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Archive for wellness

Finding Fitness: When you don’t feel well

Finding a movement/fitness practice is hard for all. It is especially more difficult for those suffering from an injury or neurological disease. Traditional exercise does not always address how to create a fitness practice when the body is not well. How the mind influences the body can determine better function for most.

Traditional exercise has an emphasis on the loading of muscles, repetitions and sweat. This is important in the end result of good healthy fitness. The process for finding fitness should be different when the body is not well.

A lot of classes and fitness are too fast and/or too much exertion for the person who does not feel well. Sometimes the body will go to the muscles that are already overworked when the load/exertion is too much. For instance, abdominal and bridging exercises are important in back care. Many complain of back pain in these kinds of exercises. What is happening here?

The brain is giving the wrong feedback to the body.

Instead of initiating the movement from the abdominals in the crunch,
the brain goes to the back muscles to start the work. How do you make change?

You retrain how the mind thinks about movement. This is a practice in itself. These techniques are used by athletes, dancers and gymnasts.

Essential tools are:

  • Breath Imagery
  • Better understanding of functional anatomy
  • Cueing
  • Mental rehearsals
  • Relaxation techniques

We are going to look at how to train the abdominals and the legs using new tools. Breath is your road to deeper concentration, relaxation and core support. For further in depth practice see my podcast on breath. One can also used breath as imagery to assist in change. When you blow up a balloon, it swells up into a moldable shape. When you allow a balloon to let out the air out, the balloon releases back to its original shape.

  • Focus your breath to an area of tightness in your body.
  • Imagine the breath expanding that area like a balloon with the inhale.
  • As that area expands, feel how the muscles lengthen, widen and release.
  • On the exhale, imagine the muscles falling softer towards the ground.
  • Breath can be a great tool when the body is fatigued or in pain.
  • Let’s say you are in a class and you have reached a place of fatigued.

Instead of leaving class, go back as the class workout to the breath. Only join back into the class when you feel well.

ANATOMICAL IMAGERY

Understanding how the body works can really help one find new connections and a preventive measure from re-injury. We are going to look at the Bartenieff Fundamental, the thigh lift. This is a underlying concept how the thighbone moves in the hip socket. It is essential for a movements of the legs such as walking and level changes such as getting up from a chair.

When someone comes in with a back injury,
I look at how they do a thigh lift.

When the thighbone is not gliding well in the hip socket,
the pelvis will unleveled to lift the leg.
This repetitive motion can lead to more discomfort in the back, hips and legs.

Here(see above podcast) is the thighbone placed into the hip socket. Notice how it is a deep round socket for the head of the femur bone. When the leg is lifted, there is an opposition of movement of the two distal points of the femur bone; one where the knee is and the other, the femur head in the hip socket. In the thigh lift, the head of the femur will glide in the opposite direction of the knee. The higher the knee is lifted, the head of the femur will roll and glide lower in the socket towards the sitz bones.

Image the bone gliding down in the hip socket as you do the thigh lift.
Feel how the back lengthens with the bone gliding well in the hip socket.

When you understand how the body is designed, you will have better movement. As Eric Franklin says “Embodied anatomy improves function”. When the thigh lift is done correctly, the correct muscles will be invited to work. The Bartenieff Fundamental, the thigh lift is the underlying concept in all abdominal work and movements of the legs.
(See my podcast on Pilates Basics: Enhancing the core)

Mental Rehearsal

This is a technique used by musicians, dancers and athletes. You review the movement in your head like it is a film. You image the movement with complete success, expression and enjoyment. We are going to look at the Bartenieff Fundamental, the pelvic shift forward. This can be a great exercise to get the legs stronger and stabilized the spine. Sometimes when the legs are weak, the back wants to overcompensate. This can be painful for many.

  • Visualize yourself doing a pelvic shift forward. 
  • Press down on your feet feeling equal pressure on the inside and outside lane of the feet. 
  • Feel the hamstrings engaged against your thighbone 
  • Using your leg muscles rise the pelvis forward towards your feet. 
  • Your relaxed spine rises up in one piece. 
  • Your back is relaxed and the legs are doing the work 
  • Imagine your legs are like an elevator that carries the load of the spine up and down. 
  • Slowly descend your spine down with your spine in neutral. Your spine should come down in one piece. 
  • Practice this a few times and then try to do a real Pelvic technique.

 Mental rehearsal is great to use when you are fatigued or in pain. Research has shown through biofeedback that muscles are charged even with mental rehearsal.

Relaxation techniques

Sometimes to get to the correct muscles usage, one needs to release the overcompensating muscles. Stretching can be positive for some; for others over-stretching can put a muscle in spasm. Constructive rest position is a practice of lying on your back to release unnecessary tension in your body.

  • Lie on your back 
  • Have your legs bent with your feet on the floor or on a stool/chair. A belt can help keep the legs together. This can help diminish tension. 
  • Observe how your spine feels on the floor. 
  • What areas of the spine lay well on the floor? 
  • How is tension in your body affects how you lie on the floor? 
  • Use breath and image of the balloon to create new releases in your spine. 

