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Postpartum Strength Prenatal Fitness

Valentine’s Couple Workouts for Expecting and New Parents

Valentine’s Day looks a little different when you are expecting a baby or adjusting to life with a newborn. Late nights, changing bodies, and shifting priorities can make it harder to feel connected to your partner. But connection does not have to mean elaborate plans or perfectly curated date nights.

Sometimes, connection looks like moving your body together.

Choosing workouts for expecting and new parents that you can do as a couple is a powerful way to reconnect physically, emotionally, and mentally. Movement becomes shared time, shared effort, and shared support during one of the biggest transitions of your lives.

This Valentine’s Day, consider ditching the pressure and choosing movement as your love language!

Gentle reminder: Always check with your healthcare provider before beginning or continuing exercise during pregnancy or postpartum, and modify as needed based on how your body feels.

Why Partner Connection Matters During Pregnancy and Postpartum

Pregnancy and the postpartum season bring big changes for both parents. Hormones shift. Sleep is disrupted. Roles evolve. It is common for couples to feel slightly out of sync, even when love is strong.

Intentional connection matters more than ever during this stage.

Shared activities help reinforce that you are on the same team. When you move together, you are not just exercising. You are communicating, supporting, and navigating discomfort and progress side by side. That sense of teamwork builds trust and emotional closeness that carries far beyond the workouts itself.

Movement also creates space for conversation without pressure. Walking, stretching, or lifting together often opens the door for connection in a way that sitting across from each other rarely does during busy seasons.

How Exercise Supports Mental Health (Even More When Done Together!)

Exercise has a well documented positive impact on mental health, especially during pregnancy and postpartum. Movement can help reduce stress, improve mood, and support emotional regulation during a time when mental load is often high.

When exercise is shared with someone you love, those benefits are amplified.

Working out together adds emotional safety and encouragement. It helps normalize hard days and celebrate small wins. It can reduce feelings of isolation that are common for new and expecting parents.

If you want a deeper dive into how movement supports emotional well-being during pregnancy, you can explore this topic further in The Connection Between Mental Health and Physical Activity During Pregnancy.

Choosing workouts for expecting and new parents that feel supportive rather than demanding can be a powerful form of self care for both partners.

Why Working Out With a Partner Improves Consistency and Results

One of the biggest barriers to consistent exercise during pregnancy and postpartum is motivation. Energy levels fluctuate. Schedules change, sometimes daily. It is easy for workouts to fall to the bottom of the list.

A partner changes that dynamic.

Working out together increases accountability in a supportive way. You are less likely to skip when someone else is counting on you. Encouragement feels more meaningful when it comes from a partner who understands your season and your limits.

Partner workouts also challenge the idea that pregnancy means you should stop moving or that postpartum recovery has to be all or nothing. If this belief has ever crossed your mind, The Truth About Prenatal Fitness: What’s Actually Safe During Pregnancy is a great resource to help reframe what safe and effective movement really looks like.

Consistency builds confidence, and confidence builds momentum. That momentum is easier to sustain together.

5 Fun Couple Workouts for Expecting and New Parents

These workouts for expecting and new parents are designed to be flexible, low pressure, and adaptable to pregnancy and postpartum life. Focus on connection over intensity and listen to your body.

1. Partner Yoga and Assisted Stretching

A pregnant woman and her partner practicing prenatal yoga and assisted stretching.

Slow, intentional movement can feel especially good during pregnancy and postpartum recovery. Partner assisted stretching allows you to support each other through gentle poses, improve mobility, and focus on breath.

This is an excellent option for winding down in the evening or to start your day with intention and calm.

2. Take a Walk or Hike Together

A happy couple walking together in a park, pushing a stroller with a baby inside. They are surrounded by trees with green leaves and a pathway lined with bricks.

Walking is one of the most underrated forms of exercise. It is accessible, effective, and easy to adapt for pregnancy and postpartum stages.

Add a stroller, carrier, or simply enjoy the quiet together. Walking creates space for conversation and connection while still supporting cardiovascular health.

3. Dance It Out

A happy couple dancing together in a cozy living room, embracing as they prepare for parenthood, with a baby sitting on the floor playing with toys.

Turn on music and move however feels good. This does not need to look like a structured workouts to count!

Dancing releases stress, boosts mood, and brings playfulness into your day. It is a great reminder that movement does not have to be perfect to be beneficial.

4. Partner Strength Circuit

Two exercise mats, one navy blue and one gray, placed on a wooden floor in a cozy living space with a sofa, plants, and dumbbells.

Strength training is incredibly valuable during pregnancy and postpartum when done safely and intentionally.

I have created a fun partner strength circuit designed specifically for new and expecting parents! It includes partner-based movements, encouragement cues, and modifications to support different stages.

You can grab the full printable PDF by entering our email below and make this your Valentine’s workout date at home!

5. Partner Strength Training and Spotting

A male athlete performing a squat with a barbell while his partner provides support and guidance in a gym setting.

If one of you already strength trains, turn it into a shared experience. Take turns lifting while your partner spots, cues form, and provides encouragement.

This style of training builds trust and communication while reinforcing proper technique. Focus on manageable weights, controlled movement, and quality reps rather than pushing beyond limits.

Making Partner Workouts Work With a Newborn

Life with a newborn is unpredictable. That does not mean that movement has to disappear.

Short sessions count. Ten minutes together is still connection! Babies can be nearby, worn, or included. Flexibilty matters more than structure during this stage.

If you are looking for more ideas on how to move together as a family or include older kids, Fun and Engaging Family Activities to Encourage Movement offers inspiration that grows with your kids.

A Valentine’s Reminder for Expecting and New Parents

Valentine’s Day does not need to be extravagant to be meaningful. Sometimes the most powerful way to say, “I love you,” is by showing up, supporting each other, and choosing shared movement in a busy season.

Workouts for expecting and new parents are not about bouncing back or pushing through exhaustion. They are about connection, confidence, and caring for your mental and physical health together.

If you want a simple way to get started, download the Partner Strength Circuit PDF and turn your next workout into a date that strengthens both your body and your bond!

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Postpartum Strength Prenatal Fitness

Pelvic Floor Health for a Strong Pregnancy and Recovery

Pelvic floor health during pregnancy plays a bigger role in how you feel, move, and recover than most people are ever taught. As an ACE Certified Personal Trainer and NASM Women’s Fitness Specialist, I see this gap in education constantly. Many moms only hear about the pelvic floor once something feels “off,” yet these muscles are foundational to strength, confidence, and long term recovery.

Whether you are currently pregnant or navigating postpartum fitness, understanding your pelvic floor can help you move with more ease, feel more supported, and return to exercise with confidence rather than fear.

What Is the Pelvic Floor?

