DOWNLOAD DIASTSIS RECTI EXERCISE TIPS

HAVE A HOODIE……. BELLY BUTTON?

Did your belly button change after your pregnancy? This is a sign of a diastasis recti. Sometimes it is even an umbilical hernia. When the connective tissue stretches sideways, your belly button loses its support.

Your belly button will change when you strengthen your connective tissue and close your diastasis. It will go from an outie to an innie.

Closing a diastasis is all about healing your stretched out connective tissue.

The Tupler Technique® does this 3 ways:

1. Taking the stretch off the “stretched out” connective tissue by continuously positioning it in a narrow position with the Diastasis Rehab Splint®. The splint also puts the separated muscle closer together making them move in the right direction when doing the seated exercises.


2. Protecting the connective tissue from getting stretched. That means being able to hold in your transverse abdominal muscle with activities of daily living and when you exercise. Also, exercises or sports where you flare your ribs or do a forward crossover movements also stretch your connective tissue.


3. Strengthening your transverse muscle with the seated exercises. It is very important to have both transverse strength AND awareness. Strengthening this muscle is important as it puts it then puts tension on the connective tissue. To strengthen the muscles and connective tissue it is important for them both to move “backwards”.


So if you hate your hoodie……time to get started closing your diastasis recti!

Watch this short video about an Outie Belly Button/umbilical hernia and Diastasis Recti

Video

DOWNLOAD DIASTSIS RECTI EXERCISE TIPS

To learn more about Diastasis Recti & the Tupler Technique® read this article: DIASTASIS RECTI RESEARCH AND EVIDENCED BASED EXERCISE PROGRAM

To view my women's programs click this link:  PROGRAM PACKAGES

Watch the short video below to know what a diastasis is.

Video

RECENT ARTICLES

7.	Best Exercises for Incisional Hernia & Diastasis Recti (Tupler Technique® Approved)
With incisional hernia and diastasis recti, the best exercise is the one that doesn’t make you dome. The Tupler Technique®...
Posture and Diastasis Recti in Men: Tupler Technique® Alignment Plan
Posture determines pressure. When your ribs flare, pelvis tilts forward, or head juts out, intra-abdominal pressure shifts toward the front—right...
How to Fix Postpartum during pregnancy and Diastasis Recti Without Surgery Using the Tupler Technique®
If you’re wondering whether surgery is the only way to flatten your belly and feel supported again, take a deep...
Tupler Technique® vs. Surgery: Incisional Hernia & Diastasis Recti Explained
Is it Tupler Technique® or surgery for your incisional hernia and diastasis recti? The honest answer: they’re not rivals. Conservative...
Preventing Diastasis Recti in Men (Tupler Technique® Core Strategies)
Men experience diastasis recti for many reasons—lifelong breath-holding during lifts, gut-forward posture at a desk, repetitive crunches, or weight fluctuation...

DOWNLOAD DIASTSIS RECTI EXERCISE TIPS

HAVE A HOODIE……. BELLY BUTTON?

Did your belly button change after your pregnancy? This is a sign of a diastasis recti. Sometimes it is even an umbilical hernia. When the connective tissue stretches sideways, your belly button loses its support.

Your belly button will change when you strengthen your connective tissue and close your diastasis. It will go from an outie to an innie.

Closing a diastasis is all about healing your stretched out connective tissue.

The Tupler Technique® does this 3 ways:

1. Taking the stretch off the “stretched out” connective tissue by continuously positioning it in a narrow position with the Diastasis Rehab Splint®. The splint also puts the separated muscle closer together making them move in the right direction when doing the seated exercises.


2. Protecting the connective tissue from getting stretched. That means being able to hold in your transverse abdominal muscle with activities of daily living and when you exercise. Also, exercises or sports where you flare your ribs or do a forward crossover movements also stretch your connective tissue.


3. Strengthening your transverse muscle with the seated exercises. It is very important to have both transverse strength AND awareness. Strengthening this muscle is important as it puts it then puts tension on the connective tissue. To strengthen the muscles and connective tissue it is important for them both to move “backwards”.


So if you hate your hoodie……time to get started closing your diastasis recti!

Watch this short video about an Outie Belly Button/umbilical hernia and Diastasis Recti

Video

DOWNLOAD DIASTSIS RECTI EXERCISE TIPS

To learn more about Diastasis Recti & the Tupler Technique® read this article: DIASTASIS RECTI RESEARCH AND EVIDENCED BASED EXERCISE PROGRAM

To view my women's programs click this link:  PROGRAM PACKAGES

Watch the short video below to know what a diastasis is.

Video

RECENT ARTICLES

7.	Best Exercises for Incisional Hernia & Diastasis Recti (Tupler Technique® Approved)
With incisional hernia and diastasis recti, the best exercise is the one that doesn’t make you dome. The Tupler Technique®...
Posture and Diastasis Recti in Men: Tupler Technique® Alignment Plan
Posture determines pressure. When your ribs flare, pelvis tilts forward, or head juts out, intra-abdominal pressure shifts toward the front—right...
How to Fix Postpartum during pregnancy and Diastasis Recti Without Surgery Using the Tupler Technique®
If you’re wondering whether surgery is the only way to flatten your belly and feel supported again, take a deep...
Tupler Technique® vs. Surgery: Incisional Hernia & Diastasis Recti Explained
Is it Tupler Technique® or surgery for your incisional hernia and diastasis recti? The honest answer: they’re not rivals. Conservative...
Preventing Diastasis Recti in Men (Tupler Technique® Core Strategies)
Men experience diastasis recti for many reasons—lifelong breath-holding during lifts, gut-forward posture at a desk, repetitive crunches, or weight fluctuation...