Marine Baak - Yoga

Marine Baak - Yoga

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✨ Helping women 35+ reconnect with themselves ✨
🌸 Yoga for hormones, stress & sleep
⬇️ My women-only online Membership ⬇️
Try it for free for 10 days

Cours en ligne de Yoga des Hormones :

Jeudis à 7h et à 19h, sur Zoom. Pour plus de renseignements et réserver : https://marinebaaklini.com/contact

A bientôt,

Marine

Photos from Marine Baak - Yoga's post 09/06/2026

Here’s what nobody tells you about Monday morning exhaustion:

It didn’t start on Monday.

It started on Sunday, or rather, on a Sunday that didn’t give your body what it needed to actually reset. A Sunday spent half-recovering, half-worrying, never fully either.

Your hormones are not a Monday-to-Friday system. They’re running 24/7, and Sunday is one of the most important days in the whole cycle. How you eat, how you sleep, whether you get outside, whether you allow yourself even one moment of real enjoyment, your body is tracking all of it.

The good news? The signals don’t need to be big. They just need to be intentional.

Swipe for five things to do before the week starts, so your hormones aren’t playing catch-up before Tuesday even arrives. 👆

(Save this. Seriously. Come back to it every Sunday. 🔖)

👇 Which of these five is the hardest one for you to actually do?

Photos from Marine Baak - Yoga's post 07/06/2026

Here’s what nobody tells you about the habit you’ve restarted three times this year:
It’s not a willpower problem.

It’s not a motivation problem. It’s not proof that you’re too busy, too inconsistent, or somehow fundamentally bad at taking care of yourself. You’re not. You’ve just been trying to build something on ground that wasn’t ready for it.

Habits don’t live in discipline.

They live in the nervous system. And when your nervous system is running in survival mode, which most women over 40 are, quietly, without realising it, building new behaviours isn’t hard because you’re weak.

It’s hard because your brain is genuinely busy. Managing cortisol. Compensating for shifting hormones.

Recovering from another night of broken sleep. Stabilising blood sugar that’s been spiking and crashing since breakfast.

That’s not a character flaw. That’s biology.

The women I work with don’t need stricter plans or earlier alarms. They need the foundation that makes the habits actually stick, regulation first, behaviour second. And once that foundation is there, the things they’d been forcing for months start happening almost without thinking.

Swipe through to understand what’s actually been getting in the way, and where to start instead. 👆

(Save this for the next time you’re tempted to blame yourself. 🔖)

👇 How many times have you restarted the same habit this year?

Photos from Marine Baak - Yoga's post 05/06/2026

Most women are taught to minimize their symptoms before they ever step into the doctor’s office.

“It’s probably stress.”
“You’re just getting older.”
“Your labs are normal.”

But feeling dismissed doesn’t make your symptoms less real.
The truth is: the quality of the conversation often depends on the quality of the questions being asked.

Because hormone shifts, thyroid dysfunction and perimenopause rarely arrive with flashing warning signs. They show up quietly, through exhaustion, anxiety, brain fog, sleep disruption, weight changes and feeling unlike yourself.

And too many women are left trying to connect the dots alone.

This carousel gives you 5 questions worth bringing into the room with you, especially if you’ve ever walked out of an appointment feeling unheard.

Save this for your next visit.
Send it to a friend who’s been told “everything looks fine.”

And remember: advocating for yourself is not being difficult. It’s being informed.
👇 Which question do you wish someone had told you to ask sooner?

04/06/2026

It’s a question most women in their 40s have never thought to ask.

Because we’ve spent so long being told to do more. Train harder. Push through. Be consistent no matter how we feel.

And yet, for many women at this stage of life, that approach can quietly work against us.

Here’s what the science actually tells us.
When you’re under chronic stress, your body increases the production of stress hormones like cortisol.

And over time, elevated stress can influence the delicate communication between your brain, adrenal glands and reproductive hormones.

The result?
Changes in oestrogen and progesterone levels can contribute to symptoms such as disrupted sleep, lower energy, mood changes, weight gain and irregular cycles.

This is one reason why stress management is considered such an important part of hormonal health, especially during perimenopause.

Hormonal Yoga works differently.

It’s designed to support both the nervous system and the endocrine system, helping the body move away from chronic stress while supporting hormonal health.
Intentional movement. Dynamic breathwork. Carefully selected postures designed to support the body’s natural hormonal balance.

It’s not gentle because it’s easy.
It’s gentle because your body is finally being listened to.

And for women who have spent years pushing, this is often where everything starts to change.

If you’ve never heard of Hormonal Yoga before, save this post. This is exactly what I teach, and exactly where I’d love to start with you.

👇 Have you ever tried a movement practice specifically designed to support your hormonal health?

Tell me in the comments.

01/06/2026

For most women, the answer to that question feels uncomfortable.

Because we were taught that results require effort. That progress means pushing. That if it isn’t hard, it isn’t working.

But what if that belief is exactly what’s keeping you stuck?

After 40, your body doesn’t respond to force the way it used to. Your hormones, oestrogen, progesterone, cortisol, are in a constant conversation with your nervous system. And when that system is under chronic stress, it doesn’t matter how disciplined you are or how hard you train.

Your body will hold on. To tension. To weight. To fatigue. To everything you’ve been trying to release.

What actually creates change at this stage isn’t more effort.

It’s safety.

A body that feels safe regulates its hormones more effectively. It sleeps more deeply. It recovers faster. It lets go, of stress, of inflammation, of the constant low hum of survival mode that so many women have normalised without even realising it.

Slow, intentional movement is one of the most direct ways to send that signal.

Not because it’s easy. Because it’s intelligent.

It works with your biology rather than against it. It lowers cortisol instead of spiking it. It tells your nervous system that the emergency is over.

And when your body finally believes that, things start to shift in ways that no amount of pushing ever could.

This is what I practice. This is what I teach. And this is what I’ve seen change everything for women who were doing all the right things and still not feeling well.

If this made you think differently about how you’ve been approaching your health, save it. Share it. And when you’re ready to go deeper, you know where to find me.

👇 What’s one thing your body has been asking for that you keep pushing to the bottom of the list?

Photos from Marine Baak - Yoga's post 31/05/2026

Most women are taught to expect perimenopause to begin with hot flushes and irregular periods.

But for many, it starts much earlier, quietly.

As anxiety that appeared out of nowhere.
As brain fog.
As broken sleep.
As feeling unlike yourself in ways you can’t explain.

And because nobody talks about these symptoms enough, so many women assume they’re stressed, failing, burnt out, or “just getting older.”
They’re not.

Perimenopause is a hormonal transition that can begin years before your final period, and understanding it changes everything.

This post is the conversation I wish more women were having openly.
Because when you finally realise there’s a reason behind what you’ve been feeling, the shame starts to lift.

If any part of this felt familiar, you are not alone.

Tell me, which symptom surprised you the most?

Photos from Marine Baak - Yoga's post 25/05/2026

Most women over 40 aren’t tired because they’re lazy.

They’re tired because their body is changing, and nobody explained how.
If you’ve been waking up exhausted, pushing through brain fog, or wondering why your energy feels different lately… this is for you.

Your hormones, stress response, thyroid, inflammation, and years of over-functioning all play a role.

The good news?
Your fatigue is not “just aging”, and it’s not something you have to accept forever.

Save this post for later, and send it to a woman who needs to hear this today. 💛

👇 Follow for more real conversations about women’s health after 40.

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