The pelvic floor is a net of muscles that sits at the bottom of your pelvis. Imagine a supportive hammock or trampoline that holds up your internal organs, including the bladder, uterus, and rectum. These muscles are not separate from the rest of your boy. They are an essential part of your core.

Anatomy of the pelvic floor depicted for pregnancy health.
Picture provided by: Foundations Pelvic Health

Your core is often described as a canister or cylinder. The diaphragm is the top, the deep abdominal muscles wrap around the sides, the back muscles provide support, and the pelvic floor is the “floor” of that system. When the pelvic floor is working well, it responds automatically to breathing, movement, and load.

This is why pelvic floor health during pregnancy is about much more than doing Kegels. If you want to explore alternatives, you may enjoy reading 5 Pelvic Floor Exercises That Are Not Kegels, which dives deeper into functional options to strengthen your pelvic floor in a holistic way.

How Pregnancy Changes the Pelvic Floor

During pregnancy, your body adapts in incredible ways. As the uterus grows, it places increasing pressure downward onto the pelvic floor muscles. Over time, these muscles may become stretched and lengthened as they support the weight of your growing baby, amniotic fluid, and placenta.

This stretching is normal. It is not a sign that your body is failing. However, without intentional support, these changes can impact coordination, strength, and recovery later on.

Pelvic floor health during pregnancy is closely connected to posture, breathing patterns, and how to move through daily life. This is one reason core-focused training matters, especially during pregnancy. The Importance of Core Strength During Pregnancy is a great companion read.

Pelvic Floor Health in Postpartum Fitness

After birth, the pelvic floor does not automatically return to its pre-pregnancy function on its own. Muscles may be tender, fatigued, or slow to respond. This is true whether you had a vaginal birth or cesarean delivery.

This is where many moms begin experience leaking, especially during higher impact movements (think: running, jumping, or surprise sneezes).

Postpartum fitness should focus on rebuilding coordination first, then strength. Jumping straight into high impact exercises without restoring this foundation can contribute to leaking, heaviness, or core instability.

There are many myths around bouncing back quickly after birth. Adapting Your Fitness Routine for the Postpartum Phase provides gentle guidance on a safe return to exercise and strength, once cleared by your healthcare team.

Why the Pelvic Floor is the Floor of Your Core

The pelvic floor works in sync with your breath. When you inhale, it gently lengthens. When you exhale, it naturally recoils and lifts. This rhythm supports everyday movements like standing, lifting, and walking.

If the pelvic floor is not coordinating well with breathing and core muscles, symptoms can show up. These may include leaking during exercise, feelings of pressure, or difficulty engaging your core.

Supporting pelvic floor health during pregnancy and postpartum is not about gripping or clenching. It is about learning how to relax, respond, and generate strength when needed.

3 Pregnancy-Safe Pelvic Floor Strengthening Moves

These movements focus on awareness, coordination, and functional strength. Always move within a pain-free range and follow guidance from your healthcare team regarding readiness to exercise.

1. Pelvic Floor Breath (Seated or Side Lying)

Pregnant woman practicing pelvic floor breathing exercises on a yoga mat at home with natural light and a potted plant in the background.

This is a gentle awareness focused exercise that teaches the pelvic floor to move with your breath.

Sit comfortably or lie on your side. Inhale slowly through your nose, allowing your ribs and belly to expand. Imagine the pelvic floor softly lowering. As you exhale, feel a gentle lift through the pelvic floor and deep core, like drawing a blueberry upward.

This is not a hard squeeze. Subtle engagement is enough.

2. Quadruped Core and Pelvic Floor Connection

Pregnant woman practicing pelvic floor engagement on a blue mat indoors, kneeling with hands on the floor.

This move integrates gentle activation with movement.

Start on hands and knees with a neutral spine. Inhale to prepare. As you exhale, lightly engage your pelvic floor and deep abs while maintaining spinal alignment. Hold for a few breaths, then relax.

This position reduces pressure and helps build coordination that carries over into daily life.

3. Supported Squat with Breath Coordination

This exercise focuses on strength and coordination and can support labor preparation.

A pregnant woman performing squats using a stability ball and a chair in a well-lit room.

Hold onto a stable surface or use a box or chair for support. Inhale as you slowly lower into the squat, allowing the pelvic floor to lengthen. Exhale as you stand, gently lifting through the pelvic floor and core.

This mirrors how your body manages pressure during functional movement and birth. For more labor supportive exercises, explore Preparing for Labor: Exercises That May Help.

When to Seek Additional Support

If you experience persistent leaking, pelvic pain, heaviness, or discomfort during exercise, it may be helpful to work with a pelvic floor physical therapist. Seeking support is proactive, not a sign of weakness.

Always defer to your healthcare provider for clearance before starting or progressing exercise during pregnancy and postpartum. Your body’s needs are individual, and honoring that is part of strong recovery.

Continue Supporting Your Pelvic Floor

If you want structured, guided support beyond individual exercises, my programs are designed to meet you exactly where you are.

Bump-to-Baby supports you through pregnancy and into postpartum with intentional core and pelvic floor focused training.

Core and Restore: No Leak Physique is ideal for postpartum moms who want to rebuild strength, improve coordination, and feel confident returning to workouts without fear of leaking.

I created both programs to prioritize pelvic floor health during pregnancy and recovery, without extremes or pressure to rush. During my postpartum period, I experienced Pelvic Floor Dysfunction (PFD), and used my experience and science-backed pelvic floor strengthening to design an exercise program that helps you rebuild a stronger, healthier pelvic floor and core to support a busy life without leaks!

Final Encouragement

Your pelvic floor is not fragile. It is adaptable, responsive, and capable of supporting you through pregnancy, birth, and motherhood when trained with intention.

Strong recovery starts with understanding your body and giving it what it needs, one breath and one movement at a time. You’ve got this, mama!

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Prenatal Fitness

Why Pregnancy Is Exhausting and How to Feel Better

If you’re pregnant and constantly tired, even on days when you “didn’t do much,” you are not alone. Many expecting moms are searching for ways to boost energy during pregnancy, only to feel frustrated when typical advice like “get more sleep” doesn’t seem to touch the depth of their exhaustion. Here’s the truth that often gets overlooked: pregnancy is one of the most physically demanding experiences the human body can go through, and feeling tired is not a failure. It’s feedback.

This post is here to help you understand why pregnancy feels so exhausting and, more importantly, how to support your energy naturally in a way that works with your body rather than against it.

Pregnancy is Physically Demanding in Ways We Don’t Talk About Enough

Let’s start with the part most people don’t tell you.

Infographic comparing the energy demands of pregnancy to running a marathon, highlighting the increased basal metabolic rate and the physiological changes involved.

During pregnancy, your body operates at roughly 2.2 times your basal metabolic rate (BMR) for about 280 days. For context, the upper limit of sustainable human energy expenditure is about 2.5x BMR. Running a marathon also sits around 2.2x BMR.

