In 2012, I was blessed to have a 8 pound 6 once baby boy. I had a smaller frame all my life and gained 50 lbs during my pregnancy. I would love to say that my decision to nurse my son for a year came from a desire to bond and share my immune system with him- but that wouldn't be the entire truth. A large part of my decision was to ensure that my uterus would shrink back and that my pre-pregnancy body would return by giving my calories to him.
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| Two Weeks Before Delivery |
As predicted, the baby weight began falling off and I was fitting back into my pre-pregnancy clothes within a few months. However, there was something markedly different about my body: a small pouch hanging below my belly button riddled with stretch marks and excess skin. Worse yet, when laying down on my back a large gap in my stomach wall that was visible from the skin falling inward. Thus my introduction to Dystasis Recti - or what most women refer to as mommy tummy.
What is Dystasis Recti and what causes it? Dystasis Recti is a condition when the abdominal wall of the stomach separates after giving birth, resulting in a small pouch in some new moms. Pregnancy puts so much pressure on the belly that sometimes the muscles in front can't keep their shape; especially if the core was weak before pregnancy.
I had never gone to a gym, nor did I engage in any fitness, sport, or dance activities growing up. Had I known that having a strong core would have helped with delivery and preventing Dystasis Recti - I would have been at the gym regularly.
What nobody tells you... Typical ab exercises such as: crunches, sit-ups, push ups, front planks, and double leg lifts laying on your back make the condition WORSE. Most women run to these exercises, thinking it's going to make their mommy pouch flatter, when in fact it's making the abdominal separation worse. Swimming, certain yoga poses (downward dog), and exercises dropping you to your hands and knees also cause your outer abdominal muscles to separate. The sad truth is that a lot of personal trainers aren't familiar with Dystasis Recti nor how these exercises are detrimental to women dealing with the condition. Below is a link with more information on the Do's and Don'ts of Dystasis Recti:
https://www.webmd.com/baby/guide/abdominal-separation-diastasis-recti#1
Aerial Fitness, on the other hand, incorporates deep core conditioning of your transverse muscles that get you off your hands and knees. The tuck, pike, straddle exercises performed on pole, trapeze, hoop, and aerial silks strengthen your deep core, bringing your ab muscles back together, and closing the gap in your abdominal wall. Since starting Aerial Fitness, the gap in my abdominal wall went from 2.5 finger widths wide to completely closing. It's also helped me build abdominal strength for the first time in my life, as well as core reactivation after my c-section.
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| Straddle Inverts on Pole & Trapeze Apparatus |
A lot of lifestyle changes including exercising, changing the type of foods I ate, and reducing the amount of stress in my life have contributed to me becoming the healthiest version of myself that I've ever been. And while I was successful in flattening my mommy tummy and returning to my pre-pregnancy weight, there is still excess skin and stretch marks that remain. And you know what? It's perfectly okay!
Had you spoken with me before Aerial Fitness, I would have told you my life's goal was to save enough money for a tummy tuck. But poling for 4 years has allowed me to obtain a different perspective of my body. Somewhere along the line, the focus shifted from how my body appears to what it's now capable of doing. Somewhere along the line, I swapped out tank tops for sports bras, and unapologetically started wearing shorts that revealed my mommy stomach. Somewhere along the line, I found love and acceptance of my body in the air.
The fact is, that outside of society's unrealistic standard of beauty and perfection, there are millions of moms out there, with a body like mine - this body that has given life to the most amazing human I've ever known... and that is nothing to be ashamed of.







