Training Postnatal

Returning to Strength After Having a Baby: A Coach’s Guide for New Mums in Leamington Spa.

Coming back to training as a mum is not the same as starting again. Your body has done something extraordinary; it now needs coaching that respects what it has been through, not a generic gym programme that ignores the last twelve months. This is what proper postpartum-aware strength coaching actually looks like at Physical Formula in Leamington Spa, and how to start.

9 min read ·
A postpartum mum performing a coached back squat with a barbell while a coach watches at Physical Formula in Leamington Spa
Coached postpartum back squat · Physical Formula, Leamington Spa

Why “bounce back” advice fails new mums

Open any women’s magazine, scroll any postpartum hashtag, ask the algorithm what to do six weeks after a baby and you’ll get the same answer: bounce back. Get your body back. Drop the baby weight. Tighten the core. The problem isn’t just the language, it’s the underlying assumption, that the body you had before the baby is the goal and that the work is to undo a year of damage.

That framing makes the whole project feel like a punishment. It also misses what actually happened. Your abdominal wall stretched, sometimes separated. Your pelvic floor took load it had never taken before. Your hip alignment changed. Your breathing pattern changed. Your sleep is now broken, sometimes for months. Your hormones are doing things they have not done before. Trying to drop straight back into the gym you used at thirty-two with a baby strapped to your chest and a coffee in hand isn’t “bouncing back.” It’s asking a body that is still healing to perform like one that isn’t.

Coached postpartum return to strength starts from a different question: what does this body need right now to rebuild properly, in a way that compounds for the next twenty years? The answer is almost never “more cardio.” It’s rarely “HIIT classes.” It’s pelvic floor reconnection, breath, posture, then load. Progressive, coached, paced.

This isn’t a gentler version of training. It’s smarter training. Done right, the strength you build in the first six to twelve months after a baby is more durable than the strength you built before, because you’re building it on a properly reset foundation.

You aren’t bouncing back. You’re building forward, on a foundation that’s been completely reset.

When to actually start: the six-week question

The most common question we get from new mums is “how long after the birth can I start?” The honest answer is: it depends, but probably later than you think and earlier than you fear.

The standard UK guidance is to wait for your six-week GP check before resuming higher-intensity exercise. For most uncomplicated vaginal births, light coached movement can begin around then. For C-section recovery, the timeline is longer, typically twelve to sixteen weeks before loaded strength work, although walking and very light reconnection work can begin earlier with coach approval. The NHS guidance on postnatal exercise is a useful starting point.

The bigger question isn’t the calendar date. It’s the answer to a handful of practical questions:

This is what a good first coaching call covers. We’ll talk through where you are, what your birth looked like, what your week looks like now, and whether you should start with us straight away or whether you might benefit from a session or two with a women’s health physio first. If we think you need physio first, we’ll say so.

The four foundations of postpartum strength

Before load, before progression, before benchmarks, the first phase of coached postpartum strength is rebuilding four systems that take real damage in pregnancy and birth.

Pelvic floor

The pelvic floor is a hammock of muscle at the base of the pelvis that takes enormous load through pregnancy and birth. It is not a single muscle you tighten on cue, it’s a coordinated system that has to relax as well as contract. Coached return work starts with proper diaphragmatic breathing, gentle reconnection drills, and pressure management, not endless kegels. We integrate this work into early sessions so that by the time you’re lifting properly, the pelvic floor is firing in sync with the rest of the system.

Breath and pressure

Pregnancy changes how you breathe, ribs flare, diaphragm changes position, intercostals shorten. Most postpartum women breathe shallow, into the chest, with limited diaphragm engagement. That’s a problem for lifting because pressure management (how you brace against load) is breath-led. The first few weeks of coached return rebuilds full 360-degree breathing, then teaches you how to brace properly under load.

