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Recovery & Wellness tfc Community

How to Make Your Morning Routine Calmer with Yoga and Stretching

The Calming Snapshot

Stop starting your day in chaos! A simple, beginner-friendly yoga routine of just 5-10 minutes can lower your stress and set a positive tone. We’ll focus on four poses (cat-cow, low lunge, downward dog, and child’s pose) to improve posture, open Hips, and connect your mind to your body. Weave these poses into existing tasks (like waiting for coffee!) for instant calm.


If you’re a mom of children under 12 years old, I’m going to bet that your typical morning starts like a car alarm: loud, sudden, and leaving you frantically looking for the keys. Between hunting down missing shoes, negotiating breakfast and jackets, and trying to find the one clean shirt that fits, you start the day reacting, not responding.

When you start your day in full-blown chaos control, you’re left feeling like you’re already playing catch-up first thing in the morning. This is why adopting a morning yoga routine is not just a wellness trend, but a vital strategy for modern motherhood! It is about creating a few minutes of intentional movement to shift your nervous system from “fight or flight” to “ready for anything!”

The Science of Calm: Why Stretching Works for Stress Relief

The magic of a gentle stretch session is not just physical; it’s chemical and psychological.

The Physical Effect on Stress

When you feel stressed, your body releases cortisol, the stress hormone. Getting your body moving, even gently, helps to regulate your nervous system. Stretching and light movement help reduce muscle tension, which is often a physical manifestation of anxiety and stress. Research confirms that engaging in mind-body exercises like yoga significantly reduces symptoms of anxiety.

A systematic review and meta analysis published in the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry found that yoga interventions significantly reduced anxiety symptoms in various populations. (Check it out here).

The Power of the Mind-Body Connection

Beginner-friendly yoga is built on linking breath to movement. This focus is a powerful tool because it forces you to be present. When you focus on inhaling and exhaling, you cannot simultaneously run through your mental to-do list. This simple shift of moving your attention into your body is the most effective way to hit the mental reset button and calm the nervous system.

If you struggle with breathwork, remember that this connection is also key to your core strength, as well as rebuilding and repairing from diastasis recti after birth. A strong core is a major component of our functional fitness! For more on optimizing your stability and strength (especially during or after pregnancy and childbirth), check out some of our other posts on these topics:

Four Simple Poses for the Busy Mama

These four movements target common pain points for yoga for moms: stiff posture from carrying or nursing, tight hips, and the need for a total reset. Aim for 30-60 seconds in each pose (but stay as long as you’d like!)

  • Cat Cow (Marjaryasana Bitilasana): Great for postural alignment and getting your back ready for the day ahead. This gentle mobilization warms up the spine and is perfect for counteracting the forward-slouch from nursing, rocking, or scrolling.
  • Low Lunge (Anjaneyasana): Excellent for hip opening! If you spend a lot of time sitting, driving, or standing up holding your baby, this will help release tension in the hips and hip flexors.
  • Downward Facing Dog (Adho Mukha Svanasana): A wonderful full-body stretch that lengthens the hamstrings and calves. It’s a mild inversion that can be gently modified by placing your hands on a stool or countertop, rather than directly on the floor. Remember to come out of it slowly; the inversion means your blood flows to your head, which is a great morning boost!
  • Child’s Pose (Balasana): The ultimate calming and relaxation pose. Bring your knees wide to allow the hips to open as you melt towards the floor. Take 5-10 deep breaths here for a complete mental and physical reset.
Here’s how to do Child’s Pose – check out our YouTube Channel for more movement demos!

Weaving Movement into the Morning Madness

You don’t need to block out a clean 10 minutes; the trick to a sustainable morning yoga routine is to blend it into your existing routine.

