This page is general information, not medical advice. Begin only after your doctor clears you to exercise, usually around six weeks or after a C-section check, and see your doctor for any concerns about your recovery.
Postnatal yoga is not about getting your body back, and it does not fix or speed up recovery. It is a gentle, supported way to reconnect with your breath, body and wellbeing as a new mother, alongside your doctor's care. Begin only after your doctor clears you to exercise, usually around six weeks or after a C-section check. At Anand Yoga Centre we teach this gently, in small classes. We are women-first, in Kolathur.
Safe postnatal yoga is slow, gentle and patient. It focuses on breath, the pelvic floor and rebuilding the core softly, never on intense exercise. It begins only after your doctor clears you to exercise, usually around six weeks after a vaginal birth or after a C-section check. We always follow your doctor's timing and adapt to how you feel.
Begin only once your doctor has cleared you. Keep everything soft and supported, avoid intense abdominal work in early recovery, and stop if you notice any belly doming or a central gap.
This page is general information, not medical advice. Begin only after your doctor clears you to exercise, usually around six weeks or after a C-section check, and see your doctor for any concerns about your recovery.
Postnatal yoga may support your wellbeing, but it does not replace medical care. Please begin only after your doctor clears you to exercise, usually around six weeks or after a C-section check, and see your doctor for any concerns about your recovery.
Reviewed by Sailaja Anand, yoga instructor at Anand Yoga Centre. Last updated 2026-06-14.
This page is general information, not medical advice. Begin only after your doctor clears you to exercise, usually around six weeks or after a C-section check, and see your doctor for any concerns about your recovery.
Book a ₹199 first class and learn a soft, supported postnatal practice with Sailaja in Kolathur.