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Several years ago, I (also) taught yoga to pregnant women. As an extra, there was the possibility of making a pregnancy mandala. How you can make one of these mandalas is explained in this article, and several of the mandalas that were made then are also shown.
Pregnancy MandalaYou make a pregnancy mandala for your child, so he or she can look back later
on the time before his or her birth; a time that is easily forgotten, but is
also important in view of human development. The women who make the mandala, use it to represent their pregnancy up to the birth of their child. It is fun to work on it and it helps the women to experience their pregnancy more consciously. This was the underlying intention of the design: by representing your own feelings, you experience them more intensely and more consciously. By drawing a mandala about her pregnancy, the mother-to-be will be stimulated,
without being forced, to pay conscious attention to the thing that is so important:
within her, new life is growing, and everything that is developing needs the
proper energy to achieve optimal growth. This can be achieved through loving
attention. Therefore, it is important that you work on your mandala seriously
and with pleasure. Only then will you create something of value for yourself
and your baby. And if the result is not that great, so what? You can always
start again. You can find nice pictures in books and magazines and you can ask
for advice from people who know more about colours and drawing than you.
You can make a pregnancy mandala by drawing, painting, sculpting or whatever you want. Below, you will find an explanation of the technique according to my design. Once you understand the principle, you can choose the materials you want to work with. The process you are working on is the most important thing. It forces you to think about conception, pregnancy, birth and your role in this as a parent. In principle, you start the mandala during the pregnancy, but you can also start later. In case of adoption, you can also make a mandala. This has to be done in a slightly different way, because you cannot represent the period before the birth. The mandalas "Badra" and "Anthon" show how an adoption-mother created beautiful adoption-mandalas when her children were already adults. The technique below is a guideline. If it feels better to deviate from it, you definitely should. The mandala “"Iris" is an example of this.
Technique. Materials: drawing paper of good quality (A3 size), a compass, ruler, soft pencil (f.e. 2B), thinliner, eraser, soft colour pencils. Design/plan: When making a mandala, you always work from the inside out, because
the process is from the inside to the outside. So in the centre you draw the
conception. Suggestions: a yin-yang sign (example 3), an embryo (can be copied
from a book), spiral-shapes, sperm and egg cells… The mandala is quartered by lines A, B, C, and D. (do not let
them cross the conception circle and the birth line). The quartering within the circle of 3,5 cm has the following meaning: the top box represents ‘heaven’, the bottom is ‘the earth’, the left is “the father”, and the right “the mother”: the four conditions for conception, see example 2. For ‘heaven’, you use the colour of the heaven, which
means the colour that you (the person drawing) thinks represents heaven. In
example 1, the colour is blue. The ‘heaven’ is then depicted in
the top box with blue as its primary colour. The meaning ‘that which binds’ belongs to the part of the lines A, B, C and D that is connected to the 9 circles. They are guiding lines (see example 1) that can be erased later. A= what connects the father to the earth? The lines are enveloped by a (fantasy)drawing, which is coloured with the adjacent
primary colours: what connects the father to the earth receives the primary
colours of both the father and the earth, what connects the mother to the heaven
gets the colours of both the mother and the heaven, etc. To give the mandala
enough expression, you can use other, corresponding colours. Sometimes, 4 colours
are chosen that do not correspond well together: don’t change them, these
are your colours! Find other corresponding colours that help create a nice unity.
The open spaces between the 9 circles will become a “month book”: every month, you write a sentence with the most important event of that month. The sentences can be varied with drawings if you like, for example of a flower that blooms in that month, the weather circumstances, etc. Be creative. Write in pencil first, so you can erase it later if needed, because it is quite difficult to get a sentence to fit. After the birth, you fill in the outside, which should be in harmony with the whole and which, in your opinion, suits your baby. The mandala can now be framed for the nursery! Tips:
Good luck, LAMMY.
Click the links below and see how it might turn out:
Translation by Iris van Duren © Lammy Reinders, Groesbeek 1999-2012.
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