YogaBirth Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training

YogaBirth Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training

YogaBirth Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training is accredited by the Royal College of Midwives.

Royal College of Midwives Accreditation Poem

What does this mean?

In 2016, the Royal College of Midwives awarded their accreditation to our Pregnancy Yoga Teacher Training Course. The RCM recognises a relatively small number of courses that enable midwives (and other birth practitioners) to expand their professional and personal development, with the aim of improving safe and effective care in childbirth. As I write this, and for the past several years, YogaBirth is the only perinatal yoga training to hold this endorsement.

RCM accreditation is incredibly dear to us because it gives a valuable message to the women who attend our classes. It says that their YogaBirth teacher has come through a course of study, practice and self-reflection, as judged by one of the UK’s highest medical bodies, that was carefully devised and well-taught to develop safe, intelligent pregnancy yoga teachers.  

Why Train With YogaBirth?

To potential teachers who are wondering why train with YogaBirth (amongst the many courses available)- that small blue RCM logo at the bottom of our course information signifies the professional quality and in-depth learning experience that YogaBirth provides.

YogaBirth came into being around the turn of the millennium, founded by a group of Active Birth teachers who had received phenomenal training in perinatal yoga and birth education with Janet Balaskas, Lolly Stirk and Yvonne Moore. Very soon, we launched our own training for antenatal yoga teachers with specialised childbirth knowledge. 

Our training has evolved over 20 years but has stayed true to the fundamental premise that the best way a woman can prepare for the tremendous physical and emotional experience of labour and birth, and for the transition into motherhood, is through yoga. Any yoga is beneficial. Yoga with layers of birthing wisdom and practical knowledge sown into it is as good as it gets. This is YogaBirth.

Teacher Training
Ground trough legs

How did we become Royal College of Midwives Accredited?

In seeking RCM accreditation, we had to demonstrate the many dimensions of the course and how teachers develop through it.

Our training takes participants on a journey to learn about yoga and birth from all aspects: emotional, social, spiritual, physiological, medical; and from the perspectives of both the teacher and the pregnant mother.

We examine nuances of communication, challenges of holding a group, the ability to offer non-judgmental information and to listen authentically. We put a strong emphasis on self-reflection- so that each person is conscious about the experiences that brought them to this work, and how those may influence their teaching. There is group learning, self-guided study of online sessions, reading, class observation, teaching practice, a pregnancy yoga portfolio project, and vibrant discussion.

Royal College of Midwives accredited Logo

YogaBirth Training

YogaBirth training is a 12-month immersion into pregnancy yoga teaching and childbirth knowledge. This is not a quick supplemental course. It is designed for people who want to explore these subjects in depth and to build strong skills, to be able to teach exceptional classes with confidence and enjoyment.

Each student is followed through the training by a personal mentor – one tutor who regularly discusses her progress and her experience of the course. The group tends to be fairly small so there is ample personal attention, and the tutor-mentor adds an individualised dimension to each person’s learning. Mentoring continues during the first few months as our newly qualified YogaBirth teachers establish their own classes.

Training suitable for all…

YogaBirth teachers include midwives, previously trained yoga teachers, doulas, childbirth educators, hypnobirthing teachers, practitioners of cranio-sacral therapy, acupuncture, physiotherapy, shiatsu and reflexology…  All have come with huge dedication to women and yoga and are endlessly intrigued by birth. Our training course is an intersection of participants who bring different skills and experiences, sharing their perspectives to enrich and expand what we already teach.

YogaBirth organisation, which teachers join after they certify through the course, is a dynamic professional network offering regular CPD and constant inspiration.

Teacher Training

How can I find out more?

Our next course begins in May 2021. Applications are currently being accepted.

If you are interested in training to become a YogaBirth teacher, we would love to speak with you.

Jill Benjoya Miller
Mother
YogaBirth Course Co-Director and Tutor
Active Birth Teacher
Doula

Lolly Stirk tecaching pregnancy yoga
More than a Pregnancy Yoga class

More than a Pregnancy Yoga class

YogaBirth offer pregnancy yoga classes with a difference. We invite every woman bringing new life into the world to connect with her innate wisdom through yoga. What women experience through our unique YogaBirth style of pregnancy yoga influenced by the work of Vanda Scaravelli is incredible, as this passage by YogaBirth founding member Lolly Stirk can attest to.

