Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Tummy Team Testimony from Online Client....


My Story- Tanya S~ new mother of 1 year old

During pregnancy, I had literally felt my ab muscles “ripping” apart above my belly button and, after some online reading, discovered I was probably developing a diastasis. My midwife confirmed my diagnosis and told me I would fix it after having my baby with physical therapy and/or surgery. I started doing “belly breaths” on my own and holding in the transverse as best I could while still pregnant and I think this helped my diastasis not to worsen much beyond a three finger gap throughout the remainder of my pregnancy. Besides the diastasis, my pregnancy was quite uneventful, and I enjoyed almost all of it. I continued to walk nearly 6 miles per day right up until I delivered my baby boy on October 24, 2012. 

My unmedicated labor was fine and manageable (labored at home and at a park, and actually arrived at the midwife center fully dilated and pushing!!), but my little man was stubbornly “sunny side up” and was incredibly difficult to get out. My midwife encouraged me to hold my breath and push (which I now know is soooo wrong!), and my baby moved millimeters at a time for 2 hours. At that point, I was taken by ambulance to the hospital, because even though the baby was not in distress, they suspected I would need a c-section to get him out. By the grace of God, something shifted in the ambulance and I was able to push him out myself in one more hour at the hospital. I had a second degree tear which healed up nicely, and I was walking within an hour of giving birth. I dove into mothering and home-making head first and loved (almost) every moment of it. I was back to walking a few miles per day at a week after birth and felt my recovery was actually fairly easy. I lost the baby weight effortlessly while breastfeeding and everything checked out fine at my six week appointment. My midwife wrote me a prescription for physical therapy to fix my diastasis, and I felt fine about where I was at. 

Two days after my six week check-up, I felt a bulging down below and discovered a bladder prolapse. I remember being shocked and scared and crying to my husband. I really felt like my body was broken. I went to the physical therapist and they gave me one exercise for my DR, did not recommend splinting, and gave me no info at all about lifestyle or postural changes. They told me to do Kegels for the prolapse. And I did. I did everything they said for months, and saw only a worsening of my pelvic floor and diastasis symptoms. I started feeling very frustrated and hopeless. I did not feel attractive, despite my husband telling me I was beautiful. My midsection, previously always effortlessly flat, was bulging and shapeless and hung to the side like a cow’s udder when I lay on my side. I didn’t recognize myself. I felt embarrassed to wear anything that showed my belly, and shopped for some new “boxy” shirts that would better hide my new 5-month-pregnant-looking form and protruding belly button. I didn’t like anybody touching my belly because it felt like a bowl of pudding, and I would avoid looking down when it stuck out while I was nursing. I hated my belly. It had let me down and it wasn’t responding to all my efforts to whip it into shape. And it frustrated me endlessly that no amount of healthy eating or exercise seemed to make a difference.

I felt defeated. After all, I had been to a women’s rehab specialist, and they had not been able to help me! Where else could I turn for help? I started to grieve the loss of control over my belly and to work on accepting my body as it was right now, with a protruding tummy that was the result of carrying and delivering my beautiful baby boy. However, even as I tried to give up the “vanity” issues, I still worried how my body would possibly support another pregnancy. I felt broken already, and was worried my mild prolapse would become unmanageable during the stress of another pregnancy. I felt I needed to find a way to improve my strength before carrying a second child, even if I would need to deal with the “cosmetic defect” of a “mummy tummy” for life. 

I prayed about it and I feel God’s response to me finally asking for His help was to lead me to Fit2B. I felt nurtured and calmed by Bethany’s approach to healing my tummy, and I started learning that I did not need to “beat my tummy into submission” to see results. Her teaching about how to move in core-supporting ways in everyday life was eye-opening to me and I started seeing changes in my belly and my everyday core strength. After about 4 weeks of doing Fit2B workouts, I felt I needed more. I needed to start from the ground up and find somebody to help me systematically rebuild what was broken. Through a search on Bethany’s site and reading her testimonial, I found the Tummy Team. 

After emailing with Kelly, I signed up for their online core foundations course. 

Empowered. That is how I would describe how I feel after going through the Tummy Team’s online core foundations program and having two one-on-one skype sessions with Kelly. I now understand how my core functions, how to balance all the parts of my body that impact my transverse and my diastasis, how to move and function in everyday life to support my core, how to live my life in a way that promotes healing and limits damage to the precious instrument God has given me that allows me to love, nurture, and care for my family. Kelly’s program is step-by-step, comprehensive, nurturing, and realistic. She is the opposite of “alarmist” which is so good for my sometimes-neurotic personality. When I obsessed about my diastasis measurements over and over, she patiently encouraged me to “stop checking so often!”. She was right She told me I was doing great, and that my efforts were paying off not only in my slowly-closing diastasis and healing connective tissue, but in my functional strength and my posture. 

