The Body Works Pilates Studio
Teaching Tip Tuesday
This simple sequence of exercises for strengthening the feet has proven time and again over the past 20 years to be tremendously effective.
Toe taps - 50 reps
Heel taps - 50 reps
Toes swishing inwards against the floor - 50 reps
Toes swishing outwards against the floor - 50 reps
Heels swishing inwards against the floor - 50 reps
Heels swishing outwards against the floor - 50 reps
Inchworm - 4 sets of 5 x forward & back
Terrific for developing strength of all the intrinsic muscles through the feet. Pair this with the foot mobility work from our Good Gait class, based on the Anatomy in Motion work by Gary Ward, and you will have the most supple and strong feet.
Tuesday Teaching Tip
I recently had an interesting conversation with a client about this exercise, the Spine Stretch. She really wanted to feel where the effort was; she was searching for ‘the burn’. It took a little while to talk her down from that perspective. You can see in the video I do several reps, two in relatively good classical form, two in the thrusting dive forward that the client was trying to do, and then two more good reps. Her focus was on how forcefully she could dive forward, thinking that this was the big effort for the exercise. She was missing out on two fundamental points implicit in all Pilates exercises: whole body movement and spinal mobility.
We start bringing the the arms forward, moving through the shoulders and shoulder blades with ease, not closing down with tension.
We then flex forward through the spine, articulating through each vertebral joint down the spine to open space through the posterior space of these joints, through into hip flexion. The arms are actively reaching forward, increasing the shoulder flexion and pulling the shoulder blades further apart to release the posterior shoulder girdle muscles.
We stack the vertebrae back to vertical, activating all of the deep to superficial back extensors sequentially up the spine, lifting the vertebrae up off each other to our ideal spinal alignment. Pressing down through the sitz bones and thighs further integrates the whole posterior kinetic chain. The passive arm release back to a neutral shoulder position teaches the brain that while one part of the body may be actively working, another part can be releasing.
When done well, the Spine Stretch opens each and every vertebral joint through the posterior side, as well as then returning back to perfect posture, tractioning the vertebrae apart as we reach this alignment. Effectively this works the spine from both front and back, developing the strength to support the mobility through each vertebral joint. We learn how to move through the shoulder girdle with ease rather than binding down in tension. And we work through active hip flexion and extension.
A full body experience with a supple spine = Pilates.
And about the exhale…
After yesterday’s post about inhaling through the nose, I have had several questions about the Pilates exhale. When doing any Pilates exercise, we are generally working for the strongest and fullest exhale we can muster. A strong exhale is driven by the abs pulling the ribs down to squeeze the air out of the lungs. A strong exhale will recruit more abdominal fibres than any other core exercise. Test this out: put your hands on your abs and cough. What do you feel happen under your fingertips? You should feel those abs tense up and draw inwards, tightening up like a corset around your waistline. If you can feel that, you have four layers of abs totally coordinated.
And we exhale through the mouth making a shaped aperture. Test this out, as well. Try forcefully exhaling with a wide open mouth and then with deliberately shaped mouth. How well do you engage the abs with the wide open mouth? Probably not very well. A little shaping of the lips changes the ab coordination.
The simplest exercise to organize this breath out is to play with a pinwheel. Blow on the pinwheel, making it spin well, sustaining the spin until you have totally squeezed all of the air out of your lungs. A complete, strong, full exhale through the mouth is a Pilates exhalation.
I am not suggesting that have to walk around breathing like this all day long. We use this breathing technique when we do the Pilates exercises to optimize the core recruitment for these movements. You are compounding the strengthening intended in the exercises. You are also simply strengthening your respiratory muscles for when you need a greater respiratory output, like when you are climbing up that hill on your bicycle ride or being chased by that bear on your camping trip. And you have to admit - skipping down the street while blowing on your pinwheel, what could be more fun?
Tuesday Teaching Tips
We are back talking about breathing technique today. With every breath in Pilates, we inhale through the nose and exhale through the mouth. Nasal breathing, in general is the most efficient means of breathing for a whole litany of reasons. Why we want to inhale through the nose in Pilates is because this promotes the most effective recruitment of the diaphragm. In other words, we are neurologically hardwired to use our diaphragm most effectively when we inhale through our nose.
