stretch/mobility

360 Breathing for Great Foundations

In the first week of my online course and in the first session I see clients in person we always investigate what’s going on with their breathing - where they breathe from, where they feel their breath moving, where it doesn’t move and what’s the interaction with the pelvic floor especially as they begin to move and load their body.  Why start with breathing? And what does it matter?

For some women in the post-natal phase their breath gets stuck into only going forward because their mid-back gets tight and the hangover from carrying a baby means they are more open at the front. This can lead to some back pain and aches, a tendency to overuse the shoulders to help lift the ribs at the front and a change in the way the head and pelvis align to support the body. 

By encouraging the breath to expand the ribs in all directions - 360 breath - we are getting more movement in the side and back ribs and everything feels a bit more comfortable. It also means the abdominals can do the work they need to when we need them - picking up a child, lifting something heavy on one side, pushing furniture or just doing our jobs and daily life - if we have the physical resilience to breath and brace at the same time then we can create strength when we need it and not just when we are in a super controlled position. So first of all we work on feeling the breath all round the ribs with various ways of creating feedback to aid that feeling, then we make it more challenging - moving in and out of standing, kneeling, curling and flexing positions - and then add in load with spring resistance or holding weights or a moving surface.

The benefit I see with clients as we progress, and as I’ve seen with my own body, is we are able to stand taller, breathe deeper and longer and have more feeling and connection in the pelvic floor.  This means that we are able to experience the full range of loading on the pelvic floor - expansion on the breath in, and contraction/connection on the breath out - which helps massively when it comes to understanding any issues, changes in function as we age or through the monthly cycle and our response to different situations.

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So how do you feel a 360 breath?  I always start lying down with knees bent, feet flat, however you can also do this sitting right back into a chair with your back supported.  Put your hands on the sides of your ribs with fingers forward and thumbs back.  Now breathe in nice and deeply and feel where it goes.  You want to feel an even inflation of your ribs into your fingers at the front, your palms at the sides and your thumbs at the back.  It may be that you don’t feel much movement into your thumbs, as I said above this is common due to posture changes in pregnancy.  Awareness is key here, so understanding that you don’t feel an even expansion is the first step, then aim to move your ribs more and expand more, and you can get into positions which will help shut down the front or sides of your ribs in order to feel the sticky areas a bit more.   This deep squat position will help to shut down the front so you have no choice but to breathe into the back even more.

Happy New Year - and a New You? No thanks, you’re perfect just the way you are!

What does 2020 hold in store for you?

Looking through my emails and social feeds there are either messages of promotion for new diets, new workouts with “incredible/intense/amazing results” or messages saying not to change anything, don’t fall for all the “New Year, New You” BS. Have you noticed that too? 

What if you do want to take the opportunity of a clear January to start something you’ve always wanted, or to create a change in your life to benefit you in the long term? How do you negotiate the noise in all this messaging then?

I think it’s pretty safe to say we know now that “fad” diets don’t work - that is ones that are restrictive, change your eating, juice only, skinny tea, massive food group removal or ones based on being a better version of yourself.  Let’s just go over that again - fad diets DON’T WORK!

I know you know deep down that sensible eating, consciously and without waste, moderate, varied movement that suits your body and getting enough sleep, relaxation, time outdoors and connection with others every day are what we need to be healthy and happy in our bodies and minds.  It’s not rocket science and you don’t need special tech, fancy clothing, another fitness or food tracking app or super expensive gym membership. Sometimes what we need is a better strategy to go about our weeks and create habits that are long lasting - read on to find out more about the 1% strategy

Image taken from James Clear’s website (above) and information contained in this message from his book “Atomic Habits”

Image taken from James Clear’s website (above) and information contained in this message from his book “Atomic Habits”

1% Changes to Create Successful Habits

In 2003 the fate of the British Cycling team changed forever.  Dave Brailsford was hired as a coach and began to implement tiny changes in behaviour and technology that took the team from only ever having won 1 gold medal at an olympics and never having won the Tour De France to winning 60% of the gold medals in the 2008 games, and gaining 5 out of 6 of Tour victories from 2013 onwards.  In fact during the ten-year span from 2007 to 2017, British cyclists won 178 world championships and 66 Olympic or Paralympic gold medals and captured 5 Tour de France victories in what is widely regarded as the most successful run in cycling history.

How did this extraordinary improvement happen?  And why is it relevant to you - someone who isn’t a professional cyclist?

Brailsford didn’t make a dramatic change in training plans, or dope his athletes up to the eyeballs to make them into superhumans.  He got them to wash their hands effectively everywhere they went so they reduced infections, and got them pillows and mattresses perfectly suited to each individual which they took with them everywhere so they slept better.  He had the inside of the team truck painted white to ensure they noticed any dirt or dust which would affect the fine tuned bikes and tested massage gel to make sure they used the most effective one for recovery.  These were among many other thousands of small changes.

On their own not a single one of these changes would have made a difference, but collectively and repeated month after month, year after year, these changes aggregated into a collective of 1000s of % improvements.

How is this relevant to you?

When you look to make any change, don’t think only the massive changes are worthwhile.  