Before finding the Tummy Team, I felt frustrated, desperate, and broken. Deeply broken. That might sound dramatic since we’re just talking about a tummy, but my diastasis and my pelvic floor weakness were leaving me feeling frustrated, unattractive, and fearful of what another pregnancy would do to my body. After eight weeks of rehabbing my tummy, I feel like I can imagine another pregnancy (not yet, but after another several months of strengthening my body and healing). I will also definitely sign up for Kelly’s online prenatal course if/when the time comes for delivery and recovery with pregnancy #2. 

My progress has been admittedly slow, and my before and after pictures are not astounding, but I can see and feel some progress after 8 weeks. I splinted nearly 24/7 for the first several weeks, and with Kelly’s encouragement, I started weaning gradually around week 5/6 of the program. I started with the following measurements (taken by myself, so not sure how accurate my reading is…):
Top: 2.5-3 and medium, 28.5”
Middle: 2.5-3 and deep, 30”
Lower: 1.5 and shallow/medium, 31”

At the end of eight weeks:
Top: 2 and shallow/medium, 27.5”
Middle: 2 and medium, 28-28.5”
Lower: 1-1.5 and shallow, 30-30.5”

Before
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After:
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I am breastfeeding my one year old son on demand and he still nurses a lot, so Kelly has told me my healing might stagnate a bit until I’m done. I am about 50% weaned from my splint. 

I feel so much stronger, so much more aware of my posture and the positions my body is in throughout the day, and much more able to stabilize myself with my transverse. My new postures and movements, and the way I now engage my transverse are becoming increasingly automatic. I feel more willing to put on a slightly more form-fitting T-shirt, and I can honestly say I feel more attractive.. My core feels much stronger, and I can see the increased muscle definition and structure in my midsection. I no longer feel like I am just “mushy” in the middle. My belly stays in place much better when I lie down on my side (instead of just kind of “oozing” away from me). My pelvic floor is getting stronger, I no longer have to run to the bathroom as often, and my prolapse symptoms are gradually lessening. 

I feel like I am finally moving in the right direction. I have hope that if I continue doing the exercises, keeping my transverse active in my day to life, stretching, and being mindful of the posture and way I use my body each day, I will continue to see improvements in my diastasis measurement, the strength of my connective tissue, my pelvic floor strength, and my overall functional core strength in my everyday life. 

From the bottom of my heart, thank you thank you thank you Kelly and the Tummy Team for making this information available to me in Pennsylvania. Thank you for the Skype sessions, the Facebook forum, and the clear path to continued healing you’ve helped lay out for me. I will be sharing your information with the Midwife Center in Pittsburgh, and with any women or men I come across who were/are suffering like I was. 


Ps: if I see more improvements in the months ahead, I will update


Monday, October 14, 2013

Real

I have been feeling a prodding to write this for some time now but there always seems to be something that gets pushed ahead.  A few discussions on the Private Tummy Team Client FB Forum really made me realize how important it may be for me to share this.

It is easy for people to develop an impression of someone based a a little information.  We all do it.  I notice this when clients first come to see me if they have watched some education videos I have posted or read my bio.  I see this flicker of recognition in their eyes when they see me, like they know me already.  It is actually very helpful as it allows people to trust us and allow us to help them even with more intimate issues.  But I also know that they have only seen a small blip of who I am.

The more people know about the work I do, the more assumptions are made.  Although, one blog will not share every intimate detail about myself, I do feel like some things that I share could really help people understand that I am just a person, just a mom, just a woman with many of the same struggles as them.

Yes, I have developed by the grace of God, I strong understanding of the body, alignment, rehabilitation etc.  Yes, I have years of experience to draw from.  And, yes, I work hard to learn more every day.  But I still struggle with the same things you all do.  So let's expose some lies and hopefully set some people free...