Deep core

The deep core (transverse abdominis, multifidus, diaphragm, pelvic floor) acts as an internal corset. It runs the show on lifts, on carrying a car seat, on picking the baby up off the floor. It tends to get bypassed during pregnancy as the abdominal wall stretched and the rectus took the visible role. Coached return work rebuilds this system first, before we layer big lifts on top.

Posture and hip alignment

Carrying a baby in front of you for nine months, then carrying a baby in your arms for the year after, shifts almost every postural marker. Anterior pelvic tilt is common. Rounded shoulders and forward head posture are nearly universal. Coached return integrates posture work into every session, so that by the time you’re lifting properly, you’re lifting from a structure that can hold the load.

A close-up of a postpartum abdomen with hands resting either side, illustrating the deep core and pelvic floor rebuild that comes first
The foundation phase · rebuilding deep core, pelvic floor and breath before any load goes on the bar.

Diastasis recti, pelvic floor and lifting weights

Two questions come up almost universally with new mums returning to training. They deserve proper answers.

Diastasis recti

Diastasis recti is a separation of the rectus abdominis (the “six pack” muscles) at the midline. It is normal during pregnancy, common postpartum, and the question is rarely “do I have it” (most women do, to some degree) but “how much, and how is it healing?”

Coached return work for diastasis avoids exercises that bulge or dome the abdomen, particularly in the first few weeks. We focus on rebuilding deep core coordination, pelvic floor engagement, and pressure management. Once the system is firing properly, most women can progress to full strength work with no restrictions. A women’s health physio referral is occasionally useful, and we’ll tell you if we think you need one.

Crucially: lifting weights, properly coached, does not make diastasis worse. The bigger risk is the opposite, avoiding any meaningful loading for years and never properly rebuilding the system.

Pelvic floor and lifting

The pelvic floor and the diaphragm work together. When you brace against a heavy lift, pressure goes up. A properly functioning pelvic floor manages that pressure; a recovering pelvic floor may not, and that’s when leaks or heaviness happen. Coached return work rebuilds the breathing and bracing pattern before introducing heavy load. The result is that by the time you’re deadlifting properly, your pelvic floor is part of the system that lifts the bar, not a casualty of it.

Most of our postpartum members lift properly, including big lifts, within four to six months of starting with us. The key is that the loading is layered onto a system that’s been rebuilt, not bolted on top of one that hasn’t.

The first six weeks of coached return

The most common entry point for new mums at Physical Formula is the six-week return programme. It’s designed specifically for women returning to training after a baby, and the structure mirrors what proper coached return should look like anywhere.

Weeks one and two: Reconnect

Light coached sessions focused on movement screen, breathing, pelvic floor reconnection, baseline strength patterns at very light load. The goal isn’t to feel worked, it’s to feel switched on. Most members leave the first session feeling lighter, not heavier.

Weeks three and four: Rebuild

Progressive strength work begins. Squat, hinge, push, pull patterns coached on technique with deliberately moderate load. Conditioning is added, scaled to where you are. Confidence with weights starts here. You’ll often surprise yourself with what you can do by week four.

Weeks five and six: Reclaim

Stronger sessions, real loads, full coaching support. By the end of week six you should feel meaningfully stronger than week one, with a clear plan for what training looks like beyond the programme. Some members stay on with our small group personal training, some take what they’ve learned and train elsewhere. Both are fine.

If you’re curious about the programme specifically, the new mums landing page walks through the details, including cohort dates, what’s included, and how to apply.

A mum in soft warm light holding and kissing her newborn baby, the daily reality that coached postpartum training is built around
The life you train around · sessions are programmed around naps, school runs and the bone-deep tiredness of broken sleep.

Training around a baby’s schedule

The honest reality of postnatal training isn’t the programme. It’s the logistics. Most mums coming back to training are doing it in the gaps between naps, feeds, school runs and the bone-deep tiredness of broken sleep.