Practical Tips for the Calming Routine:
  • The 5 Minute Window: Commit to just five minutes immediately after you get out of bed (or even before getting out of bed!) to gently move.
  • The “Wait” Rule: Do not let yourself pour the coffee, brush your teeth, or check your phone until you’ve taken 5 deep breaths in Child’s Pose.
  • The Blend: Use your current routine or tasks as a yoga cue:
    • Do Child’s Pose from bed before you even stand up.
    • Perform Downward Dog while the coffee brews in the kitchen.
    • Do a Low Lunge on each side while packing lunches.
  • Embrace the Chaos: Let your kids climb on you during Downward Dog and make it a Mommy Mountain! Their added weight just turns it into an assisted stretch 😉

Your Day, Your Tone

Adopting a beginner-friendly yoga session in the morning is an act of self care that fuels you for the rest of the day. It’s not about achieving the perfect pose; it’s about choosing to start with calm, not cortisol.

Ready to incorporate more balanced, functional movement into your busy life? We have programs designed exactly for the different phases of motherhood!

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Prenatal Fitness Recovery & Wellness tfc Community

The Benefits of Prenatal Yoga for Moms-to-Be

Prenatal yoga may sound fancy and complicated, but it’s actually one of the easiest ways to stay active while connecting with your baby during pregnancy!

Yoga is the practice of combining breathing techniques, meditation, and specific body poses to exercise and strengthen your body through mind-body connection. A regular yoga practice has also shown to have a myriad of mental benefits, such as stress reduction and management, as well as the physical benefits.

Pregnancy, while a very exciting time of a new parent’s life, can also cause many stressors as your life – and body! – undergoes this huge change. As such, many expectant mothers have found that adopting a yoga practice brings a much-appreciated sense of peace as well as improving their physical comfort throughout their pregnancy.

Disclaimer: Always consult a healthcare professional before starting any exercise routine during pregnancy.

What is Prenatal Yoga?

Prenatal yoga is a specialized practice for pregnant mamas that adapts traditional yoga poses to meet the unique needs of pregnancy. It focuses on building strength, flexibility, and relaxation, combined with breathing techniques that can be used both throughout pregnancy and during labor and delivery. Prenatal yoga also includes modifications for safety and comfort during all trimesters. helping to alleviate common pregnancy pains and promote the connection and bond between you and your baby. It is specifically designed to support your growing and changing pregnant body, and targets strengthening the core and pelvic floor to support labor, delivery, and postpartum recovery as well.

Physical Benefits of Prenatal Yoga

Prenatal yoga poses focus on improving your mobility, which can help restore your sense of balance as your growing belly begins to make you wobbly. Poses such as child’s pose, downward facing dog, tree pose, or tailor pose help open up the hips while strengthening the core; both of which will assist in labor and delivery!

During pregnancy, your body releases a hormone called relaxin, which causes the tissues of the body to soften and relax to assist with opening through the pelvis during labor and delivery. This causes the joints to have a looser feeling that can make it easy to accidentally over-stretch a muscle, causing pain or injury. Prenatal yoga helps to improve flexibility without over-stretching by incorporating strengthening of the muscles into the practice.

The improved flexibility and strength that comes from a prenatal yoga practice can ease common pregnancy discomforts like back pain, hip pain, and sciatic pain. Additionally, prenatal yoga enhances the body’s circulation and improves the efficiency of blood flow. Your blood volume can increase 50-80% in pregnancy, which can contribute to swelling of the ankles, feet, legs, and joints. A regular prenatal yoga practice can help to reduce swelling, as well as addressing other pregnancy symptoms such as nausea, fatigue, and sleep disturbances through gentle movement.

Mental and Emotional Benefits

Yoga reduces stress and promotes relaxation through the use of meditation and breathwork, as well as fostering a mind-body connection. Prenatal yoga in particular also fosters a mama-baby connection by incorporating movements that help you to feel connected to your baby.

Breathwork, meditation, and visualization can reduce the body’s release of cortisol, a stress hormone. Cortisol is associated with the triggering of the body’s “fight or flight” mechanism; lower levels of cortisol mean more feelings of calmness or peacefulness!

Mindfulness is an important cornerstone of any good yoga practice. Mindfulness is a state of being aware of the present moment, observing thoughts, feelings, and sensations without judgment. It also helps you become aware of your thoughts and emotions as they occur naturally, but without getting carried away by them. Practicing mindfulness during your yoga practice can be especially useful because it allows you to focus on cultivating a mind-body – and a mama-baby – connection, which improves both the mental and physical states.