Pregnancy Yoga like no other

Many years ago, after attending several of my weekly pregnancy yoga sessions, I noticed one of the women hanging back and suspected she wanted to ask or tell me something.

“You know these classes you teach are not just pregnancy yoga classes, don’t you?”

“Do tell” I replied.

“You approach us on every level. From the tea and biscuits in the circle at the beginning when we meet up, discuss what it is like being pregnant, how we are feeling, or where we can get the best baby slings. Or you spend time teaching us something about pregnancy, childbirth and after the baby is born. Or someone comes back to talk about their birth and show off their baby. And we receive such valuable horse’s mouth information! And then we go on to practise yoga which is unlike any I have experienced in other classes. We seem to be working from the inside out. It’s like tuning into something that is already there but I hadn’t noticed!”

Eagle Arms

Yoga from the inside out

YogaBirth classes are different for many reasons. The most important difference are the teachers. Michel Odent said that midwives are born, not trained and I suspect this also goes for YogaBirth teachers. The yoga we teach does indeed work from the inside out, working with the body rather than against it and each class is a mini rehearsal for labour and birth. Through the breathwork, positions and movements we are opening up the possibility of women having the courage and tools to let go to the most natural of all processes without fear. We love being ‘with’ women and their growing families and imparting our knowledge and experience. Through creating community and passing on not only the intellectual but the physical information in our classes we hope to make a difference to their lives.

Lolly Stirk tecaching pregnancy yoga
postnatal yoga

YogaBirth Teacher Training

Would you be interested in finding out more about how to become our next YogaBirth teacher and making this kind of a difference to women’s lives? Our next course begins in May 2021 and applications are currently being accepted. We would love to speak with you!

Lolly Stirk
Mother
Founder of YogaBirth
Doula & Hypnobirther

Lolly Stirk tecaching pregnancy yoga
What is Scaravelli Inspired Yoga

What is Scaravelli Inspired Yoga

What is Scaravelli inspired yoga and why is so perfect for pregnancy?

“You have to learn how to listen to your body, going with it not against it, avoiding all effort or strain…..” (Vanda Scaravelli).

“How could this work in yoga?” I hear you say and an even more extraordinary question, “How could that possibly work in childbirth?” Well it does, that’s the thing! Perhaps I can explain how. Although, I hesitate,  the reason for my hesitation is that words can get in the way. But I will have a go….

Yoga is about attention…..and ultimately it is about freedom. It is about transcending suffering (dukha) and discovering hidden potential (sukha) – literally “good space” – space that could be considered as clarity, as compassion, or as joy. Ultimately to realise our interconnectedness with everything – a deep peace and calm understanding that “I am That. I am All.”

Scaravelli Yoga

As a midwife and as a YogaBirth teacher I have come across many methods and formulae – with women believing that just doing “this type of breathing” or “that type of breathing” would assure them the best possible birth experience,  often it did but – and there is a big BUT – the breath is what leads you there and then you have to surrender and trust to what is. You have to have the courage to leave the technique behind. This is why birth is different for every woman, every time. In YogaBirth, through Scaravelli yoga we believe that it is possible for a woman to embrace the moment fully without falling apart. We consider this to offer a more truthful, honest and complete experience – an experience that could stay with the woman forever – as a lifelong strength.

But all births are different….

We know that it is impossible to plan or steer birth in the direction you want it to go. Not from your head at least. We forget that giving birth is as much about the birth of a baby as it is about the birth of a mother and that lifelong strength – a strength that goes deep – a felt sense of being and what is.

In yoga we begin with the breath and see it as key. In childbirth education classes too. So if yoga is something to do with the breath, movement and gravity – and birth also is something to do with the breath, movement and gravity – surely we can use one to support the other.

NAmaste

Find your own Yoga…

Those who were lucky enough to meet and study with Vanda found their idea of yoga completely transformed because Vanda did not ask them to follow a method. She worked with each of her students individually to enable them to find their own yoga. The guiding principles to this journey of self-discovery was the ground, the breath and the release of the Spine.