That means pregnancy is comparable to running a marathonevery single day…for months.

Your body is building a whole human, creating a new organ, increasing blood volume, shifting hormones, supporting fetal growth, preparing for birth and delivery…and recovery! Of course you’re tired!

This level of sustained physical output is incredibly demanding, and acknowledging that reality is often the first step toward feeling better. You don’t need to push harder, you need support and grace.

Listen to Your Body First: Rest is Not Giving Up

One of the most powerful ways to boost energy during pregnancy is also the simplest and the hardest to accept: rest when your body asks for it.

There’s a difference between discomfort and depletion. Pregnancy fatigue is often your body signaling that it needs recovery, not motivation. Ignoring that signal can lead to deeper exhaustion, increased stress, and slower recovery over time.

This might look like:

  • Going to bed earlier
  • Taking breaks during the day
  • Ajusting workout intensity
  • Letting go of unrealistic productivity expectations

If fatigue feels sudden, extreme, or unlike anything you’ve experienced before, it’s always wise to check in with your healthcare provider. But for many moms, ongoing tiredness is a normal physiological response to pregnancy itself.

NSDR: Deep Rest Without Needing to Sleep

Sleep isn;t always accessible during pregnancy. Between discomfort, frequent bathroom trips, and busy schedules, naps are not guaranteed. That’s where NSDR (non sleep deep rest) can be incredibly helpful.

NSDR allows your nervous system to downshift into a restorative state without actually falling asleep. It helps reduce stress hormones and can noticeably improve energy levels.

Simple ways to practice NSDR:

  • Lying down with your eyes closed and focusing on slow breathing
  • Guideed body scnas
  • Listening to an NSDR or yoga nidra style audio for 10- 20 minutes

Think of this as giving your body a reset, even when sleep isn’t an option.

Meditation and Breathing That Supports Energy

Energy isn’t just physical. It’s also neurological.

When your nervous system is constantly in a heightened state, your body burns through energy faster. Gentle meditation and breathing practices help regulate that system so energy can be used more efficiently.

Try starting with:

  • Slow nasal breathing
  • Longer exhales than inhales
  • Short, consistent sessions rather than long practices

Even a few minutes can create noticeable shifts, especially when practiced regularly.

Exercise That Boosts Energy Versus Drains It

Movement can be one of the best ways to boost energy during pregnancy, but only when it’s done intentionally.

Movement that often supports energy:
  • Walking
  • Prenatal strength training
  • Low to moderate intensity workouts
  • Short, consistent sessions that leave you feeling capable afterward
Movement that often drains energy:
  • High intensity workouts without enough recovery
  • Long duration cardio sessions
  • Pushing through fatigue
  • Trying to match pre-pregnancy performance

A helpful rule of thumb is to finish movement feeling like you could do a little more. Pregnancy is not the season to empty the tank.

This is where structured prenatal training can make a huge difference! If you’re looking for guidance for your prenatal fitness journey, I would love to help! I am an ACE Certified Personal Trainer and NASM Women’s Fitness Specialist with an emphasis on pre-/post-natal education, and I offer in-person training, online virtual coaching, and program design to ensure your fitness needs are met in a supportive and compassionate way. Contact me for a free consultation or browse my ready-to-go prenatal programs today!

Nutrition That Supports Sustained Energy

Eating a well-balanced diet is a great way to help boost energy during pregnancy

Food is fuel, but not all fuel works the same.

To support stable energy levels during pregnancy, focus on:

  • Protein at every meal to support tissue growth and blood sugar balance
  • Healthy fats for sustained energy and hormone support
  • Consistent meals and snacks to avoid big energy crashes
  • Hydration throughout the day

Rather than chasing quick fixes, aim for nourishment that keeps your energy steady.

It’s also important to ensure you are eating enough. The old adage of “eating for two” isn’t quite right, but you do need to increase your caloric intake during pregnancy to support the high physiological demands on your body in pregnancy!

Pregnancy calls for an additional 250-350 calories, on top of your body’s maintenance calorie budget (not the amount of calories you eat when trying to lose weight!). Unsure what that looks like? Check out our FREE calorie calculator to get a tailored maintenance calorie, adjusted for pregnancy or breastfeeding!

Energy Is Holistic, Not a Single Fix

There’s no one trick to feeling energized during pregnancy. Supporting energy comes from layering habits that respect your body’s workload.

That includes:

  • Rest and recovery
  • Nervous system regulation
  • Intentional movement
  • Adequate nutrition
  • Compassion for the season you’re in

When these pieces work together, energy becomes more sustainable and less forced.

How This Shows Up in the Bump to Baby Program

Pregnant woman exercising with dumbbells while sitting on a stability ball in a bright room.

Bump-to-Baby Full Prenatal and Postpartum Exercise Program

This philosophy is exactly why the Bump to Baby Program exists.

It’s designed to support pregnant moms through strength training, recovery, and movement that honors the reality of pregnancy. Instead of pushing harder, the program focuses on building resilience, preserving energy, and preparing your body for birth and postpartum recovery without burnout.

If you’re looking for guidance that adapts to your energy levels and changes with you through pregnancy, this program was built with you in mind.

You’re Not Lazy. You’re Pregnant!

If there’s one message to take with you, let it be this: feeling exhausted does not mean you’re doing something wrong.

Your body is performing an extraordinary amount of work every single day. When you support it instead of fighting it, energy becomes something you protect and rebuild, not something you constantly chase.

And that shift alone can make pregnancy feel a little lighter.

Additional Resources for Pregnancy Energy Support

If you’re navigating pregnancy fatigue and want more support, these resources may help you go deeper:

On The Fitness Cult
Trusted External Resource

Gentle reminder: while education is empowering, always consult your healthcare provider if fatigue feels extreme, sudden, or concerning.

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Prenatal Fitness

The Truth About Prenatal Fitness: What’s Actually Safe During Pregnancy

Pregnancy is one of the most incredibly demanding seasons a body will ever move through. And despite that, it is also one of the seasons where people receive the most confusing, outdated, and flat out incorrect advice about exercise. If you have ever been told to “take it easy,” “avoid lifting,” or “stay off your feet,” you are far from alone.

Today we are cutting through the noise and getting to the truth about prenatal fitness so you can feel confident, capable, and supported every step of the way.

Before we get into the research and the myth-busting, here is a little insight into my own experience. I am a fitness trainer and a certified pre- and postnatal specialist, so I was fortunate to be walking into pregnancy with confidence and a solid understanding of what is safe and beneficial. What I didn’t expect was just how hard the first trimester would hit me. Morning sickness, endless nausea, vomiting, and a deep, bone level fatigue made any kind of movement feel nearly impossible some days. On many days, in fact, my “workout” was a slow walk around the block with several stops to fight waves of nausea.

