Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is not safe. Maybe you will be completely fine but if your pelvic floor is not back in shape you risk more long term issues.
As a French person I am appalled by how little attention doctors here are paying to this. In France you never get clearance to exercise before completing PT for your pelvic floor (5-10 sessions minimum depending on your first assessment). Having given birth in the US I didn't pay much attention and bragged to my French friends about being back in the gym 6 weeks after giving birth. I thought they were acting the proverbial anti-gym frenchiness...
Well, I am the one who can't jump on a trampoline now without leaking. 2 years after my daughter's birth and I am finally trying to change this with a proper keggel and pelvic floor routine. I wished someone had told me that rushing into running after giving birth was not a priority: keggels were..
This seems over the top.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is not safe. Maybe you will be completely fine but if your pelvic floor is not back in shape you risk more long term issues.
As a French person I am appalled by how little attention doctors here are paying to this. In France you never get clearance to exercise before completing PT for your pelvic floor (5-10 sessions minimum depending on your first assessment). Having given birth in the US I didn't pay much attention and bragged to my French friends about being back in the gym 6 weeks after giving birth. I thought they were acting the proverbial anti-gym frenchiness...
Well, I am the one who can't jump on a trampoline now without leaking. 2 years after my daughter's birth and I am finally trying to change this with a proper keggel and pelvic floor routine. I wished someone had told me that rushing into running after giving birth was not a priority: keggels were..
Anonymous wrote:I think it is not safe. Maybe you will be completely fine but if your pelvic floor is not back in shape you risk more long term issues.
As a French person I am appalled by how little attention doctors here are paying to this. In France you never get clearance to exercise before completing PT for your pelvic floor (5-10 sessions minimum depending on your first assessment). Having given birth in the US I didn't pay much attention and bragged to my French friends about being back in the gym 6 weeks after giving birth. I thought they were acting the proverbial anti-gym frenchiness...
Well, I am the one who can't jump on a trampoline now without leaking. 2 years after my daughter's birth and I am finally trying to change this with a proper keggel and pelvic floor routine. I wished someone had told me that rushing into running after giving birth was not a priority: keggels were..
. 2 years after my daughter's birth and I am finally trying to change this with a proper keggel and pelvic floor routine. I wished someone had told me that rushing into running after giving birth was not a priority: keggels were..Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For reference my sister did a half marathon 3 months after both her babies. Still breastfeeding them. But she didn’t have a c-section so I can’t talk about that. I did my first half 10 months after my first baby.
From the prior PP: good for your sister, but that vast majority of women would neither want nor be able to dedicate the time to train for a half three *months* after giving birth. I had easy vaginal deliveries and recoveries, but three months? Why?
OP, the breastfeeding thing is another consideration, though there are ways around it (pump and dump at the starting line, etc.).
Aside from differences in recovery, the degree to which one needs to train for a half depends so much on one's individual body and running/athletic history. I know some people for whom running 13 miles is a huge accomplishment that requires a lot of training to just complete, and others for whom they can do it off the couch (although they might be sore and slow).
I am the PP you were originally referring to. Yes my sister does not really need to "train" much to do a half marathon even after having kids. We both started running 6 weeks after giving birth and she was easily able to amp it up to get ready for a half marathon. But she is a marathon runner to begin with so a half isn't too crazy for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For reference my sister did a half marathon 3 months after both her babies. Still breastfeeding them. But she didn’t have a c-section so I can’t talk about that. I did my first half 10 months after my first baby.
From the prior PP: good for your sister, but that vast majority of women would neither want nor be able to dedicate the time to train for a half three *months* after giving birth. I had easy vaginal deliveries and recoveries, but three months? Why?
OP, the breastfeeding thing is another consideration, though there are ways around it (pump and dump at the starting line, etc.).
Aside from differences in recovery, the degree to which one needs to train for a half depends so much on one's individual body and running/athletic history. I know some people for whom running 13 miles is a huge accomplishment that requires a lot of training to just complete, and others for whom they can do it off the couch (although they might be sore and slow).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For reference my sister did a half marathon 3 months after both her babies. Still breastfeeding them. But she didn’t have a c-section so I can’t talk about that. I did my first half 10 months after my first baby.
From the prior PP: good for your sister, but that vast majority of women would neither want nor be able to dedicate the time to train for a half three *months* after giving birth. I had easy vaginal deliveries and recoveries, but three months? Why?
OP, the breastfeeding thing is another consideration, though there are ways around it (pump and dump at the starting line, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:For reference my sister did a half marathon 3 months after both her babies. Still breastfeeding them. But she didn’t have a c-section so I can’t talk about that. I did my first half 10 months after my first baby.