Yoga's Body Image

Body image issues are tough for me to write about, because they are PERSONAL. Like a majority of Western Women I struggle with what my body looks like. Studies find time and again that women in the US are dissatisfied with their bodies. One Brown University Study found 75 percent of college age women thought about their body “all the time” or frequently. It isn’t just college students either, further scholarly work has found that 87 percent of women aged 25- 89 years old prefer a smaller silhouette than that of their current body. What causes negative body images? The media is a often blamed, in my opinion this is just. We are bombarded daily with images and videos of thin, smiling models with "perfect" bodies selling us everything from soda to vacations! The rise of Photoshop has made this phenomenon even more prevalent, as anyone of the cover of a magazine or billboard can be photoshopped into “perfection” removing every roll of body fat, hair, stretch mark etc. My personal hero Tina Fey has documented this phenomenon perfectly.

Fad diets and the “fix it” culture we live in also deserves some blame.“Loose Weight” is one of the most popular New Years Resolutions every year, but how to do that healthily and effectively is unclear.Fad diets and weight loss brands often exploit our insecurities, encouraging with the message that if you just do one thing you’ll have the body (and life) of your dreams. Yet often these diets aren't based on any actual science and can leave practitioners feeling hungry and even malnourished. Rapid changes in body weight, that often accompany quick fix diets, can lead to additional health risks, including high blood pressure and heart disease. Plus frustration when plans didn’t work, people often gain more weight coming off a quick fix diet than they originally lost!

The yoga community isn’t innocent in the issue of body image either.Yoga apparel companies use the same advertising tricks as almost every other company.The “Yoga Selfie” trend perpetuates this, as most “celebrity” yoga selfie- takers (Yogi Selfier?) are super-model-esq with images shot in perfect lighting and angles. As I searched for a stock photo for this post almost every picture I found showed yogis with the same body type. I’ve been through enough yoga photo shoots to know we all do this.And there is NOTHING wrong with wanting to look good in a photo, especially one you are going to share with the world. But when this picture perpetuates that you must be skinny, toned and more to be a yogi we are missing out on the real experience of what yoga can teach us.

Don’t worry, I am not just going to bad talk yoga. That would make this a really bad yoga blog. Yoga can provide great relief for those struggling with any sort of body image issue, including eating disorders (more on that another time, where I can give it the attention it requires and deserves). The yoga community has become more and more inclusive for practitioners of all sizes, with programs like “Yoga for Round Bodies” becoming more popular and more common.

Even if you don’t have a “round body” you may be struggling with dislike or mistrust of your body.The best forms of yoga to promote improved body image and self love include practice include Hatha, Yin and Restorative. Hatha Yoga focuses on building strength, flexibility and balance, rather than changing appearance. Yin Yoga works on being comfortable with the body where it is now, resisting the urge to change it. And restorative yoga is all about self love and care, essential for learning to embrace your body.

While people often come to yoga as a fitness routine they quickly learn that it is much more than that. Yoga Asana (poses) requires strength and flexibility, and this physical practice is most people’s introduction to yoga. For many, including myself, this is a difficult start. Your body may not fit into all of the poses the way you’d like them to, and it is easy to get discouraged, or envious of the teacher or person next to you who looks “perfect”. As you stick with it you begin to realize what your body can do. Hopefully you find a teacher who is skilled in helping you find the ways to help a pose fit your body, not the other way around. Instead of focusing on how to change the body you will become more aware of HOW IT IS. What it can do and what it can’t. You start to become more AWARE. How a pose feels on one side versus the other. How it feels when you do it in the morning versus the evening. How a pose feels when you do it first thing, as opposed to at the end of a practice. How your body feels after a day at the office. You’ll start learning what works for your body and you’ll want to continue to help yourself feel good.

If your practice includes mindfulness (and I highly recommend that it does) you will likely be practicing “letting go”. Letting go of what we can’t control, and letting go of striving.This can mean letting go of striving to touch your toes or striving for that flat belly. This isn’t a quick or easy practice (at least it isn’t for me) but ultimately you may notice it has been a day or a few days since you compared your body to the lululemon models, or the practitioner next to you, because you’ve begun to let go of that anxiety or desire. When you notice you are comparing you treat that with awareness. Was kind of day are you having? How are you feeling about yourself?

You may discover you become more mindful off the mat as well, becoming more mindful with your eating habits. You may find that you’ve been snacking mindlessly at your desk or waiting till you are so hungry to eat lunch that you grab the first thing you see. As you become mindful of these habits you may want to make healthy changes. As you become more aware of how your body feels during yoga you may start to become how your body feels outside of yoga, including how it feels after you eat a specific food or foods. Instead of yo-yoing from one diet fad to another you may start to learn the best way to nourish yourself.

Yoga is the opposite of a quick fix exercise or diet routine. I've been practicing for over a decade and I know there are still days I look at my fellow teachers and wonder how they got those abs or if I will ever be able to do that pose with my hips. I still let myself get "hangry" (ask my husband if you don't believe me) and I still may find myself binging on chocolate after a long day. When I find myself doing these things I reflect back on what went on in my day, on and off my mat. For someone who spent much of her late adolescents not eating (again, a post on disordered eating and yoga is brewing) I think this is a major accomplishment!