But something surprised me. On the days I managed to get outside for even a short 20-minute stroller, my mood, nausea, and energy shifted dramatically. The movement I did manage wasn’t glamorous, but it mattered. And that truth became an anchor throughout my pregnancy.

Once I reached my second trimester and the fog lifted, I was able to return to most of my pre-pregnancy exercise routine, with some thoughtful modifications, of course. I swapped out running for lower-impact options like walking or light jogging, adjusted core and balance work, and lifted a bit lighter since simply existing felt more demanding. But I moved, and I felt better for it. And even when people told me I shouldn’t lift or should stay off my feet, I continued to move with confidence because I knew the science said otherwise.

That experience is exactly why this post matters. You deserve clarity, not fear-based advice. You deserve peace of mind that you can feel strong and capable throughout your entire pregnancy. So let’s dive in!

What ACOG Recommends About Exercise in Pregnancy

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) is clear: exercise during pregnancy is not only safe for most people, it is recommended. Regular movement is linked to full-term pregnancies and healthier outcomes for both mom and baby.

Research shows that babies born of active pregnancies often have higher lean mass, higher cognitive scores, higher APGAR scores, and lower birth complications rates. Your activity during pregnancy truly supports your baby’s long-term development!

If you want support choosing safe movements for each stage, explore these resources:

Myth One: Pregnant People Shouldn’t Do Strenuous Activity

This is one of the oldest myths in the book. The truth is that pregnancy already places your body in a highly active metabolic state. For roughly 280 days, you are naturally operating at about 2.2 times your resting metabolic rate. For comparison, human capacity is thought to be around 2.5 times your metabolic rate, and running a marathon sits around 2 to 2.3 times your metabolic rate. In other words, you are working harder just by being pregnant.

So what does this mean for exercise?

It means your body is built to move, and movement is safe and beneficial when done with awareness. What pregnancy does not require is pushing for new PRs or ignoring your body’s signals. Instead, let your body set the pace. Think progressive, not punishing. Think purposeful, not maximal.

Exercise during pregnancy helps:

  • Manage chronic pain
  • Prepare your body for labor and delivery
  • Support a smoother postpartum healing process
  • Stabilize your mood and manage stress

During my own pregnancy, I lowered my intensity a bit and swapped higher impact workouts for options that felt more revitalizing. I still enjoyed my workouts and genuinely felt better both mentally and physically for doing them! When I added prenatal yoga and daily stretching my back pain improved dramatically, which made daily life more comfortable and helped me to get better sleep.

For guidance on staying injury-free and preparing your body for birth, see:

Myth Two: Pregnant People Should Avoid Core Workouts

This misconception often comes from a place of fear, but it misses the bigger picture. Your core is responsible for supporting your body through pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum healing. Avoiding core work entirely can actually leave you more vulnerable to discomfort, instability, and delayed recovery.

Safe core training is absolutely appropriate and includes:

  • Deep core activation
  • Pelvic floor strengthening
  • Stabilizing movements
  • Standing core variations
  • Modified exercises that do not provoke symptoms

During my pregnancy, I replied heavily on standing core exercises, banded rotations, bird dogs, and glute bridges. These movements helped me feel strong, supported, and stable, as well as avoiding the “pregnancy waddle” until about 37 weeks!

For more on this topic, check out:

The Benefits of Staying Active for Mama

Movement during pregnancy offers incredible advantages, including:

  • Shorter and less painful labor
  • Improved chronic pain management
  • Lower risk of gestational diabetes and hypertension
  • Better emotional resilience and improved mood
  • A stronger immune system that benefits baby, too
  • Lower risk of labor and delivery complications

On a personal note, I felt the impact of staying active immediately after giving birth. Within days I was taking short walks and doing gentle stretches. Within a couple weeks I was activating my core in postpartum safe ways, At my six-week checkup, I was cleared for all exercise, including running and lifting heavy. I attribute that recovery entirely to the consistency I maintained during pregnancy.

If you want help structuring safe, supportive prenatal workouts, visit my programs page. I’ve designed a complete Bump-to-Baby workout program that will guide you through each trimester and the postpartum period so that you can move confidently and with the peace of mind that you are doing the best for you and your baby!

The Benefits of Staying Active for Baby

An active pregnancy doesn’t just support you. It supports your baby’s lifelong health too! Research shows that babies born to active moms tend to be:

  • Leaner and metabolically healthier
  • Developmentally advanced in cognitive and motor skills
  • Less likely to experience birth complications
  • Better supported in long term health and development

Your activity during pregnancy truly becomes the first gift you give your baby!

A Final Word of Encouragement

Every pregnancy is different. and your version of movement will be unique too. Some days you may feel strong and energized, other days a slow walk may be all you can manage (been there, mama!). Both are valid, and both count!

If you are newly pregnant and feeling intimidated or unsure about what is safe, here is my heartfelt advice: Trust your body. You know what feels right for you. Exercise is safe and incredibly beneficial for both you and your baby. It sets the foundation for lifelong health. And if you want guidance, structure, and reassurance, invest in a prenatal program that takes the guesswork out of everything. Your peace of mind is worth it, and so your health and your baby’s health!

I am here to support you every step of the way, mama!

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Prenatal Fitness

How to Exercise Safely in the Third Trimester

When I think back to my own third trimester, I remember feeling giant, round and stretched to my absolute max. Everything made me winded…and I mean everything; even talking too quickly or for too long had me pausing for a deep breath! I bounced between feeling starving and dealing with heartburn that made me want to swear off entire meals. When I had first found out I was pregnant and realized my due date fell in the last week of November, I wished so deeply for my baby to hang in there until December. I have a December birthday and the idea of sharing a birthday month with my mini felt magical! By about 36 weeks, though, that dream faded SO FAST y’all! I was openly rooting for a timely delivery so pregnancy could reach its grand finale.

So if you are in your third trimester right now and feeling maybe a little uncomfortable, a little breathless, a little stretched, and more than a little ready to meet your baby, you are not alone! As an ACE Certified Personal Trainer and NASM Women’s Fitness Specialist with a focus in pre- and postnatal fitness, I want to encourage you with this: you can still move your body safely, confidently, and comfortably during these final weeks. In fact, many mamas-to-be (including myself!) who stay active throughout their entire pregnancy enjoy less pregnancy-related pains and reduced discomfort, as well as fewer complications during labor and delivery.

This chapter of pregnancy is not about chasing PRs or proving anything; it’s about maintaining your health, supporting your growing body, and preparing for labor in a way that helps you feel empowered and steady. Let’s walk through how to do that with care.

