Childbirth and the Athletic
Woman
Childbirth and the Athletic Woman - Athletic women come in
all sizes and enjoy different sports or fitness programs.
Athletic women enjoy being toned and fit. Through personal
fitness, many women have developed determination, commitment to
their task, and an ability to hit the wall and go beyond. Often
they consider themselves tough and rigorous. Women who enjoy
fitness as a way of Life rather than being ‘athletic’ also
admire their shape, sense of being in ‘tone’, flexibility and
strength. So why would an athletic woman (including women who
just stay fit) need to know anything about childbirth? Isn’t
the goal of preparing for childbirth about ‘getting in
shape?’
One famous woman athlete made a public comment that if she
had gone through labour before her competitive event she would
have done better in the competitions. Obviously, childbirth
gave her insights that would have improved her performance.
Many athletic women may not know that you are more likely to
have a caesarean than most women. We’ve all heard stories that
dancers and horsewomen are more likely to have a caesarean;
however, it’s true for many athletic women. Yet, somehow this
seems paradoxical. How can being in shape lead to more
medically assisted births?
Childbirth at it’s simplest is an exercise in plumbing.
An object (baby) has to come out of a container
(woman). In order to do that the object must come through a
tube (pelvis), open a diaphragm (cervix) and aperture (vagina).
The container has a Mind and if the process of the object
coming through is perceived of as painful, then the Mind can
respond to those sensations by tensing up the body. Tension in
the body can interfere with the need of the container to relax
and open in order for the object to come out. Being ‘toned’ is
a form of tension. This means that there is entirely different
preparation for giving birth than staying in shape or being in
training. One husband of an athletic woman said after her
caesarean: ‘I thought childbirth was about muscles pushing a
baby out. Now I understand it’s about creating space so the
baby can move through her body.’
Each sport or fitness program uses different muscles, yet it
is not just the muscles that can produce tension. Connective
tissue or fascia can hold tension as well. In our plumbing
analogy, the tube (pelvis) is surrounded by connective tissue
which is part of our body’s soft tissue. Soft tissue is
anything other than bone. For example, tension in the
connections between the bones in the pelvic girdle (tube) can
prevent the bones from being mobile. Our baby’s bones in their
head are designed to mold and over lap; however, we can create
more space inside this tube when we know how to keep our pelvis
mobile. In childbirth, the sacrum is the bone that needs the
most mobility. It’s also the bone that is used to stabilize our
bodies as we weight bear and tends to being immobile. We can
also reduce ‘back labour’ by learning how to create sacral
mobility. One ice skater said after 3 caesareans: ‘Once I
learned to mobilize my sacrum in labour, I had no trouble
giving birth to my fourth child naturally. No one told me I had
to do that. No one told me I had to do the Internal Work (birth
canal or aperture) either.
The soft tissue in our birth canal may also be quite tight.
Many women are told to do ‘pelvic floor’ exercises. These
certainly are good to strengthen our insides; however, they are
not appropriate birth preparation exercises. Instead pregnant
women need to learn how to relax inside the pelvis and the
muscles of the birth canal.
For many athletic, relaxing is not in alignment with their
personal self perception.
One competitive cyclist said: ‘I considered myself very,
very tough and I was. I had developed skills and management
skills for my chosen event; however, without a whole new set of
skills for the event of giving birth I didn’t have a clue and
ended up with a caesarean and sense of personal failure. When I
discovered The Pink Kit Method for birthing better™ I learned
the necessary birthing skills and my husband learned how to
coach me.’
The Pelvic Clock exercise from The Pink Kit is one of the
many you can teach yourself at home to prepare for childbirth.
When used in labour, the Pelvic Clock technique helps you to
focus on relaxing where your cervix attaches inside the pelvis.
This assists in dilating the cervix. You can use the same
concept to mentally relax around the cervix directly which also
assists cervical dilation. NOTE: If you are pregnant now, you
can do the Pelvic Clock exercise below, but only do the
cervical relaxation the last two weeks of your pregnancy as
specific preparation for birth and then feel free to do it
throughout labour.
1) Do this exercise in a number of positions: standing,
sitting, lying down or partially kneeling. As you know,
different postures engage different muscles and aspects of the
connective tissue.
2)
3) Draw a line around your body, starting midway down your
pubic bone, around to the top of where your legs meet your hips
and then to your sacrum. This will be about 1 ½ inches above
where the little bumps are, at the beginning of your bottom
crack. You have drawn a circle around your pelvis. Inside this
circle, inside the pelvis is approximately where the top of
your vagina (the soft tissue around the cervix) meets the
inside of your pelvis. In labour the contractions draw this
tissue into the pelvis, opening the cervix which is in the
middle of the tissue. Where the tissue meets the pelvis is like
the rim of a clock face and the cervix is like the area where
the hands of the clock join. Uterine contractions open the
cervix so that there is no longer a clock face, rather a large
opening for your baby to come down and into your birth canal.
The tugging open of the cervix is what is ‘painful’ in
labour.
4) Give your clock face names. Name the pubic bone
12:00, one hip 3:00, the sacrum 6:00 and the other hip 9:00.
Now go around the clock and soften (inside) at each o’clock
(you can always include 1:30 etc). It’s helpful to say to
yourself while you lightly touch that place: ‘Soften inside my
pubic bone.’ Pause before you go on to the next place in order
to let your mind find that place in your body and for your body
to respond. This is yoking your mind to your body.
5) After you have gone around the outside of the Pelvic
Clock and if you are two weeks away from your due date, then
you can do the same softening around the cervix which is in
closed and in the center. The cervix is made up of 50% muscle
cells and the rest connective tissue, so it does respond to
intentional relaxation.
6) Doing both of these things in labour between
contractions and even during contractions has been one of the
great focus tools that women who have prepared with The Pink
Kit have used. It’s an ideal tool for husbands/partners to
know. They can feel it in their own bodies and can remind us to
‘relax at 6:00’ if we have back labour, for example.
Notice this difference, just tense up inside, hold the
tension while you go around the clock again. You can feel the
difference.
Over the past 30 years, The Pink Kit Method for birthing
better™ has helped many women athletes to have a positive
birth. The information originated in the United States in the
1970s and came to New Zealand with the founder of the Trust,
Common Knowledge, in 1995. Since then the multi-media kit The
Pink Kit: Essential Preparations for your birthing body through
the website.
A number of New Zealand athletic women have used The Pink
Kit and found it incredibly helpful. They have been body
builders, aerobic competitors, rowers, horsewomen, dancers etc.
Each has a different experience and different story of their
birth. Some found that their sport had prepared them for the
challenge of labour while others were surprised at how
challenged they were by labour.
Often athletic women have athletic partners.
When both expectant parents have prepared for birth using
The Pink Kit, having a skilled partner as birth coach has been
wonderful for the woman. Men do have the same bodies and can
feel inner tension in the same manner than women can. When
these women found labour challenging, they relied on their
partners to help them work through each contractions with the
common knowledge skills they had taught themselves. One woman
athlete said: ‘when labour got intense, my husband reminded me
that I had put in the effort to my sport and that I could do
this. He inspired me to keep going instead of using pain relief
and he was there every contraction, doing the work with
me.’
With the new skills, you can find in The Pink Kit, athletic
women and their partners can meet the challenge, achieving a
positive birth experience in all situations. Learning new
skills become fascinating rather than conflictive. In fact,
you’ll get back into shape sooner after birth when you have
learned to relax to give birth. There will be less trauma for
you and your baby.
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