Educated crowd-anyone tried Pilates?

Flex

Active Member
Hi everyone,

I've recently pulled a tendon or muscle in my forearm (it's my right arm too, which is my "working" arm - argh!!!) I knew I couldn't do any upper body weights, but thought I could do lower. Well, I can't even get the barbell up past my knees without pain!!!

I am an avid weight trainer (all Cathe videos of course). While I'm recovering, I'm going to have to sub some other forms of toning. Has anyone tried Pilates? I weight train 3-4 times per week and am worried about losing strength and tone.
 
Hi Flex,

I do pilates/ballet tapes quite regularly.

I also find that when I pull or strain a muscle, pilates and ballet type workouts workouts tend to keep me toned and stretched out, I actually find that I recover much quicker through doing them (its probably in the mind) basically I maintain what I already have but even if you were to lose strength, it would only be minor and it would only be a matter of weeks before you start gaining it back.

Plus you dont want to injure yourself any further by stressing the muscle unecessarily through weights, and defeat the purpose of all your hard work.
Just my point of view, hope you get better soon.


luv Hotchick:)
 
I have the Winsor Pilates set and I love it. My back used to be sore all the time and this really fixes that!!

Danielle :7
 
I include yoga & Pilates in my fitness routine. Pilates is generally more focused on core strength while yoga is total body. You would have to skip some moves (e.g. planks & pushups). But it would give you something new to focus on while your arm recovers.

Also consider doing unweighted standing leg work. Leaner Legs is still tough using body weight. Or consider a weighted vest. And you can still do floor work using ankle weights, body bar, etc.

Recovering from an injury is frustrating but be PATIENT! Take care.

Debra
 
Thanks all for the input. By the way, what are some of your favourite/very challenging pilates or yoga videos?
 
My favorite Pilates video is called "Advanced Body Slimming" by Winsor Pilates. I LOVE it because it hits everything in only 20 minutes. It's great!!

Danielle :7
 
I bet it's not just in your mind that pilates/ballet helps. IMHO, anything that increases blood flow without straining the injury has got to speed recovery.

Flex, it can be a drag to be injured if you let it, so BRAVO to you for using this time to explore new ways to have fun. In time you'll get back to where you were or even better.

Do you have access to a library that has pilates videos or DVDs that you can screen? In my town, both the public library and a local video rental place have exercise videos. You could also ask physical therapists if they could lend you any or at least recommend good ones. Pilates teachers might be willing to let you sit in on a class, too, to see if you'd like to sign up for more.

Hope you recover soon!
 
Hi flex,

I love Moira stotts pilates matwork series(essential, intermediate, advanced)

Jennifer Kries (3 dimensional toning,perfect mix, dance to fitness and target specifics,

Karen voights (pilates total body training,abs & back and core essentials)

New york city ballet workout, ballet bootcamp 1 & 2, and the ballet workout.

the new lotte berk method videos look very good too, but I have not tried them yet.

all the above can be very challenging in different ways, and some are fusions a mixture of pilates, dance and a minimum of yoga.

Flex why dont you watch some of the clips of these on collage video, it might give you a feel of what you may like.

luv Hotchick:D
 
Hi Flex! (Looong)

Here is a newsletter I received tday from WedMD! Hope this helps. Good Luck with your injury!

:Original article:
http://aolsvc.health.webmd.aol.com/content/Article/61/71424.htm


Have You Tried Pilates Yet?

By Barbara Russi Sarnataro
WedMD Feature Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD
on Tuesday, March 04, 2003

On a bed-like machine with a moving carriage, straps and springs, Robin Harrison balances on her shoulders with her bare feet in straps above her head. From this impressive position, she bends her knees toward her ears and deeply exhales as she articulates her spine back onto the carriage.


Harrison is doing Pilates (puh-LAH-teez), the system of strengthening and stretching exercises designed to develop the body's core (abdominals, low back, hips, and gluteals) and the hottest trend in the mind-body fitness craze sweeping the nation. The Little Rock, Ark., pharmaceutical sales rep is coached through an hour-long series of positions on a mat and several different machines resembling medieval torture equipment with names such as the Reformer, the Cadillac, and the Barrel. When she's through, she feels stretched and strengthened.

"Around my whole midsection I feel so much leaner," she says. "It's not just me -- I've gotten compliments from other people noticing I look thinner. I've lost inches and my clothes fit differently."


Harrison, 35, was drawn to Pilates six months ago with its promise of more lengthened muscles, increased flexibility (she's a runner with short, tight hamstrings) and a sleeker shape. In a few months, she has whittled her stomach, trimmed her hips, and stretched her hamstrings, all without wearing out her running shoes.


Once known only to dancers and celebrities, Pilates has become more mainstream, with studios popping up like Starbucks across the country. Many health clubs have jumped on the bandwagon as well, including Pilates mat classes in their schedules. Enthusiasts everywhere sing its praises to all within earshot -- bragging about how they consciously sit and stand straighter. Back and neck pain have disappeared for some, inches have for others.


"I could really tell the difference after about two months," says Harrison. "Since I was stronger in my abs, I had a lot less back pain."


Little Rock lawyer Wooten Epes has been plagued with chronic low back pain since a series of car accidents left him with a fusion of two vertebrae in his lumbar spine. He began doing Pilates with a private instructor a year ago and has been able to build muscle mass in the supporting muscles of his back, legs, and gluteals.


"After the first session I knew it was exactly what I needed," says Epes, 55. "It allowed me to exercise and not be afraid I was going to hurt my back."