Why Exercise Looks a Little Different in the Third Trimester

Your center of gravity has shifted, your joints have more laxity, and your body is working hard around the clock. Movement that once felt simple might feel wobbly or tiring, which is totally normal at this stage. The goal now is comfort, strength for labor, and mindful maintenance rather than intensity or perfection.

If you want deeper guidance on adapting your fitness routine throughout pregnancy, you may also enjoy reading my prior posts Safe Exercises for Each Trimester of Pregnancy or How to Choose the Right Prenatal Exercise.

Activities to Avoid for Safety

Avoid Anything That Challenges Your Balance

Your bump has changed your alignment and stability, which makes balance-based activities riskier than before. Stay away from movements that place you high off the ground or require single-leg stability in a way that feels unsure. Prioritize grounded, supported, stable positions instead.

For more ideas on safe prenatal movement, check out The Best Sports and Activities for Pregnant Women.

Avoid Supine Exercises

Lying flat on your back in the third trimester can reduce blood flow and make you feel dizzy or uncomfortable. You can swap those exercises for positions that are elevated, side-lying, seated, or on hands and knees. You can still get the benefit of the movement without the unnecessary strain.

What to Focus on Instead

Labor and Delivery Preparation

At this stage, your movement routine can be intentional and powerful even when gentle. Think about strengthening the muscles that support labor, including your hips, legs, back, and upper body. Incorporate deep core work that teaches you how to connect your breath, release tension, and maintain stability as your belly grows.

Breathing practice becomes incredibly valuable here. Slow diaphragmatic breathing can help during contractions, assist with pushing, and carry over into the postpartum recovery process.

For more targeted ideas, see Preparing for Labor: Exercises that May Help!

Light Cardio to Maintain Endurance

This is a wonderful time for brisk walking or easy, low-impact cardio. Keeping your cardiovascular system active helps build stamina for labor without taxing your joints. Walking in particular is one of the best daily activities available in the third trimester, and you can learn more in Incorporating Walking into Your Daily Routine While Pregnant.

Pelvic Floor Connection

Your pelvic floor is working harder now than ever. Gentle pelvic floor work helps you prepare for both the pushing phase of labor and the recovery period after birth. This work includes learning how to relax the pelvic floor as well as how to lightly activate it in coordination with your breath.

Listen to Your Body and Rest More Often

Pregnancy is not the time to push through discomfort. If something feels wrong, stop. If you feel lightheaded, overheated, crampy, or simply exhausted, stop and rest. Fatigue often shows up more frequently in the third trimester, and honoring your body’s signals is one of the healthiest choices you can make.

Quick Third Trimester Reminders

  • This is not the time for max effort workouts
  • Stay hydrated
  • Move with intentionality
  • Take breaks as needed
  • Prioritize comfort and safety
  • Focus on maintenance and labor prep rather than performance

Program Highlight: The Bump-to-Baby Program

If you want guided, trimester-specific workouts, breathing instruction, pelvic floor integration, and weekly movement plans that grow with you, my Bump-to-Baby Program was created for exactly this season! This program takes the guesswork out of prenatal fitness and supports your from early bump to postpartum. It is structured, safe, clear, and designed to help you feel capable, steady, and confident as your body changes.

This is one of my most supportive offerings and truly a labor of love for expecting mamas who want reliable guidance from a certified prenatal specialist!

Check it out here and get yours today!

Book a Free Consultation

If you would love personalized guidance or simply want help tailoring a routine to your current energy level and comfort, schedule a free consultation with me. I would be honored to support you in this chapter!

Disclaimer

Always consult with your physician or healthcare provider before beginning any new exercise program during pregnancy.

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Postpartum Strength Prenatal Fitness

How to Fit Fitness into a Busy Mom Schedule

TL;DR: Fitness doesn’t require an hour! As a busy mom, focus on functional fitness (training for real life) and maximizing NEAT (activity within daily tasks) to get stronger. Create a quick home gym space and use our specialized programs to fit movement into the chaos seamlessly.


Look, I’ll be honest with you; on any given day in this motherhood chapter, I can manage to nail about two of these

  • My daughter has her hair done cutely (and a matching outfit/bow combo, wow!)
  • I’m showered and put together

OR

  • We’re on time.

but you’re not getting all three! Trying to squeeze in a 60-minute workout on top of that feels like asking for a unicorn to deliver your latte. It’s *nearly* impossible. 🦄

I get it, and I know the struggle is real. Whether you’re navigating the constant demands of a newborn, chasing a newly mobile toddler, or – bless your heart! – doing both, the idea of “getting back into shape” often feels like just another item on a mile-long to-do list.

But here’s the good news! As your resident certified fitness coach and fellow mom-in-the-trenches, I’m here to tell you that fitness doesn’t have to be a big block of time. We are ditching the “punishment” mindset and shifting the goal from “aesthetic” to functional movement and integrating strength into your actual life.

Ready to find your fitness flow in the chaos? Let’s dive in!

Need a structured plan that understands your life? This is the core philosophy behind my specialized programs. If you’re currently expecting or deep in the “fourth trimester,” check out my Bump-to-Baby and Postpartum strength programs; structured, doable workouts designed for your current chapter!

The Functional Fitness Mindset: Train for Motherhood, Not the Magazine

Forget hours on the treadmill. When we talk about fitness for moms, we are talking about functional fitness; training your body for longevity and the real, daily demands of your life.

Why Functional Training Wins for Busy Moms:
  • You’re an Olympic Lifter (of Children): Functional training strengthens the muscles you actually use to lift a 30-pound child out of a crib, haul a car seat, and carry ten grocery bags up the stairs.
  • Injury Prevention: Motherhood is a marathon of repetitive movements (pick up, rock, put back down x 100). We need core stability, glute strength, and good posture to minimize back pain from constant bending and carrying.
  • Efficiency: Functional movements (like squats, lunges, and rows) use multiple muscle groups at once, giving you the biggest bang for your buck in a short amount of time.

Ditch the hour-long session and grab 10-15 minutes for a quick circuit focusing on key functional movements. Seriously, a quick set of squats while waiting for your coffee to brew is a major win!

NEAT: The Busy Mom’s Secret Weapon

Meet your new best friend: NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis).

Simply put, NEAT is the energy we expend for everything that’s not sleeping, eating, or dedicated exercise. For a busy mom, this is where we bank most of our movement! We don’t need to find extra time for movement; we need to optimize the movement we are already doing.

How to NEAT-ify Your Day:
  • Parking Farther Away: That extra 30-second walk into the grocery store? NEAT win! Every step counts towards raising your overall energy expenditure.
  • Embrace the Velcro Baby: Carry the baby instead of using the stroller sometimes (check with your doctor first!). That squishy 15-pound love-muffin is your built-in kettlebell.
  • Stair Challenge: Always take the stairs when you have the option.
  • Physical Play: Get down on the floor and play chase, do “airplane rides,” or maneuver through homemade tunnels and obstacle courses. It’s a full-body workout disguised as fun and bonding time!

