Health Books
NATURAL WOMAN
Herbal Remedies for Radiant Health
at Every Age and Stage of Life
By Dr. Leslie Korn
9781611806717 | $24.95 | 12.17.19
THE FOURTH TRIMESTER CARDS
Daily Support, Inspiration, and
Wisdom for New Mothers
By Kimberly Ann Johnson
9781611807646 | $18.95 | 11.12.19
ACCESSIBLE YOGA
Poses and Practices for Every Body
By Jivana Heyman
9781611807127 | $24.95 | 11.05.19
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publications
Beyond the Pain
PW talks with Taq Kaur Bhandal
says. “That means they’ve moved on from this idea of wellness as merely physical,
to a holistic approach that includes the spiritual.” Magical Self-Care for Everyday
Life by Leah Vanderveldt—who, like Jessica Cording of Little Book of Game Changers,
is a MindBodyGreen contributor—mingles breathing exercises, stretching, and
recipes “to ground each chapter,” Richards says, with tarot, astrology, and moon
rituals.
Vanderveldt calls for women to get in touch with their own sources of power, in
what she refers to as the “goddess” space. Similar themes are found in Self-Care
Down There by Taq Kaur Bhandal (Adams, Feb. 2020; see “Beyond the Pain,” below),
which covers vaginal and pelvic health. Bhandal discusses fairly mainstream tools and
In Self-Care Down There (Adams, Feb.
2020), Bhandal, a menstrual health
coach in British Columbia, considers
vaginal wellness from a variety of
sex-positive perspectives, biological as
well as spiritual. Having encountered
“so much hesitancy around even say-
ing the word vagina,” she notes, she
encourages readers, the way she does
her patients, to see that having conver-
sations around “pelvic, menstrual, and
vaginal health are a way to take care of
ourselves, and are a source of power.”
Your book oscillates between main-
stream advice and what you call
“sacred self-care” sections. How do
these two approaches relate to each
other?
When most people think about their
period, they’re thinking about how
they’re going to just get through it.
A lot of my work is showing them
that, beyond the pain, our vaginas are
sources of learning about how to be
comfortable in our own bodies. Spirit
and mind are part of that.
Multiple perspectives on what
vaginal healthcare is can exist. Main-
stream health-care practices tend to
see things like painkillers as the way
to support vaginal health, and I think
ibuprofen is a miracle drug. I see value
in research, and peer-reviewed studies,
and randomized control studies. But I
also identify as a Punjabi woman with
ancestral roots in India and Pakistan,
so I wanted to look at the Vedic prac-
tice of yoga and what that can mean
to health, as well as Buddhist mind-
fulness meditation. In the 21st century
we have knowledge of many different
practices and can look at them all
rather than privileging one over
another.
You equate vaginal wellness with
empowerment—how so?
Women and nonbinary folks have been
trained to not really know a lot about
what’s going on down there. We don’t
even feel comfortable talking about
our vaginas. If we can’t bring them up
in conversation, how can we have posi-
tive dialogue around them? We’ve
been taught to think about our periods
as dirty things that need to be covered
up and managed; the main word we
use around them is hygiene. So bring-
ing forth the idea of our vaginas as a
source of power is a tool to not only
reclaim our bodies, but to not feel
shame about them.
Whom do you see as your
readership?
The people I want to speak to are
young people just coming into the
world of adulting; they’re graduating
from high school or university, maybe