top of page

 About Pilates 

Joseph Pilates created his unique workout system in the 1920's. All movement is initiated from the body's core, specifically the deep muscles of the abdomen and back. When the core muscles are strong, they stabilize the torso, support the spine, and allow the entire body to move freely and efficiently.

 

​With over 600 individual exercises, Pilates offers a truly integrated approach to fitness! It conditions the entire body, not just certain muscles. No muscle group is ever over or under trained.

 

And because Pilates elongates the muscles as it strengthens them, it improves joint flexibility as well as muscle tone. A strong, balanced body with well supported joints and flexible tissue is less susceptible to injury.

Pilates Reformers

​Some of the Benefits of Pilates Include:

  • Improves posture and muscular symmetry

  • Increases abdominal and back strength

  • Core strength and stability

  • Injury prevention

  • Enhanced athletic performance

  • Longer, leaner muscles

  • Improved balance and coordination

  • Relief from stress and back pain

This is an animated history of the remarkable life of Joseph Pilates, creator of the Pilates Technique.

Stott Pilates is a version of the Pilates method of physical exercise that we teach at Pushes And Pulls, LLC. It was developed by Lindsay and Moira Merrithew, with the collaboration of physical therapists, and sports medicine and fitness professionals. The most significant difference between Stott Pilates and Joseph Pilates's original method of the early 1900s is that, where the original method uses a straight spine during exercise, Stott Pilates focuses on maintaining the natural curvature of the spine.

 

The Stott Pilates method has exercises designed to restore the natural curves of the spine and re-balance the muscles around the joints. The Stott Pilates method places more emphasis on scapular stabilization than other methods. The method focuses on the following Five Basic Principles:

 

Breathing
The breath pattern used in the Stott Pilates method involves an expansion of the rib cage out to the sides and back without allowing the shoulders to lift. According to Stott Pilates, it is also important to breathe into the lower part of the lungs, because there is more efficient gas exchange.

Pelvic placement
Pelvic placement emphasizes stabilization of the pelvis and lumbar spine (lower back) in either a neutral or an imprinted position. Neutral placement maintains the normal curve of the lower back: when lying on one’s back, the front of hip bones and pubic bone lie parallel to the mat, and the lower back is not to be pressed into the mat. While breathing and engaging abdominals in this position, no strain should be felt through the lower back. In an imprinted position, the lower back is moving toward the mat.

 

Ribcage placement
The rib cage position affects the alignment of the thoracic (upper) spine. When lying on the back in a neutral position, Stott Pilates practitioners maintain the sense of the weight of the ribs resting gently on the mat (that is, they maintain the normal curve of the upper back). They don't lift off or push the rib cage into the mat, paying particular attention to the placement of the rib cage when inhaling or while performing arm movements overhead.

 

Scapular movement
When using the Stott Pilates method, stabilizing the scapulae (shoulder blades) on the back of the rib cage is as important as contracting the abdominals during the initiation of every exercise. This helps avoid strain through the neck and upper shoulders. To achieve proper placement, a sense of width is maintained across the front and back of the shoulders, making sure that the shoulders neither round forward too much nor squeeze together toward the spine; shoulders are not lifted too far, nor over-depressed. Placement is somewhere between these two positions.

Head and cervical spine placement
Stott Pilates placement of the cervical spine (neck) is such that it holds its natural curve, with the head balanced directly above the shoulders when sitting, lying and standing. In some cases, a small pillow is used when lying on the back to put the head and neck in a comfortable position. Whenever exercisers lift the head and upper body from the mat, they lengthen the back of the neck and nod the head forward, without jamming the chin into the chest. This way there is enough room to fit one’s fist between the chin and chest. Once the head is in proper position and the shoulder blades are stabilized (Principle 4), the upper torso can be lifted by contracting the abdominals and sliding the rib cage toward the pelvis.

bottom of page