  • Waking up every morning and looking out your window to take in the sky and trees before opening your phone will help your mental wellbeing more easily than thinking “I have to meditate every day for 20 minutes or I’ll never reduce my stress levels”

  • Drinking a glass of water every time before you make a caffeinated drink will help you stay more hydrated than vowing to never drink caffeine again.

  • Packing your bag so you have the snacks and lunch you want for the next day in advance means you’re less likely to regret what you eat and drink at work.

  • Having a little programme of movement that benefits your body to do each morning will help you feel more balanced, stronger and more mobile.  Prepare for success with this by committing to waking up 15 minutes earlier, make it friction free to carry this habit out by having the written programme, a mat and any pieces of equipment right there ready for you so you literally fall over it in the morning rather than it being packed away.

Remember that most of the significant things in life aren't stand-alone events, but rather the sum of all the moments when we chose to do things 1 percent better or 1 percent worse. Aggregating these marginal gains makes a difference.

How does your movement practice serve you?

When clients come to see me and they want to start progressing their strength and build on what they learn in class I always suggest doing some work at home.  Fairly obviously most people don’t have time or the money or the energy to come to a class daily and I don’t think that would be great for you anyway.  What I do think helps is chipping away at strength foundations every day if that’s possible for you. I definitely don’t mean for an hour every day, and I definitely don’t mean an intense session more than 3 times a week, maybe even less. 

What to consider when starting/committing to a movement practice:

1) Know Yourself! Personally I really struggle with high intensity exercise - maybe I used up all my intense sessions when I was rowing and doing CrossFit and I’ve got none left now? If you respond well and feel great after intense sessions, that’s great, monitor the best response you get from your body with how many per week suits you - 4 may be too many and leave you depleted, 1 may be too few as it may make you feel a bit sluggish in each session. Again this is my personal experience:  I do respond well to strength workouts, I am slightly hypermobile so I need more strength than anything else (hence Pilates and not yoga for me). Some women come in and talk to me saying they do circuits or running or something similar and feel a bit wobbly and are in pain afterwards, or drained and exhausted but don’t recognise this. At the time I was doing it, Crossfit was not a good workout system for me, I would get constantly injured and feel sore and depleted for days after each session.

2) Does your routine serve you well? If you are recently post-natal or coming out of the pre-school years and now wanting to focus on yourself, monitor how your pelvic floor, abdominals and any shoulder and back pain responds to the new exercise/movement regime. If you are in pain or have issues with leaking or a pooch tummy, don’t accept this as your new normal or just how it will be because of having babies, your movement practice should serve to strengthen and benefit you, helping you to build foundations in the right way, not in a more depleting way causing any further issues. If you start leaking, feel more weak in your centre, have lasting shoulder, neck or back pain and aren’t able to move well in your daily life, take some time to think about your movement practice and whether there might be something there that isn’t working for you.

3) “Listen to the whispers so you don’t have to hear the shouts”!!  After years of struggling to find the right way, I’ve built, over time, better foundations, which I continue to work on all the time: breathing, pelvic floor awareness, rib mobility, spine elongation, glute strength, and now I can build overall strength and dynamics on top of that. Take care not to go in hard straight away, getting over enthused by being unleashed into the world of movement after feeling like your body belongs to someone else for a few years. I totally understand the thinking, it feels so good to move, but this is also a moveable feast, your response to movement will change daily, weekly, monthly and so some exercise will suit you one day and feel all kinds of wrong the next. Of course our menstrual cycle affects that, as well as the physical demands we have from others day to day, as a woman ending her child bearing life phase and moving on to the next we also have influences from post-birthing and feeding hormones as well as the coming peri-menopause symptoms. You may have to become more aware of your needs and responses as you go on.

4) What to do and how often? My personal commitment and what works for me is to do a max 10 minute glute mini workout often in front of the TV in the evening or between working on admin stuff during the day and then 2-3 longer workouts like this one ☝🏼 each week. I’ll do my rehab stuff as often as possible too (there’s always something needing doing) and I run with my dog, as long as I’m not injured, twice a week - this is often a walk and not a run, always on trails and hilly or rough ground. This works for me as I know I can fit in at least 2 longer sessions each week on days that I work less, and I know that if I don’t do some extra glute work through the week, my hips and back get achy and tired, and I need the correct support from my core to be able to move, sit while working for long periods, and do my job. The running happens if I can because I might as well use the time I walk my dog to do a bit of extra sweating. I put no pressure on myself with this, running is not my natural thing, but I do love the enjoyment of moving faster than walking, sweating and pushing myself a bit.

When you are looking at this you may think, “oh I could never do something every day” or “I could never do 2 longer sessions, I just don’t have the time”, so this is where you look at what time you do have, what you’d really love to do, who you could ask to support you to be able to choose that option (see previous blog post) and maybe what you might have to give up to make that commitment. Often if we look at it, there are slack times in our day when we don’t need to spend half an hour scrolling Instagram ( yes, me too, it’s a sap!) or an hour watching TV in the evening - actually a useful time to consciously move. I’ve had good responses with women willing to do a short circuit while cooking dinner in the evening - the trick here is being prepared so you’re at least in comfortable clothes ready to move when you have the opportunity.

