How to Prepare Your Body for Labor
While the physiological and hormonal changes in your body throughout pregnancy help it prepare for labor naturally, there are some ways you can help actively prepare for labor.
Try yoga positions that may help with labor
Yoga poses or positions can help increase flexibility and align your musculature to make labor easier. Some poses you can try include:
- Supported Squat or Malasana Squat: You can sit on a yoga block or do a squat without one if you want, hold the pose for as long as you can, and then relax. This helps open up the upper part of your pelvis.
- Wide Leg Twists: stand with your legs wide apart, lean forward with your arms wide open, and twist your arms at 180 degrees while leaning forward. You can hold onto something to make this easier. This helps relax your pelvis as well as the thighs.
- Hero’s Pose: sit with your legs folded and your highs rotated inwards. You can sit on a yoga block to help with balance. This helps open up your pelvic outlet
- Side Lunge: stand with your legs wide apart, lean onto one leg while folding it at 90 degrees while stretching the other one. This helps relax and open your mid-pelvis.
Do perineal massage to reduce the risk of damage to your perineum area during birth
It is common for your perineum to stretch and sometimes tear during birth. A perineal massage can help relax it and prevent or at least minimize tearing. Here’s how you or your partner can do it:
- Sit with your legs apart and your back supported.
- Put some lubricant, oil, or moisturizer on your fingers
- Gently place a thumb or finger about 5 cm into your vagina and use it to gently stretch the wall sideways at about 3 o’clock position.
- Still pressing and stretching gently move in a clockwise direction. Repeat for a total of 4 or 5 minutes.
Do this 3-4 times a week after 35 weeks. It might be a little uncomfortable at first but will get better as you get used to it.
Stay active to help your baby’s position
The baby naturally aligns itself in the head-down position near the end of your pregnancy. Your being active helps encourage the baby to move accordingly. This is important because:
- This position significantly reduces the chances of having an emergency C-section
- It’s associated with quicker labor that requires less pain-reducing methods
- It’s the safest position for your baby to descend out of the vagina without incurring any injuries
Staying active also helps your body align and adjust to the growing baby, helping with problems like back pain.
Learn ways to help deal with labor pain
Labor pain can be increasingly discomforting for the mother as labor progresses. Opting for a natural birth means there are more limited pain-control options for you to choose from. This is why it’s important to know of natural techniques that can help with pain relief during labor. Some of these include:
- Breathing exercises
- Yoga poses using a yoga ball to lean onto
- Relaxing music
- Massages
- Aromatherapy
- Water immersion