Special pilates group sessions Movements Afoot would love to set up special classes for special needs. We would love to bring pilates movement to people who would love a Pilates class designed at the pace and needs of their present health. Please give us a call if you and your organization would like to set this up.

Possible Special Pilates classes:

  • MS 
  • Arthritis 
  • Back care 
  • Fibromylia 
  • Chronic fatigue 
  • Parkinson’s

Other resources Somatic/body therapies:

  • Alexander technique 
  • Bartenieff Fundamentals 
  • BodyMind centering 
  • Feldendrais 
  • Franklin Method 
  • Hanna Somatics 
  • Pilates 
  • Restorative yoga 

For further information about constructive rest:

  • Andre Bernard 
  • Eric Franklin 
  • Restorative yoga 
  • Another great book about release techniques Paul Escosque Pain-Free

Is Your Ab Workout Hurting Your Back? NY Times

Is Your Ab Workout Hurting Your Back?

by Lesley Powell

A very interesting article was in the NY Times last week.  Core training needs to be 3-dimensional.  Just training the abdominals is not enough.  Especially with our culture being in so much flexion due to computers, cars, tv and the lack of exercise, people are really weak in their backs.

I just taught a Balanced Body University’s Pilates course this weekend. All the students were active professionals.  Most were having trouble with extension in getting to the deep extensors of the back.  When the deep extensors do not initiated the movement,  the back shortens and for some, cause discomfort.

Another problem with abdominal training, is finding qualities of tone.  To get to the deeper  transverse abdominals, breath is essential.  Once found, it has tremendous lightness.  In teaching all clients from beginners to teachers, many are firing and compressing the rectus too strongly for the required action.  For instance, the rectus abdominus assists in flexion of the spine in crunches and rollups.  Many are unneccessarily firing the rectus with a simple pelvic tilts of the lower spine.

Abdominals come in many flavors” Doris Pasteleur Hall

Training of the spine in different positions is essential for dynamic stabilization.  How you organize your spine lying down is very different from sitting, standing, plank pose.  Getting aware of where your spine is in space is important.

This simple exercise can be difficult.  Many are firing the rectus which will lower the head down.  Some have trouble keeping a head-tail connection.  You will see the spine rotate and/or unleveled.

Quadriped with opposite arm and leg lifted

What the NY Times article is not addressing is how the training of the limbs in coordination with the core is important.  Awareness of how the body moves is lacking in most training.  We have constant pressure by clients of having a stronger workout.  Many of these clients lack internal awareness of their bodies and training of deeper stabilizing muscles.  Many of the deep stabilizing muscles will never have the feel as a bicep firing to lift a weight.

Learning good form is essential for proper conditioning and balance.

Pilates Basics:Essentials for Backcare

by Lesley Powell

I want to talk about how to work with clients with low back pain.  These clients have already ruled out by the medical professional where exercise is contraindicated.

To start a client with low back pain,  my first goal is to observe their form as I teach the movement principles/fundamentals.

I am working first on teaching stabilization.

I am conservative about stretching until I know how they will react.  Some clients with too much stretching, their muscles go into spasm.  Sometimes the tight muscles are the ones trying to stabilize them. Without educating them about proper stabilization, the body does not know what to do.

Teaching the fundamentals, you can see how poor patterns will be reflective throughout the entire workout and their gait.  Fundamental education will create better awareness, control and injury prevention skills.

Differentiation of thigh bone

Differentiation of thigh bone

I always start with the thigh lift and the pelvic shift forward, a neutral bridge.

A lot of clients are not using the hip socket correctly.  The pelvis is unleveling to lift the leg.

  • Is the pelvis stable when the leg is lifted?
  • How is the ease in the femoral folds?
  • If the pelvis is unstable, is it rotating and/or unleveling?

Bridging: Having a leg to Stand on. (upcoming a new podcast on proper bridging)

I always look at the neutral bridge with back clients.  Many clients are very weak in the legs and using the backs to compensate for leg weakness.

In the neutral bridge, the pelvis should shift forward over the feet.  The Bartenieff Fundamental, the pelvic shift forward is a perfect name for this action.

The highest place in the bridge should be the pelvis.
When the legs are weak, the back usually arches to push the body higher.

Back care clients are very weak in the deep muscles of the back.  Many are compensating with the superficial muscles of the back.  This can cause compression/pain in the back.  Simple extensions exercises of the upper spine and legs are essential skills to learn.  Can your client lift their upper spine and/or legs and then entire body pain free?  Are they shortening their backs to do any of these exercises.

