Betty Conroy, PT
When I began my MTY journey during the onsite M8 module, I was hopeful to learn how to integrate my passion for yoga into patient treatments and to gain competence in teaching yoga classes....
This week is a guest post from a physical therapy colleague, fellow women’s health advocate, and PYT practitioner, Lisa B. Minn. She has been a physical therapist for over a decade and during that time she has “come to be impressed by the effectiveness of a holistic approach to health care.”
Welcome Lisa B. Minn, and her post on fertility and yoga:
I met Ginger last year when she was in San Francisco teaching a course I attended on medical therapeutic yoga for the spine. I am so glad she has given me the opportunity to write about yoga for fertility – because I know, firsthand, how helpful yoga can be in the journey to motherhood.
I have learned that yoga is a valuable tool for navigating the rocky waters of infertility – from a completely unexpected diagnosis of hypothyroidism to demoralizing labels including “advanced maternal age.” I am still waiting for that one “good egg,” and in the meantime, I am making the most of my journey.
Making babies is big business. Just try entering ‘how to become pregnant’ or ‘infertility’ into a Google search and see what comes up. Everyone has a system, a trademarked technique, a patented program that will help you become pregnant in four easy steps. You’ll see ads for supplements, books, and fertility centers. One source says that acupuncture is the answer. Another claims that ice cream is the surprising secret.
Yoga can do a lot of good for the fertility challenged. But there are some things it can’t overcome. It can’t unblock tubes scarred by severe endometriosis, it can’t cure hypothyroidism, and it won’t help you grow more eggs or replace damaged DNA.
A good resource for finding a therapist who can safely prescribe the right yoga for you, according to your individual needs and your medical diagnosis is through Professional Yoga Therapy. PYT therapists are uniquely trained to consider all the needs and challenges of women struggling with the physical and spiritual challenges of women with reduced fertility.
1 See this article in Yoga Journal, written by Judith Lasater, for more extensive detail about the connection between stress and fertility:
Lisa B. Minn is a licensed physical therapist and yoga enthusiast. She has been incorporating aspects of Yoga and Pilates into her physical therapy practice since 2001 and became a certified yoga instructor in 2004. Her experience ranges from working with athletes at West Point and Georgetown to instructing elderly and wheelchair-bound clients in the fundamentals of Yoga. Lisa has conducted several lectures and workshops across the US, as well as in Honduras and Peru, where she volunteered her services. Lisa currently resides in Sausalito, California, where she lives and works. She is the author of the blog The Pragmatic Yogi and can be reached at her website, Lisa B. Minn.
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