The above reasons are just some of the many why I created the Yoga for Women’s Wellness Series. I want to create a space where women can get to better know (and love) their bodies. Where women can be (re)-introduced the amazingness of all they can do. A safe space to meet yourself where you’re at. The first session is entitled “Getting to know your feminine body”. We will work into poses that encourage both empowerment and care. We’ll work on being mindful of the body’s limitations as well as its limitless ability to amaze us.

The first session of Yoga for Women will be held Saturday February 6 14hr-16hr at Radiant Light Yoga, advance sign up is recommended. For Private Yoga for Women session contact me. As always feel free to contact me with any questions.

Yoga for Women's Health

   

Happy New Year Dear Readers.   I don’t know about you, but I am excited about 2016.   2015 was a big year for me, on the personal front I got married in May and moved to Brussels in August, each an experience that alone would have been major.  Combined with some great business accomplishments it really was an amazing year.  I am looking forward to more excitement in 2016.

 

Some of you may have already noticed some changes here at Birth Breath Beyond.  I am very happy to share that after lots of consideration and continued training I am expanding the scope of my work from “Yoga and Pregnancy” to “Yoga for Women’s Health”.   This is an evolution that has been occurring for awhile and one that I can't wait to share with you.

 

I’ve always been interested in woman’s health, including pregnancy but reproductive health and health at all stages of life.   My Masters of Public Health is in Women’s and Reproductive Health and I’ve been passionate for such work since at least University. I believe that women lack access to evidence based, up–to –date information at all stages of life, including, but not limited to, pregnancy. Information about contraceptive methods is often confusing, based on out to date information, or cloaked in secrecy or fear.   Menstruation is seen as shameful and menstrual hygiene products often lack ingredient information and are cloaked in stigma of “dirtiness”.   Fertility and pregnancy loss isn’t discussed except behind closed doors, and such it discussion is often dismissed or down played.   Abortion is often viewed as a political issues, and although it has been made into one in the US and in much of the world it is often a personal one that people are silenced from discussing. Menopause and aging is viewed negatively, something to delay or avoid, not embrace or learn more about. I haven’t forgotten pregnancy. Those that suffer from Pregnancy and Post-Partum Depression often suffer alone, away from the smiling pictures and stories society and social media expects.

 

I’m not a doctor or a health provider. What I am is a yoga teacher, Women’s/Womb Yoga Therapeutic Teacher, Yoga Therapist-in-training, Masters in Public Health and Doula.   And I am using these skills to provide a new offering in Brussels, Yoga for Women’s Health.

 

So what exactly is Yoga for Women’s Health? It is using yoga and yogic principles to help regulate menstrual cycles. To provide complimentary care for those experiencing sub-fertility or other fertility issues, and for those undergoing fertility treatment. It’s working with yoga clients throughout their menstrual cycles, helping them create a practice, and lifestyle practices, that better listen to and honor their bodies’ many natural rhythms and cycles. It’s working with women during and after menopause to embrace changes in their bodies and create practices that best embrace this stage of life. It is working with women experiencing pregnancy or postpartum depression or anxiety to integrate yoga into their treatment plan. As my training continues I hope to be able to work with women experiencing eating disorders, an issue I’ve myself experienced and know I carry with me every day.   Much like my doula work, I am not a health care provider and I don’t want to depict myself as such. Rather I can serve a role in the complimentary care of anyone dealing with a woman’s health issue.

 

So what about my doula work? Well, I see this work as an extension of my role as a doula.  There have been so many times I’ve thought “I wish I had a doula for this”. When I had my IUD removed and when I made further family planning decisions. For women navigating the complicated world of fertility treatment a doula could be a useful companion.  Offering Yoga for Women's Health will let me hold that role.   I haven’t given up my birth doula work either. It saddens me that so few women in Brussels get to learn about what a doula does or know that this amazing source of support is available here.   My first introduction to the English speaking prenatal support care here was rather harsh, and I was upset to see misinformation and scare tactics being shared to discourage women from learning more about doulas. I see my role as a doula to be to support women in their birth however they choose, and that includes supporting them in accessing evidence based information.   Fortunately I’ve since been introduced to other amazing birth workers who are working hard to ensure the women of Belgium have CHOICES at their birth and access to as many evidence based support and care options as possible.

As I continue to offer this support to pregnant women I want to offer it to all women.   Prenatal and postnatal yoga is often the only time yoga caters to women’s specific needs. The only time women take time to share their experiences and their fears in yoga sessions or classes. The only time we consider women’s specific physical needs in a yoga session. It shouldn’t be this way.   Historically yoga was designed for men only, but now the majority of practitioners are women. Women deserve to have a practice that is tailored to their specific physical needs. They deserve to have non-medical care and support during physically and emotionally challenging times and times of change.   I am excited to be able to offer this to the women of Brussels and I hope you will join me in this exciting journey. 

Join my mailing list to be the first to know about promotions and Upcoming Women’s Yoga Sessions. Ready to start your yoga journey?  Sign up for a free FREE consult to learn more about Women’s Yoga Fertility Yoga , Pre and Postnatal and other Private Yoga Sessions.