of juggling extreme tiredness, morning sickness, work, the needs of existing family or all of the above!

Here is some gentle advice that I have found serves most pregnant women:

1. Eat well
This first tip may seem totally obvious but it’s so easy not to do. If you are suffering morning sickness you may get caught up in some bad patterns like for example succumbing to sugar cravings (and then getting caught up in the ups and downs of high / low blood sugar levels that come with them) or eating more junk food than you usually would. In my own personal experience I have found that eating a high sugar or low quality diet when I’m struggling with morning sickness really doesn’t help. I might feel like my body is craving a sugar hit but if I can avoid it and go for something more nourishing and energy sustaining I almost always feel so much better for it. Green smoothies and juices have done wonders for me when struggling with morning sickness and have a very high nutrient density. I’ve also found a hearty breakfast even if I don’t feel like eating balances me out for the rest of the day better than if I skip brekkie. Think nourishing wholesome, vegetarian wholefoods and you can’t go far wrong. Carry healthy snacks around with you such as nuts, home made muesli bars or fruit so you don’t get caught out and about with nothing nourishing to eat (this is a good habit to get into for when you have young children around too!)

2. Rest when you can
I found this so challenging in my first pregnancy and when I was a ‘new mother’. In pregnancy we often feel we have to keep going regardless of the messages our body may be giving us to slow down. Try to find time in the day to rest, even if you are at work – download a Yoga Nidra recording onto your MP3 players (try Guided Relaxation from Sharon Gannon at www.jivamuktiyoga.com) and lie down somewhere quiet to listen to it in your lunch break. If you are pregnant and working try not to overschedule your evenings and ‘down time’. The more you rest now the more you are building reserves in the energy bank for those challenging first few months of motherhood.

3. Be in the moment
This is such a cliché but nonetheless it’s true! It’s so very easy to wish pregnancy away. We’re anticipating meeting our little one for the first time, we may be feeling pretty yucky, and towards the end most women experiences a desire to ‘get this baby out of me!!’ that’s a sure sign labour will be coming soon. Amidst all of this try to take time to smell the roses. Pregnancy is a unique and precious experience and even if it’s challenging you won’t always be feeling the way you do. In our busy lives we often forget to ‘check in’ with how our bodies are feeling and even how we’re doing emotionally. Pregnancy might be a great time to start a journal or treat yourself to a regular massage or set up a meditation routine. However you do it it’s important to take time to connect and ‘just be’. Many studies have shown that pregnancy women who do this adjust to motherhood more easily.

4. Nest and nurture
Especially towards the end of your pregnancy take some time out to spring clean your home, make your environment beautiful and nurture yourself. Get a good friend to help you. Set up your kitchen with teas and herbs that will nourish you post-natally (when it might be harder to get out to the shops). You might also want to consider the beautiful ritual of having a ‘Blessingway’ around this time. Read ‘Mother Rising: The Blessingway Journey into Motherhood’ by Yan Cortlund for more information.

5. Let go of guilt
In the yoga tradition there is no word for ‘guilt’. I mean that quite literally – in the ancient Indian language of Sanskrit there is no word that directly translates as ‘guilt’. Instead the idea of actions and consequences or results is emphasized. Guilt is a phenomenon of the developed world and also one that is quite linked to my generation of parents I think. It’s almost as though we have too many resources and too much information and no matter what you do there is a voice out there somewhere (or a little voice inside your head) saying you could have done differently and usually better. This as true of the journey of pregnancy as it is of the journey of parenthood. Give yourself a break! No good comes of feeling guilty especially when you are doing your absolute best in a situation.

Katie Manitsas is the author of ‘The Yoga of Birth’ and director of Jivamukti Yoga Sydney. She is mother of two young boys and a practicing doula. Katie runs a weekend workshop twice a year, also called ‘The Yoga of Birth’, which trains yoga teachers to teach pre-natal yoga. The training is taught by Katie and several guest teachers all of whom are leaders in their fields related to childbirth. If you attend the training a copy of the book is included free of charge. The next training runs August 24th and 25th 2013. Details can be found at www.jivamuktiyoga.com.au or email katie@jivamuktiyoga.com.au.

Jivamukti Yoga Sydney - Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training August 2013


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Australian Yoga Journal – Get your FREE Yoga CD in November-December 2012 edition

Australian Yoga Journal - Prenatal Yoga with Ana Davis

Coincides never cease to amaze me. My focus for the past 9 months has been on my pregnancy – I had a beautiful baby girl (Alexandra Imogen) earlier this month. I thoroughly enjoyed practising prenatal yoga throughout my pregnancy, and highly recommend it to any pregnant woman after their first trimester. Preferrably, find an excellent teacher in your local area. This is a great way to meet other pregnant women and share experiences. When I was feeling really uncomfortable about something, it was good to find out that someone else was feeling the same way as me. (If you can’t make it to a class, check out our online pre-natal classes).