Diane Long who studied with Vanda for nearly 30 years, talks about the deep wisdom within the body, “There is wisdom to be received from the body, a memory of lightness and simple symmetry….”

Sandra Sabatini, another of Vanda’s closest students, when describing giving birth to her children says, “During labour I observed an unknown intelligence at work. The more passive, soft and elastic I became, the more powerfully this physical cleverness acted.”

No method, formula or trick can get you there. You have to find it for yourself under the guidance of a teacher. In YogaBirth we offer that support by allowing women to discover “the deep inner calm”, described by John Stirk, “what lies beneath”. This inner calm is the source of our strength and resilience and is there for all of us, should we choose to take time to let go of what is no longer required.

Movement that relates to the ground is what animates us – the breath being part of that movement. The delightful interplay between the two offers opportunity for the spine to release. When this happens, so much more becomes possible. We start moving from inside, to the cues not only from the natural intelligence of our bodies but something even deeper. So that in the depths of labour there is a seamless transition as the rhythms of breath and movements combine with the rhythms of labour.

Every woman births differently

As a midwife I remember being fortunate enough to have supported women from my class in their  labour. Some seemed to display a need to move very gently and quietly – movements which were punctuated with moments of simply being in the quietness of their space, and yet, their presence filled the room, albeit for the most part, in silence. Others writhed about the floor, uttering the most primal of sounds and roaring as if giving birth to the universe itself – and yet feeling good for it. Not emitting the sounds of despair, but sounds of true realisation.

These amazing women discovered for themselves a way to meet the extraordinary surges of labour. They met with a Yoga that was more authentic and more meaningful to welcome their baby into the world. And when they said “I did it!” they uttered this from the very depths of their souls – almost as if they were saying “Now I understand!”

Time to Empower
Pregnancy Yoga

YogaBirth classes

So how might we begin in a YogaBirth class if there is no method and no formula, you might ask. I think back to John Stirk talking about “the deep calm which lies beneath”…….about deep silence and the breath which arises from and dissolves into this silence.

Enabling women to move towards stillness can serve as both our starting point and the end of a class. For this reason YogaBirth teachers always begin their classes with a tuning into the Breath…..then finding the breath through movement, connecting with the deepest of sensations, through the ground and through touch. At the end of a class we return to stillness, to the state of going even deeper, to connect with the deep inner calm, and the most ancient of wisdom. So that the woman – the whole of her body, she and her baby can rest back in the stillness of the moment. Through gentle exploration she has discovered her oldest friend, the Breath. And it is so simple – nothing more is required but for her to trust her body and follow the breath. 

YogaBirth Teacher Training

If you are interested in training to be a YogaBirth teacher, we would love to hear from you. Our teacher training, established in 2005, is a one year course commencing in May 2021. It is anticipated that some of the training will take place on line. We welcome doulas, yoga teachers, therapists, midwives and anyone with a passion for this work.

Judy Cameron
Mother
YogaBirth Teacher
Qualified Midwife

Judy Cameron Senior YogaBirth Teacher

Laura

I wanted to write to say a big thank you for the yoga classes these past few months. I didn’t know quite what to expect but they quickly became one of my favourite hours of the week – a quiet time to really focus on my baby and de-stress from the battles of work. I learnt an enormous amount from you about relaxation, distancing myself from pain and breathing. I started to look forward to giving birth to see what my body was capable of doing. As it turns out, baby was lying breech for the final few weeks of pregnancy. The day after our final yoga class, my waters broke with gusto at home and so we made our way to hospital. We decided that, due to a variety of factors, we would prefer to have a Caesarean section. This then all happened very efficiently – from my waters breaking at 8am, our beautiful baby boy was delivered at 2.33pm in theatre. Whilst he was three and a half weeks early and didn’t exactly follow our natural birth plan, he is absolutely fine and charming the socks off everyone already – we’re besotted!

Tara

Most importantly, I can look back at the birth itself and smile with tears in my eyes. It was utterly incredible. Perfect in fact. Unbelievably empowering. And the love I felt for both my husband and baby was off the scale. Coming to yoga classes not only helped my confidence with positions during labour, but was a great way to have some special ‘me’ time – and of course a fantastic way to meet other mummies-to-be.