Create a Sanctuary for Quick Wins: Your Home Gym

The #1 barrier to exercise? Getting out the door. The easiest fix? Eliminate the barrier entirely!

You do not need a fancy, mirrored room. You just need 8 square feet and a few key tools to build your workout sanctuary right where you are. This space allows you to sneak in 5-15 minutes whenever your kid is distracted by a snack, a nap, or Bluey!

The Home Gym Essentials:
  • A quality yoga mat
  • One set of dumbbells (or use what you have at home; water jugs, encyclopedias…kids!)
  • Resistance bands

Keep your essentials visible and accessible. When the stars align and you get a tiny pocket of time, you don’t want to waste it digging for your gear.

For all the budget-conscious mamas out there, I’ve got you covered with a complete guide! Learn what you really need and how to build an Instagram-worthy workout space for under $500: Fitness Gear and Equipment for Moms: What You Really Need | Build Your Home Gym for Under $500: The Busy Mom’s Guide to Working Out at Home

The Takeaway: Done is Better Than Perfect

Motherhood is an amazing journey, but it is physically demanding. You deserve to feel strong, energized, and capable! Shifting your focus to functional fitness and maximizing NEAT means you are finally training for the life you actually live.

Remember: A 10-minute workout beats a zero-minute workout. Every. Single. Time.

Or, as I like to say, a lil bit of anything is still more than a whole lotta nothin!

Ready to get started with workouts that truly fit into the life of a busy mama?

We’ve already done the heavy lifting on programming. Check out our specialized PDF program packets for workouts that fit this philosophy perfectly!

Don’t miss out on future tips for fitness, nutrition, and not losing your mind as a mom! Subscribe to the fitness cult newsletter to be new besties! 🫶

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Prenatal Fitness

Safe Outdoor Workouts During Pregnancy: What You Need to Know

There’s something refreshing about stepping outside for a workout. Fresh air, sunlight, and a change of scenery can make exercise feel less like a chore and more like a mood boost. But when you’re pregnant, it’s natural to wonder if outdoor workouts are still safe for you and your growing baby! The good news is that you can absolutely enjoy the benefits of being outside as long as you listen to your body and follow a few key guidelines.

Benefits of Outdoor Workouts During Pregnancy

Spending time outside while you move your body offers more than just physical benefits.

  • Vitamin D and fresh air can give you an energy lift and help regulate mood.
  • Gentle cardio like walking, swimming, or biking can improve circulation and reduce swelling in your hands, ankles, and feet.
  • Mental health support comes naturally when you connect with nature, easing stress and improving sleep.

A wonderful way to enhance outdoor walks is to turn them into mindful movement. Paying attention to your breath and your surroundings can help you feel calmer and more grounded. For more on mindful walking, see my post on Mindfulness and Meditation Techniques for Expecting Moms.

Safety Considerations for Outdoor Workouts

Safety is about being proactive. With a few adjustments, you can enjoy outdoor workouts in every season.

  • Stay well hydrated and carry water with you.
  • Dress in layers so you can adapt to changing conditions.
  • Aim for early morning or evening activity when the sun is less intense.
  • Choose safe, even surfaces and avoid slippery or unstable terrain.
Heat Precautions
  • Shorten workouts in high temperatures and seek shaded routes.
  • Wear light, breathable fabrics that wick away sweat.
  • Always bring water and sip often.

Warning signs of heat exhaustion or heat stroke: dizziness, nausea, pounding headache, excessive sweating that suddenly stops, rapid heartbeat, or confusion. If any of these occur, stop immediately, move to a cooler place, and slowly rehydrate.

Cold Weather Precautions
  • Layer clothing to trap warmth but avoid overheating (thermal base, wind or water resistant top layer).
  • Wear shoes with good traction to prevent slips.
  • Warm up thoroughly before heading out.

Risk of hypothermia: sweat can cool rapidly in the cold, increasing the chance of hypothermia. Watch for shivering, numbness. unusual fatigue, or slurred speech. If you notice these, stop and warm up indoors right away.

Best Outdoor Exercise Options by Trimester

Each trimester brings different energy levels and comfort needs. Outdoor exercise can adapt right alongside your body.

  • First trimester: walking, light hiking, or gentle yoga in the park.
  • Second trimester: swimming, cautious cycling, or modified strength circuits in a safe outdoor space.
  • Third trimester: stroller walks, water aerobics, or resistance bands outside.

Joining a mom group can add accountability and encouragement no matter your trimester. Moving with others is often more enjoyable and helps keep you consistent.

Gear and Accessories to Support You

A few supportive items can make a big difference in comfort and safety outdoors:

  • A supportive maternity belt to ease pelvic or back discomfort.
  • Quality shoes with good cushioning and support.
    • I loved these no-hands-needed slip-ons as getting on the floor and tying my shoes got progressively more difficult with a growing belly!
  • Sun hat, sunscreen, and hydration pack or water bottle to stay protected and hydrated.
  • A supportive sports bra designed for pregnancy.
  • Comfortable maternity leggings that stretch with you.
  • Kinesiology tape for added belly support.

We’ll be linking recommended products through Amazon so you can shop trusted options easily! Shop the full list here.

When to Modify or Stop

Always tune into your body. Outdoor exercise should leave you feeling refreshed, not depleted. Pause or stop if you notice:

  • Dizziness or feeling faint
  • Unusual shortness of breath
  • Vaginal bleeding
  • Contractions or cramping
  • Sudden pain that feels different from normal stretching

Pregnancy is not the time to chase personal records. Instead, think of outdoor workouts as tools for energy, balance, and overall well-being.

Encouragement and Practical Tips

Exercise is not only about the physical side. It can be a source of joy and connection during pregnancy.

  • Balance is key: If you leave your outdoor session feeling lighter, calmer, and energized, you’re on the right track.
  • Make it social: Invite friends or join a Mom group to stay consistent and supported.
  • Coffee Run opportunity: For local moms, consider joining Coffee Run, our stroller-friendly walking group that pairs exercise with community and connection.
  • Move with your kids: For ideas on how to include little ones, check out our post Family-Friendly Workouts: Staying Active with Your Kids.

Safe outdoor workouts can be an amazing way to stay active, connected, and strong during pregnancy. With the right precautions, you can enjoy nature while keeping yourself and your baby safe!

If you’d like tailored guidance, explore our prenatal training programs here or contact us for a free consultation for customized training or programming. And for added comfort, check out our curated list of recommended Amazon gear to support your outdoor workouts.

