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Emma Lovewell’s Message to New Moms About Postpartum Exercise Is the Reminder We Need

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Emma Lovewell’s Message to New Moms About Postpartum Exercise Is the Reminder We Need

When it comes to getting back into working out after giving birth, everyone’s needs are different. For some new parents, walking to the bathroom a few times a day is enough exercise and honestly, we get it. Even once your body starts physically healing from labor, you now have a whole new baby to take care of. Who has the time to sneak off for a workout? Who has the energy??

Emma Lovewell gets it too. The Peloton fitness instructor welcomed her first child, Skylar, in August and has been taking her time returning to exercise (as she very well should). The influencer and author just posted her first post-baby workout to Instagram, and the caption contains a message every new parent needs to hear.

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In the post, Lovewell notes that it’s considered a “general rule” that you can start working out at six weeks postpartum. Although, again, everyone is different; according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, it’s usually safe to begin exercising “a few days” after giving birth if you had a healthy pregnancy and normal vaginal delivery. If you had a C-section or complications, your doctor should advise you on the timeline.

But no matter when you get the green light, it doesn’t actually mean you have to start exercising right then. As Lovewell puts it, with a cheeky winking emoji: “you can wait longer.”

“I’m choosing to take my time,” the fitness expert explained, “but also excited about getting stronger.”

In the video, Lovewell moves through three different Peloton workouts — including one of her own, a 10-minute postnatal core class! — while little Skylar plays in her seat nearby. And for the record, Lovewell did find it “weird” to take her own class, “but I thought it was cute to show Sky her mama on the screen,” and well, we can’t argue with that!

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Kayla Itsines

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Fitness Influencer Kayla Itsines Says These Are the Most Important Muscles to Strengthen As a Mom

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And it was a good choice anyway, because rebuilding core strength is essential after a pregnancy. Your abdominal muscles have just spent nine-ish months stretching and lengthening to make space for your growing baby, and they naturally get weaker over that time. You might even experience diastasis recti, or separation of the abdominal muscles, which can cause back pain, constipation, and incontinence — none of which you need to deal with on top of a new baby.

Strengthening your core both before and during pregnancy, then gradually adding core work back in after giving birth, are the best ways to prevent this kind of condition, experts previously told SheKnows. Kayla Itsines, a personal trainer, founder of the super-popular Sweat app, and mom of two herself, recommends new moms focus on strengthening deep core muscles, aka the muscles that stabilize your trunk and core, like your diaphragm, pelvic floor, and transverse abdominis. “I’m talking about movements that are really slow and controlled or strength holds,” Itsines previously told SheKnows.

The gentle core exercises we see Lovewell doing at the beginning of her video are good examples: modified planks and bicycles and slow leg drops from side to side, all of which encourage core activation and strengthening without getting too dynamic.

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And Lovewell’s attitude sets a great example too. “These were some of my first workouts since Sky was born (besides walking, hikes, and carrying a heavy AF car seat around),” the fitness pro wrote in the caption, and she was all positives afterwards. “I felt proud of myself for moving my body, no matter how short or simple it was. Feels good to sweat and move!”

Want more workouts? Check out these free yoga flows you can do at home:

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New gym opening in Woodbury uses AI to help people rethink their workout

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New gym opening in Woodbury uses AI to help people rethink their workout

Twenty minutes, twice a week — that’s the promise behind The Exercise Coach, where artificial intelligence and robotics are helping people rethink what a workout can look like.

“We always start with a leg press, and we get a really good workout on those hamstrings, the quads, the glutes,” said Erica Bennett, trainer at The Exercise Coach.

The workouts are designed for all ages and fitness levels, but many clients are 40 and older. That’s where maintaining strength, balance and muscle mass often becomes a bigger focus.

The proprietary “Exerbotic” machines first measure your strength and range of motion.

“The machine will then use that to create the workout for you, so that you are always spending the most time under tension and the right amount for you,” said Bennett.

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The goal is to keep muscles working continuously while the machine adjusts resistance and movement by staying within the lines of the digital graph above you.

“That’s reducing some of that wear and tear on the joints. That’s creating a little bit of a safer experience, especially for somebody who’s looking at some age-related muscle loss,” said Bennett.

Owner Chris Geiser says the technology is what first caught his attention.

“I love data, I love systems, and this had both of those, but also allowed us to help transform people’s lives, have an impact on their health,” said Geiser.

While the tech drives the workout, every session is still guided by a coach.

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The workout may be short, but it doesn’t feel easy.

The studio also incorporates balance and cognitive training to help clients maintain stability and coordination as they age.

“We don’t need to accept a casual decline of muscle mass. We can keep it up with the right level of intensity and the right frequency,” said Geiser.

For anyone who’s fallen out of an exercise routine, Geiser has a simple invitation.

“You might be surprised what your body can still do. We invite you to give it a shot,” he said.

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The Exercise Coach studio at 8425 Seasons Parkway in Woodbury, Minnesota, opens Friday.

One-on-one coach-led training is $35 to 45 dollars per session.

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I’m A Longevity Doctor—These Are The 6 Types Of Exercise Every Woman Should Be Doing For Healthy Ageing

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I’m A Longevity Doctor—These Are The 6 Types Of Exercise Every Woman Should Be Doing For Healthy Ageing

Scratch the surface, and you might think women have the upper hand when it comes to longevity. According to data from the Office for National Statistics, here in the UK, we live an average of 3.9 years longer than men.

Look a little closer, however, and there’s a catch. Thanks to a longstanding lack of investment in women’s health research, our underrepresentation in clinical trials and fewer treatment options designed for our bodies, we spend 25% more of our lives in ill health than men.

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Regular Exercise, Key To Wellness, Long Life – Fitness Expert

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Regular Exercise, Key To Wellness, Long Life – Fitness Expert

A fitness expert and chairman of Gategold Limited, Sir Goodluck Obi, has proffered solutions to rampant cases of sudden deaths of some high profile Nigerians in public places. Obi blamed the incidents on lack of awareness on regular health checks, lack of exercise and lifestyle issues.

Obi told journalists that, ”I became a fitness buff when I took ill some years ago and I went to the USA for treatment.

”The doctor carried out thorough checks and concluded that I should go and do exercise for some time and comeback.

”I complied. After I returned to the doctor, ççhe said I should intensity the exercise for four days and come back to see him. I repeated this routine.

”Finally, he gave me a clean bill of health without administering any treatment. That was what opened my eyes and gave birth to the vision of promoting fitness as a key regimen for long life and wellness. This happened around 2007. That was the beginning of Gategold. It was set up to promote longevity, and healthy life style”.

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According to Obi, his business is not just about making money. “Gategold is the vehicle I use to promote my calling for healthy living because I benefited from it myself.”

He revealed that prior to the launch of the Gategold company,he was a successful automobile spare parts dealer.

‘I left a thriving business to promote this vision; a calling indeed that benefits humanity’, he added.

 

Obi gave insights into human health challenges.’I am not a medical doctor, but by experience, I know that you can be slim and not be healthy. You may look and feel good and not be healthy.

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He noted that children exercise themselves by playing, running around, jumping and all that, which helps them grow into healthy adults.

 

‘For one to stay healthy, you must listen to the voice of your body and react accordingly, before it’s too late’, he added.

 

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