Preparation for Labor and Delivery

Breathing exercises and techniques are a crucial part of labor-pain management. Focusing on your breathing ensures proper oxygenation, which is vital for the health of both you and your baby during delivery. Performing breathing exercises also helps your body to relax and calm the nervous system, allowing the muscles of the body to work with labor contractions, rather than tensing up and resisting, which can slow or stall labor. Practicing labor breathwork with prenatal yoga throughout pregnancy helps the body prepare for labor by building cardiovascular as well as muscular endurance.

Some beneficial breathing exercises to practice for labor include:

  • Deep, Slow Breathing: Inhale deeply through the nose, feeling your abdomen expand, and exhale slowly through the mouth. 
  • Rhythmic Breathing: Find a comfortable rhythm, like inhaling for three counts and exhaling for three counts, to help stay focused. 
  • Paced Breathing: Match your breath to the contraction, becoming faster as the intensity increases and slower as it decreases. 
  • Light Accelerated Breathing: Use short, shallow breaths through the mouth at about one breath per second during the peak of contractions. 
  • Pant-Pant-Blow Breathing: A sequence of short, quick breaths followed by a longer blow, often described as “hee-hee-hoo”. 
  • Expulsive Breathing: Use this technique during the second stage of labor to help push more effectively. 
  • Learn more from the American Pregnancy Association

Tips for Practicing Prenatal Yoga

  • Find a supportive and comfortable environment: whether this is your living room, an outdoor space in good weather conditions, or a local group class, you should feel both physically and mentally safe and comfortable
  • Listen to your body: be prepared to modify poses to find what feels right for your practice; every pregnancy is unique and will require differing practices – embrace where you are in your journey and focus on the mind-body-baby connection
  • Daily practice: yoga requires little else other than a comfortable space to be; try to incorporate even just a few minutes every day of breathwork, mindfulness, and physical poses that release muscle tension and bring relief

You should always stop activity immediately and seek medical attention if you experience any of the following or are concerned about the health and safety or yourself or your baby:

  • vaginal bleeding
  • abdominal pain
  • regular or painful uterine contractions
  • leakage of fluid from vagina
  • shortness of breath before exertion
  • fainting
  • severe headache
  • chest pain

What is your favorite technique for practicing mindfulness? Share with us in the comments below!

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tfc Community

May Group Classes!

Join us for our May Group Classes! We will offer 1 Orange County class (Saturday morning) and 1 virtual class via Zoom (Sunday Morning). Please take note of the sign-up deadlines listed. We can’t wait to work out with you!

Saturday, May 21st @ 10 AM:
Kickboxing Cardio 🥊
Fountain Valley Mile Square Park

sign-up deadline: Friday, May 20th at 8 PM

Sunday, May 29th @ 9:30 AM:
Virtual Yoga 🧘🏻‍♀️
Zoom Class

sign-up deadline: Saturday, March 26th at 8 PM

can’t make it? subscribe below to get updates on all our other classes & events!

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tfc Community

March Group Classes!

Join us for our March Group Classes! We will offer 1 Orange County class (Sunday), 1 Inland Empire class (Saturday), and 1 virtual class via Zoom. Please take note of the sign-up deadlines listed. We can’t wait to work out with you!

☘️ Sunday, March 13th @ 10 AM:
90’s Dance Aerobics 🦋
Mile Square Park

sign-up deadline: Saturday, March 12th at 8 M

☘️ Saturday, March 19th @ 2 PM:
Kickboxing Cardio 🥊
Rancho Garcia Park

sign-up deadline: Friday, March 18th at 10 PM

☘️ Sunday, March 27th @ 9:30 AM:
Virtual Yoga 🧘🏻‍♀️
Zoom Class

sign-up deadline: Saturday, March 26th at 8 PM

can’t make it? subscribe below to get updates on all our other classes & events!

join the tfc community!

subscribe to be best friends 🤍

Weekly wellness tips & mom support, straight to your inbox 💌

got any feedback or ideas? please let us know how we can make fitness the most fun for you! 👉

what kind of group classes would you be most excited to attend?

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Thank you for your response. ✨

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