5) Values - in the end your choice of movement comes down to your values for yourself. Where do you want to get to? What does your future look like and your ideal week of movement entail if time and money were no object? Moving in a nourishing way is a show of self-love, loving yourself enough to honour the adventure that you and your body have been in through your life, showing yourself how brilliant you are for housing, nourishing and nurturing another human and giving yourself the space to rebuild with all that you have experienced inside you now.

Have you found your way with your workout/exercise/sport/movement routine? Are you struggling to work things out? Do you want help and to find a way?

As a post-natal corrective exercise specialist I see women 1-1 in both my studio in Sussex and online from anywhere in the world, get in touch to chat over your needs and how I can help you.

How not to hurt yourself when you run!

I hear from many women (myself included at one point), that they are worried about running because they don’t trust their pelvic floor, or they can’t run very much before it all going a bit pear shaped.  I get that, I wasn’t sure my pelvic floor would hold either, but now I know that you can start running whenever you like or whenever you need to without worry because if you set yourself up well you’ll be using your body efficiently so your pelvic floor will be in the right place. 

“But surely my pelvic floor is always in the same place, how can it be in the right or wrong place?” - ah well that’s the thing, the way we stand, walk, go up and down stairs, get out of a chair and run can all influence whether our pelvic floor is in a position where it can do it’s job well or in a position that there’s not a hope in hell it could hold on and so most likely it won’t!  So let’s set you up right and then off you go!

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  • Ideally I would have you take a photo of yourself side on so you can see the curves of your spine - if not a photo, at least stand side on to a mirror and take a look.

  • Our spine has natural curves from the joint between our skull and neck curving slightly forward, the area around the back of our ribs curving slightly back and then a low curve behind our pelvis which curves forward again.  In some people these gentle curves can become exaggerated and a head forward posture leads to an increased upper back curve and increased lower back curve to balance all the way through.  In others the spine can be very flat through the upper half and with a steeper curve in the low back to compensate.  In others, and this is more common in post-natal women, the curve in the low back travels up to behind the belly button and either their butt sticks out or, more commonly they tuck their bottom under to compensate for the excessive curve higher up.

  • So when you look at your spine, what do your curves look like?

  • When you’re standing, walking, running and all the rest of your daily movements you want to think about keeping your ribs connected to the pelvis at the front.  In 99% of my clients we focus on ribs down - this is through expanding your back as well as connecting through your front.  So when you walk and go to start running keep your ribs dropped down so you have that connection and control set up right.

  • Then check in with where your pelvis is, if it’s stuck out you’re going to have problems with the impact of running on your low back, and if it’s tucked under - surprisingly common! - you’ll have problems with your pelvic floor struggling to hold strong enough with the weight of your trunk going down through your pelvis. Start from the ribs and then you may find the pelvis stacks correctly underneath.

  • What about your head?  Remember your head is pretty heavy, if you run with your head stuck out forwards that’s going to increase the slump down through your upper back and make it heavy to keep picking up each step - like holding a bowling ball in your arm all the time!  So keep your chin tucked slightly and back of your neck long so your head and ribs are all in a line.

  • As you start to run, make sure you drive your legs back out behind you each step instead of scooting your feet forwards.  It helps if you start from where your foot lands - make it mid or fore foot instead of heel which means you are best to strike the floor almost under your body rather than out in front.

  • Last thing - arms - do they swing across your body or do you use your arms forwards and back like pistons to help propel you.  If you are doing the cross body swinging thing you are potentially lacking mobility in your upper back to get enough counter rotation to your pelvis - ie. your pelvis and ribcage should rotate opposite to each other each step - but if you don’t get enough of this then your arms have to swing to get more momentum.


Having someone take a video of you running is a brilliant tool to help you learn.  You often find that what you think you’re doing and what you’re actually doing are a world apart from each other and seeing yourself can help you close that gap.

Don’t be afraid to run, here’s my top 3 tips for starting out:

  1. Go by feel not distance, speed or what your technology says

  2. Walk then run, walk, run, walk, run - slow to a walk when you feel your alignment (all those points above) is failing to hold.  There’s only any point in running while you’re doing good technique rather than ending up in a sloshy mess at the end.

  3. Breath into your ribs to the side and back under your shoulders - more of that in the next post - not by tightening your neck and dragging your shoulders up

Have fun, running is a brilliant way to get some headspace, take an easy amount of time out to do something for yourself and most importantly enjoy spending time in nature whatever the weather. I will post more soon about conditioning exercises for running so you can make sure you’re strong enough all over to keep going.

Happy Running!

Not just a spare rib!

Today I've been inspired by chats I've had with a few of my clients about how important the position of ribs is for working your abs more efficiently which relates to your posture and how you use your whole upper body especially in weightbearing but also in any lower body work to be able to align well for efficient movement and use of the connection between upper and lower body (pelvic floor and glutes most essentially).

In this video I talk through why rib position is so important, how to think about visual cues for correction, and ways to help your body work effectively over time to get stronger over time.

Let me know any comments or questions you might have, I hope you find this interesting.