Archive for the ‘Pilates’ category

Pilates Will Change Your Body

August 4th, 2011

We all aim to cultivate strength, vigor, control, intensity, energy and other characteristics generally associated with power. They are also the beneficial outcomes from consistent and devoted Pilates practice. If your athletic or a couch potato, young or old, or somewhere in between, Pilates has a role to play as you seek to develop a lifetime habit of exercising sensibly and successfully. Once learned, the critical elements of this exercise can be yours forever, to take with you as you stay active.

Pilates is a whole body exercise program that at once strengthens and lengthens your muscles. You will certainly get toned abdominals with this exercise as the traditional “ab work” you may have participated in at a gym cannot measure up to what Pilates has to offer. Get ready to embrace a program that is diverse, challenging and exciting and say goodbye to doing hundreds of crunches.

This exercise is powerful because it uses the mind to improve the body. Your focus, concentration and attention are called upon with every movement. Without this mental aspect fully engaged you would simply be doing movements and you would not be doing Pilates.

It will take power to engage your whole self with each exercise. Every part of your body will be called upon to move, or not to move. Amazingly, it will be this movement inhibition that will be most challenging, taking weeks and months of practice to attain, and years to perfect. You will see changes to your body from the inside out.

The key to achievement is using your mind as well as your body and you won’t tune out with this exercise, instead every movement, every repetition, is performed with concentration and mental control. You will learn to tune in to precisely what your body is doing and not doing, what is moving and what is not moving. Your body will gain new wisdom. » Read more: Pilates Will Change Your Body

Men: Practicing Pilates

August 4th, 2011

Some men can, some men do. Some will, some won’t. Everyone needs it. Practice that is. Practice for physical conditioning, refinement and perfection.

And it usually happens. Within the weeks preceding or following an elite athlete’s game, be it golf, basketball, football or tennis, a new name is mentioned for the work they are doing with the practice of Pilates to stretch, strengthen and lengthen their bodies as a regular part of their athletic training.

I am proud of all these individuals for their game, all the wins and accolades they achieve. I know that I join Pilates teachers across the globe in being equally proud of each of the studios and teachers that regularly work with this special client group, as they bring a lot of notoriety to the overall art, method and practice of Pilates.

The names of the individuals are familiar, Jason Kidd, NJ Nets; Lebron James, Miami Heat; Tiger Woods, Rich Beem, Rocco Mediate, PG; R.W. McQuarters, 11-year NFL player; Curt Schilling, Boston Red Sox. The reasons these men have pursued the practice of Pilates is as varied and different as each of the sports they call their own.

Lebron James and the Miami Heat didn’t win the 2011 series, yet, his rationale and appreciation for the use of the Method, is spot on, “Pilates is all about the core. The extremities just hang on as our middle beautifully orchestrates every maneuver we make for each and every exercise.” » Read more: Men: Practicing Pilates

The Evolution of Mind Body Training

August 4th, 2011

Pilates is for conditioning and toning the core body through a sequence of specifically designed exercises. These exercises are aimed to improve core strength, muscle tone, flexibility, coordination and muscle control. The creator, Joseph Pilates, originally set out to help rehabilitate injured soldiers from World War I. He used a system of gears and pulleys to create machines like the Reformer and Cadillac to help aid with targeting muscle groups. Dancers immediately took to Pilates to help align their bodies and achieve a lean muscular tone. Pilates has become more mainstream because of its specific methods to stabilize the core body and build lean body mass without bulking up using weights.

Originally, Joseph Pilates used the resistance of bed springs so that bed ridden soldiers could maximize their rehabilitation routine of refined movement. From there, the invention of the Reformer and the Cadillac machines have enhanced the quality of working the targeted core muscles in your trunk (called the powerhouse), thereby stabilizing the body. These machines are also used with weight training programs that utilize the use of the resistance of the springs and trolleys to achieve a strengthened core body. Joanna Bell, a Pilates Reformer Instructor at Extreme Fitness in Toronto, compares Pilates with fluency in scales with music. With a solid knowledge of the basics, the core body (and scales) can be referred to when creating masterpieces.

Pilates has six basic principles since its beginnings in the 1920′s.
1. Centering (strengthening The Powerhouse-abdominal muscles, pelvis, buttocks and lower back)
2. Concentration (using full attention)
3. Control (achieving total muscle control)
4. Precision (movement has purpose)
5. Breathing (movement is coordinated with breathing)
6. Flow (movements are fluid) » Read more: The Evolution of Mind Body Training