No mother enters pregnancy saying she hopes to gain all the weight, have gestational diabetes, suffer from preeclampsia, or receive an unplanned, preventable c-section due to a complication.
While genetics plays a part, a healthy lifestyle can override many preventable issues that commonly arise during pregnancy. Our society is the heaviest and unhealthiest it has ever been; this includes pregnant women. Maternal and fetal death rates are too high, more children than ever are suffering from autism, cancers, and chronic illnesses. It is time for a change, and the change starts with us.
5 Essential Exercises For a Healthy Pregnancy
Healthy living is no longer a trend but a lifestyle choice for so many within the childbearing age bracket now. A great divide is occurring that is placing people in the know when it comes to foods, toxins, and healing ourselves naturally. There are many who will choose ignorance, choose to continue leading their lives in booths at unhealthy restaurants, sitting all day, and filling their bodies and air with harmful chemicals. But, the numbers are shifting, and more people are walking away from the ignorance. More people are aiming at bettering their lives and the lives of their children.
It starts in utero, this ‘bettering’ of a child’s life. A mother has the ability to help her growing child by consuming the highest quality foods, keeping toxins out, and by allowing highly oxygenated blood flow into her fetus. Foods, lifestyle choices, and exercise are the key components to supporting the healthiest pregnancy possible.
While eating well and ending bad habits are easily accepted, exercise, it seems, tends to scare many mothers. But why? The most common misconceptions of exercising while pregnant include:
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“I wasn’t working out before, I can’t start now.”
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“Working out will cause a miscarriage.”
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“I’ll overheat the baby.”
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“A high heart rate can cause problems.”
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“I’ll hurt the baby.”
All of the above is untrue. Exercise is not only safe but incredibly important while pregnant. Prenatal exercise:
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Reduces back pain
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Eases constipation
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Provides richer oxygenated blood from the heart through the body and to the placenta
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Decreases the risk of gestational diabetes
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Decreases the risk of preeclampsia
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Decreases the risk of cesarean delivery
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Promotes a healthy weight gain during pregnancy
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Strengthens the heart and blood vessels
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Increases probability of making it to full term
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Helps you to lose the baby weight after your baby is born
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Decreases the chances of depression
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Reduces stress levels
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Allows for better sleep
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Prepares the body for labor and birth
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Reduces anxiety
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Lowers blood pressure
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Boosts brain development in fetus
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Lowers the heart rate of the baby in utero, which allows the heart to be stronger during labor
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Lowers risk of childhood obesity and other chronic diseases