The 6 Stages of Toilet Meditation with Shelly Prosko
By: Shelly Prosko, PT, CPI, C-IAYT; Editor: Nataliya Zlotnikov, MSc, HBSc ∙ Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
By: Shelly Prosko, PT, CPI, C-IAYT; Editor: Nataliya Zlotnikov, MSc, HBSc ∙ Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
Can you meditate while pooping?
Mindfulness practices are gaining popularity and even appear trendy these days.
Perhaps it is because we know, and have experienced, that there is tremendous value in being present and mindful throughout our day.
We talk about mindfulness during many activities such as driving, walking, exercising, eating, socializing, etc.; so why not also be mindful while going to the bathroom?
Yes, mindful pooping!
Image source: Pelvic Health Support
Meditation for bowel movement
Being fully present and aware of our bodies, minds and emotions can help release the pelvic floor muscles when we perform our toilet duties, resulting in successfully completing our task.
We oftentimes are in a hurry and rushing with the attitude of ‘hurry up and just get it over with, I have something important waiting’ or our minds are elsewhere as we are texting or reading, which can be distracting from our present intention of the moment: to empty and eliminate!
This could lead to not fully relaxing and releasing the pelvic floor muscles, or not fully emptying the bowel or bladder, which may potentially contribute to or exacerbate a variety of pelvic health issues like:
- Urinary urgency
- Frequency
- Incontinence
- Constipation
- Pelvic pain conditions
I have a short 'Toilet Meditation' that I like to share with my clients/students that involves 6 stages, using the acronym “AIRBAG” to help you remember (more on this below).
Shelly Prosko's 7-minute Toilet Meditation
This above meditation is also part of Shelly's online healthcare course, PhysioYoga and the Pelvic Floor.
Learn more in the course
PhysioYoga and the Pelvic Floor
Toilet Meditation using AIRBAG acronym
If you are sitting on the toilet, it’s a good idea to place your feet up on some blocks so that your knees are slightly higher than your hips.
This is an ideal position for your pelvic floor muscles to be released and allows for proper elimination, particularly for bowel movements.
If you are standing during urination, these toilet meditation stages of “AIRBAG” can still be performed.
What follows is a lovely explanation of the AIRBAG acronym that you can learn and share with your clients.
Awareness (A)
A brief body scan from head to toe, simply observing sensations that you may be experiencing both externally and internally, without judgment. You may include awareness of thoughts and emotions, without elaborating on a story or analyzing.
Imagination (I)
Use your visualization skills to imagine your pelvic floor and the general area where the pelvic floor muscles are located: they expand across the inside of the front, sides and back of the pelvis, the tailbone and the sacrum. Visualize where the bladder and bowel are positioned and imagine them emptying and that the pelvic floor muscles spanning across the pelvic floor are healthy and functioning optimally.
Release & Relax (R)
Let go of any tension in the pelvic floor muscles as best as you can. Releasing and relaxing these muscles can sometimes be difficult for a variety of reasons. Letting go may take courage, trust, concentration and practice.
Breathe (B)
Allow your natural breath pattern to emerge.
Sometimes when we ‘try’ to breathe, we create more tension that results in unnatural patterns that don’t serve a relaxed state.
As you quietly inhale, the belly will naturally go ‘out’ and the pelvic floor will descend. As you exhale, the belly and pelvic floor muscles will return to their resting positions. During your pooping meditation, see if you can simply allow the quiet rhythm of the abdominopelvic diaphragmatic breath to happen on its own without trying to change it.
Allow (A)
This ‘allowing’ is a little more than just releasing and relaxing or allowing the breath to happen on its own. See if you can really give yourself permission to trust that your body knows what to do and when to do it.
Perhaps you feel the need to ‘push’ gently (do not strain) or you feel like you want to take a deep breath or lean forward or place your feet in a different position.
The more refined your awareness skills are, the more you can trust what feels right, and not always what you think you should do.
Gratitude (G)
I think it is a healthy practice to not only be completely present and mindful when toileting but also to honour this sophisticated and truly complex function that our body does for us daily without us even asking it to.
So each time you complete your toileting event and bathroom meditation, see what it feels like to send a little gratitude to your body and all its incredibly phenomenal parts to end your meditation!!
Take Shelly's Online Course
PhysioYoga & The Pelvic Floor
What does this course offer:
What will you learn in Shelly's online healthcare course, PhysioYoga and the Pelvic Floor?
Honestly, quite a lot.
Too much to put into this blog. So if you are curious, check out the course page by clicking on the yellow button above.
In brief, though, this course intends to offer a theoretical and experiential integration of accessible and practical yoga methods and philosophy with evidence-informed practices to enhance overall pelvic floor health and wellness.
The course is intended for:
Rehabilitation professionals and movement specialists including but not limited to:
- Physiotherapists
- Physiotherapy assistants
- Occupational therapists
- Occupational therapy assistants
- Athletic therapists
- Exercise therapists
- Kinesiologists
- Yoga teachers
- Yoga therapists
- Movement specialists who are interested in learning more about yoga and pelvic floor health and wellness.
If you'd like to learn more, take a look at Shelly Prosko's course, PhysioYoga and the Pelvic Floor!
Happy Toileting!
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Date written: 30 Sept 2019
Last update: 1 Feb 2024
PT, C-IAYT, PCAYT
Shelly is a physiotherapist, yoga therapist, educator, author and pioneer of PhysioYoga who has been integrating yoga into physiotherapy since 1998 with a focus on chronic pain, pelvic health, compassion in healthcare and professional burnout. She guest lectures at numerous yoga therapy and physiotherapy schools, presents at yoga and medical conferences globally, contributes to academic research and writing, provides mentorship to professionals, and offers courses and resources for yoga and healthcare practitioners and the general population. Shelly is a Pain Care Aware Lead Trainer.
She considers herself a lifelong student and emphasizes the immense value gained from clinical experience and learning from the patients she serves, the professionals she teaches, and the colleagues with which she collaborates.
Shelly has written several book chapters in yoga therapy and integrative rehabilitation textbooks and is co-editor/author of Yoga and Science in Pain Care: Treating the Person in Pain. She maintains a clinical practice in Sylvan Lake, Alberta, Canada and believes compassion is the foundation of healthcare and overall well-being.
Learn more about Shelly’s work at www.physioyoga.ca to learn more