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Postpartum Strength Prenatal Fitness

Fun and Engaging Family Activities to Encourage Movement

Balancing pregnancy or motherhood while chasing after little ones with endless energy can feel like a workout in itself! Add in the desire to stay active and carve out family time, and it might seem like too much to juggle. The good news is that movement does not have to be rigid or separate from family life. It can be joyful, stress-relieving, and something your kids actually look forward to. When you approach activity with playfulness, it becomes both a bonding experience and a healthy routine.

These activities are not about perfection or strict form. They are about connection, health, and fun, which is often exactly what growing families need most!

Everyday Play that Gets Everyone Moving

Some of the best movement opportunities happen in your living room or backyard:

  • Turn up the music for a dance party that doubles as cardio and laughter! For moms-to-be, dancing is an easy way to keep things low impact while still breaking a light sweat.
  • Create an indoor scavenger hunt with clues that lead kids from one room to another (or up and down the stairs!).
  • Build a backyard obstacle course with cones, hula hoops, or even couch cushions. Let your kids take turns being the leader while everyone else follows their directions.
  • Add in a classic round of Simon Says with movement-focused prompts like jumping jacks, balancing on one foot, or crawling under a table.

Did you know? Even just ten minutes of moderate activity can improve circulation, boost mood, and help kids burn off restless energy.

If you are looking for more ideas that bring fitness and play together, check out my post Family-Friendly Workouts: Staying Active with Your Kids. It pairs perfectly with the activities here!

Outdoor Adventures for the Whole Family

Fresh air is a game-changer, especially when kids are bouncing off the walls indoors. Outdoor adventures give everyone the chance to move more freely and soak up some sunshine.

  • Go for a family walk, stroller jog, or bike ride after dinner.
  • Explore local trails and make it fun by turning your kids into “explorers” who spot different leaves, bugs, or rocks along the way.
  • Bring back playground classics like tag, frisbee, or relay races.
  • Use the jungle gym for climbing, hanging, or swinging challenges that help kids build strength while parents sneak in some upper-body activity.

Fitness benefits: Outdoor play boosts cardiovascular endurance for adults, builds gross motor skills for kids, and reduces stress for the whole family.

Chores that Double as Fitness

Household tasks may not sound exciting, but with a little creativity, they can become both playful and productive.

  • Turn toy clean-up into a race or laundry basket relay.
  • Head outside to garden together. Digging, squatting, and carrying smalls bags of soil all build strength and mobility.
  • Try pairing chores with bodyweight movements. For example, add a few squats while vacuuming or a set of lunges while sweeping.

Did you know? Pregnant moms who stay moderately active often report less lower back pain and enjoy better sleep quality. Turning chores into movement is a smart and realistic way to keep active during pregnancy.

Seasonal and Holiday-Themed Movement

Switching things up with the seasons keeps activity fun and helps create lasting traditions.

  • In summer, set up a water balloon toss or chalk hopscotch trail.
  • In fall, roll pumpkins across the yard or rake leaves into giant piles for jumping.
  • In winter, go sledding, build a snow fort, or bring things indoors with cozy family yoga sessions.
  • In spring, try an egg hunt, go on nature walks, or plant flowers together.

Fitness benefits: Seasonal activities add variety and make movement something families look forward to together.

Simple Tools and Tech to Make Movement Fun

You don’t need an entire gym to get moving with your family! A few simple tools can add excitement.

  • Props like hula hoops, jump ropes, yoga mats, or large climbing blocks spark creative play and physical activity.
  • Try a family step challenge with pedometers or smart watches to see who can reach their goal first.
  • Use YouTube family-friendly workouts or kid-focused fitness apps for guided fun at home.

Did you know? Simple props like resistance bands or hula hoops

Encouragement and Inclusivity For All Stages

Movement looks different at every stage of life, and that’s a good thing!

  • Celebrate effort over competition. Applaud participation and creativity rather than speed or skill.
  • Modify activities to match energy levels and safety needs, especially during pregnancy or early postpartum recovery.
  • Keep the focus on joy and connection. Kids will learn from your example that exercise is something to enjoy, not something to dread!

Final Thoughts

Movement does not need to be something separate from family life. With a little creativity, it can be woven into everyday routines in ways that strengthen bodies and bonds!

If you are ready to bring more fun into your family’s fitness routine, explore the fitness cult’s resources for safe, family-friendly workouts and programs designed with moms in mind:

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Recovery & Wellness

The Importance of Getting Enough Sleep to Support Fitness Goals

Late nights, early mornings, and a never-ending to-do list…sound familiar? For moms especially, sleep often feels like a luxury reserved for another season of life. Between kids waking in the night (I tended to my daughter after her bedtime twice while writing this!), work, and household responsibilities, sleep is usually the first thing to be sacrificed. The problem is that while workouts and nutrition get most of the spotlight when it comes to fitness, sleep is the hidden factor that can make or break your progress.

Today, we’ll explore why sleep is essential for fitness success and cover recovery, metabolism, performance, and the role of stress hormones.

Why Sleep is a Cornerstone of Fitness

Think of sleep as the body’s reset button. During those precious hours, your body repairs, recharges, and resets your endocrine system. When sleep is consistently cut short, your motivation dips, workouts feel harder, and the energy you need to stay consistent is nowhere to be found.

Chronic sleep deficit also disrupts the delicate balance of your hormones, including those that regulate hunger, stress, and muscle repair. This disruption creates a cascade of challenges for anyone working toward strength, fat loss, or overall wellness.

See my post of Coping with Pregnancy Fatigue if this resonates with you!

Recovery and Muscle Repair Happen During Sleep

It’s in deep sleep that your body gets busy repairing muscles, synthesizing proteins, and growing stronger. If you’re skipping (or missing) rest, you’re shortchanging the very gains you’re working for! Instead of bouncing back after workouts, you’re left dragging, sore, and hitting plateaus.

The right recovery tools can help too. A good foam roller or yoga mat (like the ones I’ve highlighted in my post on fitness gear and equipment for moms) can enhance recovery; but nothing substitutes a good night’s sleep.

I design training programs that intentionally build in recovery, and I also offer dedicated recovery services. If you’ve been feeling stuck, let’s talk about how to optimize both your workouts and your rest!

Sleep, Metabolism, and Weight Management

If you’ve ever stayed up too late only to find yourself craving sugar or salty snacks the next day, you’ve experienced sleep deprivation’s effect on metabolism. Poor sleep throws off ghrelin (the hormone that increases hunger) and leptin (the hormone that signals fullness). The result? You feel hungrier, crave more processed foods, and have a harder time sticking to your nutrition goals.

For moms working on postpartum weight loss, sleep can feel impossible to prioritize, but it directly affects your body’s ability to shed fat and maintain energy. Even a little extra sleep can make your nutrition efforts far more effective. So let your village step up and get your naps in when you can!

