FITNESS Pre-Natal Pushups Pregnant women and new moms must look carefully for organized exercise opportunities that cater to their 'condition.' Ann Mendelbaum's sweatshirt makes the point during a pre-natal exercise class at the Maple/Drake JCC. MIKE ROSENBAUM Sports Writer p regnancy springs many sur- prises on a woman, including, if she is fitness-conscious, fin- ding an organized exercise program. It is easier to find a health club with classes, rather than a class specifical- ly for pregnant women. The Maple/Drake Jewish Com- munity Center offers exclusive pre- and post-natal exercise classes. Vicki Spisak, coordinator of the Center's program, offers land and water classes for pregnant women and a separate program for new moms and their babies. Other clubs have knowledgeable staff who advise their pregnant female clients on how to work out. They, like the Center, operate under the guidelines set down by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Spisak says women at any stage of pregnancy can join the Center's classes if they meet certain guidelines. "We usually suggest that they start after their third month. But they all have to have a doctor's note or physician's approval. And they can exercise all the way up into their last month?' Cindy Ockerman, aerobics direc- tor at Franklin Racquet Club, taught classes through seven months of her second pregnancy. "And the eighth month I did low-impact (aerobics) .. . But that was three and-a-half years ago. I don't even let my teachers do that now." The Center's pre-natal program includes stretching, pelvic tilts, arm motions, knee bends and non-impact aerbics. Expectant mothers do relax- ation exercises at the end of the workout, then sit down for a discus- sion on pregnancy, child care, etc. The water classes are similar, with greater emphasis on exercises done while holding onto the edge of the pool. "It's really nice in the water," says Spisak. "They get to use the resistance of the water to tone the muscles and they don't get the poun- ding. If they have a backache, knee problems, anything, the water is the perfect place for them to be." Pregnant women at Franklin go into regular classes. Once Ockerman knows they are pregnant, she tells them "certain things as far as what they should or shouldn't be doing and expecting. And when we're doing cer- tain exercises, we give them other ex- ercises?' The main changes Ockerman makes in pregnant women's workouts involve keeping their heart rates "The more pregnant you are the more awful you feel as far as looking at yourself in the mirror. And knowing that you're staying within your weight range ... is definitely going to make you feel better." below 140 beats per minute and keep- ing them off of their backs. "Certain abdominal exercises I wouldn't let them do;' she says. "I sug- gest they lie on their left side for a lot of the work, to do it there or just do pelvic tilts or something instead of the abdominal exercises, for free ox- ygen and blood flow to the baby. .I sug- gest they don't use weights or rubber bands because they don't need the ex- cess stress on their joints. And I en- courage them to drink lots of fluids throughout the class. If I don't see them do that I'll make them go out at least three or four times through the class. And we recommend that they take the low-impact classes as opposed to high-impact." The Beverly Hills Racquet Club, like Franklin, has no special classes but gets many pregnant and post- pregnant women. Beverly Hills is con- sidering a pre- and post-natal pro- gram beginning this fall when their swimming pool is completed. Mean- while, their instructors are taught the national guidelines. Miry Perna, junior fitness direc- tor at Beverly Hills, formerly taught pre- and post-natal fitness at the Jewish Center. Now six months into her first pregnancy, she is doing a high-tech workout involving tread- mill walking and weight machines. She uses "very low" weight resistance with high repetitions. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 55