Just when I was due to give birth, Australian Yoga Journal magazine decided to put together an issue focusing on prenatal yoga — we are once again featured in their November 2012 (in news agents now) — the magazine includes a complimentary 65-minute Prentatal Yoga Class CD, led by one of liveyogalife.com’s most popular teachers, Ana Davis. Ana Davis is an international yoga teacher based in Byron Bay. She has been teaching for 16 years and is the director of Bliss Baby, which specializes in prenatal and postnatal yoga training. Ana is also a senior yoga teacher at the Byron Yoga Centre where she lectures on yoga for women’s health as part of their teacher training programs.

This 65-minute Prenatal Yoga Class is the 1st in a 7-set-series of classes. The 7-class-set has been designed to be accessible throughout the different stages of pregnancy. It covers the fundamentals of posture & breath-work, poses for birth-preparation, lateral stretches & hip-openers, energy-building, core & sacral stability for birth, and restorative sessions for those tired days. For more information, check out Ana’s complete series of classes here.

Ana also has an 8-class-set of 20-minute Postnatal classes for after you have given birth — excellent for regaining your fitness, stability and stamina.

Check out the complimentary class in this month’s issue of Australian Yoga Journal magazine, available at your local newsagent today!

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New Product Release: Hatha Yoga Intermediate Series

Experienced Vinyasa Hatha Yoga Teacher - Danielle Dolev

Check out our latest release – Hatha Yoga Intermediate Series Class 1 to 6 by Vinyasa Hatha yoga teacher, Daneille Dolev.

The set of classes primarily focuses on improving your strength, stability, concentration and balance with a special focus on the flexibility of your hips. Danielle specialises in designing beautiful flowing classes with an emphasis on working with your breath.

Class 1: Focuses on improving your strength, balance and concentration. It has an emphasis on a flowing practice where you move smoothly between postures while working with the breath.

Class 2: Focuses on improving your strength, balance and concentration. It has an emphasis on the therapeutic benefits of flowing movement where you move smoothly between postures while working with the breath.

Class 3: Focuses on improving your strength, balance and concentration. It also has a strong emphasis on the therapeutic benefits on flowing with the breath.

Class 4: Focuses on developing your strength, balance, hip stability and opening through your hips. It has an emphasis on a flowing practice where you move smoothly between postures while working with the breath.

Class 5: Focuses on improving your strength, balance, concentration whilst opening your hips. The flowing practice has a strong emphasis on moving with the breath.

Class 6: Focuses on improving your strength, stability and balance whilst opening the hips. Danielle designs beautiful flowing classes with an emphasis on working with your breath.

These classes are intermediate level (also suitable for advanced beginners) and available separately or as a complete set of 6 classes.

NOTE: These classes do not come with printable PDF visual guides.


Live Yoga Life has a wide range of MP3 yoga classes, yoga ebooks and yoga books available for you to download:

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Australian Yoga Journal – Get your FREE Yoga CD in August 2012 edition

Australian Yoga Journal - Chair Yoga with James BryanWe are once again delighted to be featured in the August / September 2012 issue of Australian Yoga Journal magazine. The magazine comes with a complimentary CD featuring a 30-minute Chair Yoga Open Level Class by one of Australia’s most experienced teachers, James Bryan. James teaches at the Knoff Yoga School in Cairns with Nicki Knoff.

In this class (Chair Yoga Level 2 Class 2 – Chest-Openers & Back Bends), James expertly guides you through postures that work on releasing the shoulders, opening the chest, and releasing tension and strengthening the lower and upper back. Once again, these focus points are high-lights to a complete and whole-body exercise.

These are a series of four guided classes that builds on the Level 1 Program with stronger and deeper physical exercises involving standing-up and using your chair either for support or for stronger and deeper stretches as a prop.

Check out the complimentary class in this month’s issue of Australian Yoga Journal magazine, available at your local newsagent today!

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Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training, Sydney – March 2012

For more information about the prenatal yoga teacher training with one of our teachers – Katie Manitsas – click on the image below. It is a weekend course for yoga teachers to learn how to teach yoga to pregnant women and is being run by Jivamukti Yoga Sydney.

Jivamukti Yoga Sydney - Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training March 2012


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New Product Release: Vinyasa Hatha Shiva Shakti Yoga Routine 1

Experienced Vinyasa Hatha Yoga Teacher - Grant Wolf

Check out our latest release – Vinyasa Hatha Shiva Shakti Yoga Routine 1 by Vinyasa Hatha yoga expert, Grant Wolf.

Grant’s shiva shakti yoga class is designed to take you through an overall yoga journey. If you can, try to face east with your mat when commencing your practice.

As a holistic practice, this class goes through standing postures, twists, gentle backbends, hip-openers, inversions, and breathing exercises.

This program is designed for individuals with previous yoga experience, and intermediate practitioners.


Live Yoga Life has a wide range of MP3 yoga classes, yoga ebooks and yoga books available for you to download:

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