The Cortisol Connection

One of the biggest culprits in stalled progress is elevated cortisol, the body’s main stress hormones. Research shows that inadequate sleep increases cortisol levels (especially chronically inadequate sleep).

Why does this matter? Cortisol not only promotes fat storage, especially around the midsection, but it also interferes with protein synthesis; the very process that builds and repairs muscle. Too much cortisol for too long can actually break down muscle tissue.

In other words; you can be hitting the gym consistently and eating well, but if your sleep is poor, elevated cortisol will make everything feel like an uphill battle. Think of those mornings after only five hours of sleep: your workout feels harder, your patience is thinner, and your body is working against itself instead of in harmony with you.

Performance, Focus, and Injury Prevention

Lack of sleep doesn’t just impact your waistline, it also affects your performance! Sleep-deprived bodies react slower, have poorer coordination, and fatigue more easily. This means heavier weights feel impossible, runs feels sluggish, and workouts leave you drained instead of energized.

There’s also the increased risk of injury. When your focus is compromised, it’s easier to misstep, lift with poor form, or overestimate your capacity. Sleep sharpens your mind and body so you can trainer harder and safer.

Sleep Facts Every Mom Should Know

Here are a few science-backed truths to keep in your back pocket:

  • Women often need more sleep than men. Research shows women’s brains engage in more multitasking and complex activity during the day, which leads to greater recovery needs at night.
  • Sleep needs fluctuate with hormones. During menstruation, postpartum recovery, or any period of physical healing, the body may need up to an extra hour of sleep per night.
  • Seven to nine hours is the general recommendation, but moms in demanding seasons of life should aim for the higher end whenever possible.

Knowing these facts can help you give yourself grace. Wanting more sleep isn’t weakness, it’s biology!

How to Get Better Sleep (Even as a Busy Mom)

You may not be able to clock nine hours of uninterrupted rest right now, but small tweaks add up:

  • Create a bedtime routine, even if it’s just ten minutes of winding down.
  • Limit screens before bed (blue light suppresses melatonin, the body’s natural sleep-aid).
  • Use supportive items: blackout curtains, white noise for the baby, and a good pillow (check out my favorite maternity pillow that turned me from a stomach sleeper into a permanent side sleeper!)

Conclusion

Sleep is not a luxury – it’s a powerful tool in your fitness journey. Without it, recovery slows, cravings spike, motivation dips, and progress stalls. With it, everything becomes easier; workouts feel better, nutrition is manageable, and results come faster.

Even small improvements in your sleep can create meaningful change. So tonight, give yourself permission to go to bed earlier. Your body, and your fitness goals, will thank you!

If you’re ready to align your workouts, recovery, and lifestyle for real results, book a consultation or join a program with me at the fitness cult!

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Postpartum Strength Prenatal Fitness Recovery & Wellness

Keeping Fit During the Holidays: Tips for Moms & Expecting Moms

The holidays are here, and with them come festive decorations, endless to-do lists, and of course, delicious food at every turn! It can feel like the perfect storm for skipping workouts and overindulging, but staying active and feeling your best is still entirely possible. Fitness and wellness do not need to be complicated; small, consistent choices can make a big difference for your energy, mood, and overall well-being.

In this post, we will explore realistic ways to fit activity into busy holiday schedules, share quick and effective workouts for moms (that are pregnancy-approved, too!), offer general movement tips, and cover holiday-friendly nutrition and hydration strategies to keep you feeling good inside and out.

Incorporating Workouts into a Busy Holiday Schedule

The holidays are hectic, and finding time for yourself can feel impossible, which is why planning is your best friend. Early mornings, nap times, or even a few minutes before holiday events can become your workout windows. Think of this time as a little hard-earned “me time;” a moment to prioritize self-care amidst the chaos.

Micro workouts that take only 10 to 15 minutes can fit seamlessly into even the busiest days. You can combine movement with mindfulness techniques such as guided meditations, mindful walking, or yoga/prenatal yoga. This approach nurtures both body and mind, helping you feel grounded and energized. For more ideas on including mindfulness in your workout routine, check out my prior post on Mindfulness and Meditation Techniques for Expecting Moms.

Remember to approach your holiday workouts with flexibility and self-compassion. Progress matters far more than perfection, and every little movement counts. As I like to say, a little bit of anything is still more than a whole lotta nothin’!

Quick and Effective Workouts

Low-impact, safe exercises are perfect for expecting moms, especially when time is tight. Walking, prenatal yoga, and bodyweight strength exercises are easy to do at home, in a hotel room, or even in the living room between holiday tasks.

Here are a few quick routines to keep you moving:

  • A 10-minute core and glute circuit to strengthen your back and support your pelvic floor.
  • A 15-minute yoga flow to stretch tight muscles and calm your mind.
  • Short walking intervals during errands or while prepping for holiday gatherings to sneak in extra steps.

Adjust the intensity based on how you feel each day, your trimester (if applicable), and your comfort level. If you would like a tailored approach to fit your schedule, energy levels, and stage of motherhood safely, I’d love to help you design a personalized program that keeps you moving and confident this season!

Reach out here for a FREE consultation!

General Activity Tips Beyond Workouts

Even outside structured workouts, staying active can be simple and fun! Try to move throughout your day through light stretching, standing breaks, and walking.

NEAT, or non-exercise activity, can have a surprisingly big impact. Dancing with your kids while wrapping gifts, tidying up, cooking, or brisk walking while shopping all count as valuable movement.

Strength-building does not have to mean heavy lifting. Carrying groceries safely, picking up packages, and practicing good posture while bending or lifting are all ways to strengthen your muscles gently and stay functional through the holidays.

Nutrition and Hydration for Energy and Wellness

Food is fuel, but it is also an important part of holiday joy, social connection, and family traditions. Balance is key, so try to focus on getting your protein, fiber, and healthy fats to keep energy steady.

Start with smaller portions, especially when faced with multiple tempting dishes. Our eyes often end up bigger than our stomachs, so eating slowly gives your mind time to register fullness, usually taking about 15 minutes.

For quick, healthy snack ideas, check out my prior post The Best High-Protein Snacks on Amazon for Busy Moms and Health-Minded Eaters.

Hydration is just as important as nutrition, particularly during busy or festive days. Keep a water bottle nearby and sip frequently.

Finally, practice mindful eating. Enjoy holiday treats without guilt, savor the flavors, and listen to your hunger and fullness cues. This approach helps you feel nourished and satisfied while still participating fully in the holiday celebrations.

Takeaways

Small, consistent movement combined with mindful, balanced eating can make the holiday season more enjoyable and less stressful for moms or moms-to-be. Remember, progress matters more than perfection, and every step counts – literally and figuratively!

Bookmark these tips, and share your own holiday fitness hacks in the comments below! Explore our prenatal and postpartum workout programs or personalized training options to stay active, energized, and confident through the season.

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