The once-underweight Epes gained muscle mass and a new lease on life. "I have more stamina," he says. "It has allowed me to do more things without having more pain."


The discipline is far from new, born from the mind of German-born Joseph H. Pilates nearly a century ago. A sickly child plagued with asthma and rickets, he obsessed about the perfect body, something to combine the physique of the ancient Greeks with the meditative strength of the East. The result was a system of exercises he called contrology, requiring intense concentration and centered mainly on a strong abdomen and deep stretching. It worked for him. Pilates became a boxer, diver, skier, gymnast, yoga devotee, and incredible physical testament to his method.


Pilates taught his method to wounded English soldiers during World War I, using springs he removed from their hospital beds to support and assist them as he developed techniques to increase their range of motion.


When Pilates immigrated to the U.S. in 1926, dance titans George Balanchine and Martha Graham, on the lookout for safe exercises and rehabilitation fitness for their dancers, embraced Pilates, saving it from obscurity until the rest of the world could catch on.


Along with the celebrity appeal, the trend toward a mindful approach to fitness has helped elevate Pilates to the forefront of health clubs and rehabilitation communities alike.


"People aren't getting what they were looking for in their traditional health club workouts," says Aliesa George, Pilates instructor and studio owner in Wichita, Kan. "They don't see their bodies changing doing step aerobics or running on the treadmill, so they're looking for other activities."


Performed in a variety of combinations and levels of difficulty, exercises to build what Pilates called the "powerhouse" engage the mind and body in a fluid and precise rhythm. It's a thinking exercise.


"More people want to tune in," says George. "They're looking for a mental connection. Pilates is something you can't do while you're thinking about something else."


There's an intrinsic relevance to it, says Little Rock internist Hoyte Pyle, MD. Instead of working major muscle groups in isolation, says Pyle, "Pilates works the whole body in synergy," which is how we should be moving on a daily basis.



Instead, we spend most of the day sitting, often slouched over a computer, says Ellie Herman, author of Pilates for Dummies and a Pilates trainer with studios in San Francisco and Oakland, Calif.


"There's so much sitting, everyone has back and neck problems," says Herman, who originally started doing Pilates to rehabilitate from a dance injury. "They're starting to realize they need to do something to help strengthen their posture."


For many, particularly baby boomers who are becoming more aware of increasingly aging bodies, stooping shoulders, and greater propensity for injury, Pilates serves as an insurance policy of sorts.


The core muscles of the back and pelvis anchor the body and keep the spine properly aligned in movement, whether it's picking up a baby or darting for that tennis ball, says Boise, Idaho, physical therapist Sara Carpenter. "Neglecting the core sets you up for injury. Strengthening it takes pressure off the compensating knees, back, and shoulders."


Unfortunately, most of the exercise we do doesn't involve movement of the spine, says George. "We work our arms and our legs, holding our bodies still. As for the stomach, we either skip it altogether, or we do a few crunches at the end of a workout."


As a result, she says, people forget how to move their bodies and articulate through the spine. Pilates gives that back.


Another advantage, says Carpenter, is that people with chronic injuries or painful physical conditions such as arthritis can rehabilitate using the apparatus without risking injury. But she does warn against just anybody running out to take a mat class.


"The downside is, some of the moves in a mat class are very difficult, even for a fit person. You need to respect your body and know what your limitations are," says Carpenter.


It's also important to be an educated consumer.


The increasing demand for Pilates classes, particularly in gyms, has created problems, according to longtime Pilates instructors. With no regulating body overseeing training, there are vastly different levels of education among teachers.


Kevin Bowen, president of the Pilates Method Alliance, a nonprofit professional advocacy group, warns those interested in learning the method to seek out an instructor who has been through a qualified, comprehensive teacher training program.


"There are currently no national education standards," says Bowen, "so training programs run the gamut from six hours to 900, and anyone can say they're a Pilates teacher and the public is none the wiser."


The group is working to change that and create a national certification.


Done correctly, say proponents, there's no end to the benefits long after leaving the studio.


"Pilates helps people become more conscious of their posture, how they move, sit, and stand," says George. "They can learn a lot of things with a good Pilates instructor that can affect the rest of their life."


Published March 4, 2003.




Your-Friend-In-Fitness, DebbieH http://www.smilies-world.de/Smilies/Smilies_klein_1/wavey.gif If You Get The Choice To Sit It Out Or Dance...I Hope You DANCE!!!
 
RE: Hi Flex! (Looong)

Pilates was originally developed as a form of physical therapy so, properly done, it can really help you recuperate from an injury.

I have done Pilates one-on-one with a certified Pilates instructor for the last four years. I can't speak highly enough of it. Everything people say about it is true.

My only warning......Most of those videos are NOT really orthodox Pilates or are not great instruction tools. Ideally you should work with a certified Pilates instructor or given that this option can be quite costly, attend a mat class led by such an instructor.

You really NEED a qualified person correcting your moves, especially in the beginning. Romana, who is the Master Teacher and disciple of Joseph Pilates, is strongly opposed to people being introduced to Pilates via videos etc.

When i work out at home by myself I use Brooke Siler's book. That, I find is the best Pilates at home tool.
 
RE: Hi Flex! (Looong)

I just read the article posted before me and it's totally wrong about there being no national training standards.

There is an international Pilates guild of instructors who have graduated from very demanding coursework all taught by teacher trainers who have been personally trained by Romana. Plus they must satisfy a certain number of hours of continuing education each year. You can find this on the official pilates website.
 

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