Yet, a lot of people still get this wrong by sniffing through the nose. As you can see for the first two breaths in the video, when I sniff, my nostrils actually close down on themselves. The breath becomes much more of a upper rib cage breath. And you can see how much my neck muscles are recruited. This does not use the diaphragm, only the intercostals and superficial inspiratory muscles.
A simple cue to ensure you are inhaling well is to deliberately draw the breath in through the nose into the back of the throat. The nostrils should automatically expand, creating a bigger diameter passageway through the nose. And you should feel the diaphragm expand more thoroughly around the whole circumference of the lower rib cage, as demonstrated in the second two breaths on the video. This is a true diaphragmatic breath, a perfect 360 degree breath. Taking the inhale cuing further, I ask my clients to inhale through the nose, drawing the breath into the back of the throat and down into the bottom of the lungs to the 12th ribs. And to be able to do this through every rep of every single Pilates exercise requires a whole lot of concentration and control, exactly what Joseph Pilates asked for when he designed all of this work.
Tuesday Teaching Tip
For today’s tip, I want to address a critical safety tip for all Pilates practitioners - the importance of a good quality mat. There are several mat exercises that put weight onto a flexing or fully flexed spine: Roll Over, Rolling Like a Ball, Open Leg Rocking, Jackknife, Seal and more. In these spinal flexion exercises, the weight of the body is loaded through the spine more directly through the spinous processes of the vertebrae, the knobby points that you can touch on your back. Simply put, these exercises expose these bony projection more when you flex the spine. And you need decent cushioning to protect these bony points of the vertebrae.
Get yourself a reasonably cushioned mat to do your matwork on. A yoga mat is NOT sufficient. There are several Pilates-specific mats on the market that you can purchase. These are usually about 1 cm or more thick. What I use here at the studio is a camping mat made by Thermarest, called Ridgerest. These are inexpensive and last for decades (I kid you not, I only replaced my original stock five years ago and I have been in business for 25 years).
Again, this is a critical point for safety. Doing these exercises on a poorly cushion mat, you can bruise or even fracture a spinous process. I have done this before practicing my mat exercises on a s**g carpet with what I thought was a thick underlay. It took two months for the bone bruise to heal. And, if you have any degree of osteopenia or osteoporosis, these particular exercises are completely contraindicated. Let’s play safe when we move.
Tuesday Teaching Tip
Stretching the deep external rotators.
Did you know that there are six muscles deep across the back of the hip joint that are dedicated to rotating your femur (thigh bone) outwards in external rotation (what every ballet dancer works for in turnout). These small but powerful muscles also form a hammock for your pelvis to rest on and thus provide a role in organizing pelvis alignment over your legs.
If they are too tight, they will force the ball of the femur upwards and forwards in the hip socket. This stretch for these muscles is an adaptation from a myo-fascial stretch by the French osteopath, Guy Voyer.
For the side that we are stretching, we are bracing the leg in internal rotation against the floor; the other leg is held in external rotation. Sit with the pelvis as square as possible. You can sit up on a mat, yoga block or pillow to get the sitz bones as level as possible. Rotate the spine towards the internally rotated leg, using your core and your arms. Rotate until you hit the end point of your twist. Go a little further and you will feel how you start to leverage your pelvis back away from the femur (think of pulling your back pocket towards the wall behind you). And reach out through the leg, pulling your knee forward. The goal is to open more space across the back of the hip joint. Hang out for 4 - 6 breaths, increasing the turn every exhale.
Once you have completed the stretch, lay down on you back and do 10 small leg swings. Allow the femur to fall back in the hip socket as the leg comes up to vertical.
Some people experience knee pain along the inside line of the knee from this stretch. Do the stretch judiciously, not taking any structure, knee or hip, into the range causing pain. You may have to work on this repeatedly to gently coax length out of all the tissues around the hip joint. Listen to your body as you do this or any stretch.
Practicing this regularly will free up the hip joint and allow for more swing in your stride.
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