First, people like to assume since I run The Tummy Team that I am super thin and have a 6-pack (abs, not Coors Light).  I am not skinny and I do not have flat tummy.  I am 5'8" which is relatively tall for a woman (I am seriously an amazon beside everyone of my close friends- I don't think I have one close friend that is not at least 4 inches shorter than me.)  So due to that height, my weight is dispersed.  I weigh a lot.  A lot. How much? I honestly cannot say because I have not looked at a scale seriously since I was about 21.  When I was in college, I was a very competitive athlete and very fit.  At that time I had an insanely low body fat percentage, like 16% or something crazy, but still weighed 20lbs more than almost everyone on my swim team.  Maybe it is muscle, or dense bones, who really cares.  The scale took on a very negative place in my life so I chose to no longer measure my health by it.  Even when I am at the doctor or pregnant, I stand on the scale backward and ask them not to tell me the number. The number messes with my head.  I am size 12 ( a real size 12 not the junior size 12- why do they do that anyway?).  Sometimes I am a size 10 but usually I am a size 12.  When the size 12 does not fit well, I realize I need to adjust some things.  My belly measurement (at the belly button) ranges between 36 and 38" depending on many factors.  I do not measure all the time, but I know this because I demo the splints and if I am 36" the medium fits better, if I am 38" the large does.  I try to not sweat it.

Second, people assume I am super comfortable with my body.  Wrong.  I can be very self conscious of my tummy.  Personally, I have had so much healing in this area of my life and this area of my body that it does not affect me nearly as much as it has in the past.  But almost every client I have looks at my tummy and I imagine every on-line client zooms in and checks out my tummy when watching the videos.  It is human nature to be curious to see if this program "worked" for the teacher.  I really try to not let it control me but I am a woman and I have the same body image issues as everyone else.  Even when I was fit I did not have a washboard stomach.  I have stretch marks, extra skin and a very deformed poorly planned tattoo on my tummy.  However, I expose my tummy at every class I teach and give other professionals the opportunity to check my stomach.  We cannot allow fear to control us, so I look for every opportunity to stare that fear in the eye and overcome it.

Third, my diastasis is not completely closed.  I had a 6 finger very deep diastasis with a weak inactive core, no pelvic floor, horrific posture, no energy and chronic back pain just 4 years ago.  My diastasis now typically measures 1 shallow (closed) at the top, 1.5-2.5 shallow/medium at my navel, and 1-1.5 shallow at the lower measurement.  However, my posture has transformed, I lost 6-8 inches off my waist, I have a solid pelvic floor, tons of energy, incredible functional strength and no back pain.  The diastasis measurement is only one piece of the puzzle.  The elasticity of the connective tissue flucuates, it reacts to your menstrual cycle, it was very stressed and damaged so their can be residual changes to that tissue.  That measurement alone will never be the measurement of your success or failure.  And, often the more we focus on the number, the less it changes.

Forth, I move my body.  It is true that I live what I teach.  I am aware of my posture, alignment, how I sit, how I move, and how active my core is throughout the day.  But I move. I am not in the "rehab" phase of the program.  I have a lot of awareness and functional strength for what I ask my body to do, so I can do things without causing damage to my body. Not crunches, not v-sits but functional movements within reasonable ranges.  For instance,  I swim butterfly.   Butterfly can cause the ribs to flare, and my back does arch and the dolphin kick does put my body into a crunch at times.  I also do flip turns which is a flexed position.  My diastasis has not reopened because of this.  But I would not have been able to do even 2 years ago.  It is a process and a journey.

Fifth, I am not a fitness fanatic.  I cannot run, I suck at hiking, I cannot complete most of Bethany's Fit2B workouts without serious effort and fatigue (even the ones I filmed- look closely, I am sweating and exhausted).  I run a business, have 3 kids and a home to take care of, so I swim 2-3 times a week and do functional core exercises and stretches and a few other fun things here and there.  You just cannot do it all so I choose what I love and I choose to be in my kids lives.

I am sure there are other myths that need to be busted but these are the ones I feel people assume the most.  I have never intended to misrepresent myself.  I have found that especially with the internet where you can present what you want and omit what you don't, it is very easy for people to fill in the blanks with their own assumptions.  Sadly, I feel like people can either put me on a pedestal or be overly mean and critical.  Very few people hit the mark unless they really know you.

I firmly believe that "the Truth will set you free".  Spiritually and figuratively.  When women assume things that are incorrect and then try to live up to those imaginary standards, they live in a trap.  The "never good enough" or "I wish I was like so and so" trap,

We all have a story, a journey and a beauty to share.  Beauty is so much more about how you feel than how you look.  When you feel beautiful, it pours out of you.  Beauty is everywhere.  Don't miss it looking for something else or trying to be someone else.

Thanks for reading.

Kelly Dean, MPT
Founder of The Tummy Team