A few practical things we’ve learned from coaching mums through this:

If you’ve trained before and you’re comparing yourself to that pre-baby version, the kindest thing you can do is stop. The body is different. The brain is different. The life is different. The goal is to build something new and durable, not to recover something old and brittle.

The common mistakes we coach past

Four patterns we see frequently with new mums coming back to training.

Going too hard, too soon

Booking a six-week bootcamp at week eight postpartum because you want to “get it done.” You’ll either get hurt or stall out, both bad. Coached return takes longer than it feels like it should and the rewards compound.

Treating walking as “not training”

In the first three months particularly, walking with the pram is one of the most useful things you can do. Pelvic floor, posture, breath, circulation, mood. Don’t dismiss it.

Skipping the core and pelvic floor work because it feels too gentle

This is the foundation. Skip it and you’ll be lifting on a broken base. Spend three weeks on it properly and the rest of the year compounds.

Comparing yourself to non-mum members in the room

Everyone in the room is on their own programme. The woman pulling 80kg next to you might be in week sixteen of her cohort. You’re in week two of yours. The comparison helps no one.

How to start with us

If you’re ready to return to strength training properly after a baby, the easiest first step is the six-week return programme for new mums. It walks through what’s included, cohort dates, and the application form.

If you’d rather read more first, our broader guide to strength training for women in Leamington Spa covers the underlying philosophy, and the overview of how Physical Formula coaches walks through the gym, the team and the approach.

If you’d rather just talk, email info@physicalformula.com with a sentence about where you are and what you’re hoping to do. A coach will reply within 24 hours.

Apply For The Next Cohort
Frequently asked

Quick answers.

When can I start exercising after having a baby?

Most women start light, coached return-to-training work between six and twelve weeks postpartum, after their six-week GP check. C-section recovery is typically longer, often twelve to sixteen weeks. The bigger question isn’t “how long since the birth” but “how is your pelvic floor, your breathing, your bleeding and your sleep”. Coached postpartum training adapts to all of those, not to a calendar date.

What is diastasis recti and can I still strength train with it?

Diastasis recti is a separation of the abdominal muscles that’s normal during pregnancy and very common postpartum. Yes, you can strength train with it, in fact you should, but the programming matters. Coached return-to-strength avoids exercises that bulge or dome the abdomen, focuses on rebuilding deep core and pelvic floor coordination first, then layers load on once the system is firing properly. A women’s health physio referral may be useful in some cases, and we’ll tell you if we think you need one.

Is it safe to lift weights when I’m breastfeeding?

Yes. Strength training is safe and beneficial during breastfeeding. We work around feeding schedules, milk supply, and the realities of broken sleep. Most of our breastfeeding members train fasted in the mornings or post-feed in the afternoons. None of them have reported supply changes from coached strength work.

How long until I feel like myself again after starting?

Most mums report feeling “noticeably better” within four to six weeks of consistent coached strength work, more energy, better posture, better mood, returning sense of capability. The bigger body composition shifts come over three to six months. The window where most members describe “feeling like themselves again” is around month two to three.

Where can I do postpartum personal training in Leamington Spa?

Physical Formula runs a postpartum-aware return-to-strength programme out of our studio at Unit 7E Rigby Close on the edge of Royal Leamington Spa. Coaching-led small group personal training is the format most new mums start with, six to eight people in a cohort, coached on movement, progressed properly. We also run a dedicated six-week return programme designed specifically for mums.

Can I bring my baby to the gym?

We don’t currently run babies-in-the-room sessions. Most mums find separating their training from their parenting helps both. Sessions are timed around school runs, naps and morning windows so you can train without the baby and still be home in time for the next feed.

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Training Postnatal
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Postpartum Strength New Mums Pelvic Floor Diastasis Recti Leamington Spa Warwickshire
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Six-week cohort · Limited spaces

Build back, properly coached.

The next cohort of the six-week return programme for new mums starts soon. Small group, real coaching, postpartum-aware programming. Apply for a free discovery call to see if it’s the right fit.

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