By teaching your clients, the basics, you are also giving them tools to take home to practice.  Once they accomplished the basics, don’t forget about the Pilates mat exercises:

  • Single leg circles
  • Single leg kick
  • Double leg kick
  • Shoulder bridge

Stretching

Once I hurt my back seriously carrying a computer.  My back was in spasm for over a week.  I stay away from stretching the back.  I did a lot of stretching of my legs on the floor with a yoga strap.  Roll downs were too painful at that time.  Then my next goal was using downward dog to lengthen my back.  Even a client putting their hands on the barrel or a wall and doing a modified downward dog can be helpful.

It is essential to teach stabilization exercises.  Then intertwine these concepts with your workout using the machines.  For example, before doing pulling straps on the long box, here is a routine on the long box.

  1. 3 upper spine extensions.  The Spine raises in line with the box.
  2. 3 right leg lifts, 3 left.  Leg lift is in line with box.
  3. 3 modified swans.  The spine and legs are in line with the box.
  4. then, pullling the straps.

Below is a link to great exercises for back care.  Please feel free to share this link with your clients for their home practice.

Pilates Basics: Essentials for Back Care

Wellness, Hygiene and Each other

by Lesley Powell

With all that is going on in the world today’s health,  Movements Afoot wants everyone to take care of themselves and others.

It is important for all of us in public spaces and sharing equipment:

  • Clean hands thoroughly before sessions
  • Wear socks.  The new toesox are great with rubber texture on the soles to prevent slippage
  • Clean mats with teatree oil before/after sessions
  • In  all sessions, staff and clients wipe down equipment with teatree oil

Tea Tree oil is a natural disenfectant and smells great.

Thanks for taking care of yourself and others.

Pilates is Wellness

by Lesley PowellMovements Afoot

Pilates is wellness. Wellness is a deep connection of the body and mind.
True fitness is wellness.

Pilates will teach you how to center your mind and your body.  It creates balance of dormant muscles to overused muscles.  It creates an ease of motion of joints at the same time Pilates strengthens you.

Pilates will teach you about your whole body and its fascinating connections.  As you enhance your learning of your body, your new knowledge will enhance your posture, your fitness, your movement loves and your energy.

If your body does not feel well, how can your mind and spirit?

Learn:

Breath: to relieve stress, open areas of tension
and teach you about getting to the deeper muscles for support, the transverse abdominals.

Breath connects you to your deepest abdominal muscles.
The transverse abdominal is like your very own corset.

Centering: coordination of the body radiating from your core in all movements.

The core muscles are your back and abdominal muscles
that stabilized your spine.

Inspire your core muscles to create better posture and tone

Learn how to dynamically train them for improved posture
and coordinate them with your entire body.

This is the best injury prevention skill to have.

Balanced Muscles: create efficient movement, tone and joint mechanics.

By creating better balance in your muscles,
relieve tension that causes discomfort.

Precision and Control: good form invites good function and better fitness.

Learn how improved function and control with a few repetitions
are more valuable
than many repetitions done poorly.

Pilates Basics: Enhancing the Core

by Lesley Powell

Thigh Lift

Thigh Lift

The Bartenieff Fundamental, the thigh lift, is in all Pilates exercises. Learn how to stabilize your pelvis through your deep core muscles and mobility of your thighbone.

Breath yourself to new abdominals

by Lesley Powell

Hollowing the AbdominalLearn how breath is the secret to deeper stronger abdominals

Hollowing the Abdominal

3-D Breath- the Diaphragm and the Core

by Dr. Martha Eddy

“Just found your site. I am a long time Rebirther and recently began teaching a
“Breathing for Relaxation” class at a senior center. There are 8 men and 2 women, all in their 80’s! I distributed a copy of our respiratory system so that we could track how physiologically our breathing works. Then as we talked about chest and belly breathing, one man has a most intersted question
which I am on a quest to give an informed answer.
I hope you can help me.


“Where does the air go when we breath in and out of the belly
because the air has to go into the lungs?”


Great question and I need help with an accurate answer. Thanks much for any information.”

from a comment

Dr. Martha Eddy (Dr. Move): It sounds like you are providing a great service at the center.

In response to your students question -  “Where does the air go when we breath in and out of the belly because the air has to go into the lungs?”:

The belly and lungs interact in breathing because of the movement of the diaphragm – the horizontal, dome-shaped muscle that separates the abdomen from the chest since its attaches to the bottom of each of the ribs all the way around from the back of the body to the front arched region of the solar plexus.

The breathing (oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange) only really happens in the lungs
(and in the cells of the body)

but it is the movement of the diaphragm downward into the abdominal region
that causes a vacuum in the chest to “inspire” an inward breath.

This movement of the plunger action of the diaphragm can cause the belly to protrude – “stick out” and is commonly referred to as “belly breathing.” The upward relaxation of the diaphramatic muscle helps to push the air out of the lungs! When this happens the stomach flattens a bit.

The other day an elderly colleague of mine advised a group of us during a photo shoot moment to “Hold your stomach in. Take a deep breath.”. I said that’s a bit of a contradiction since generally the belly bulges out when we breathe in deeply.

However its actually great to learn how to activate the abdominal muscles AND breathe deeply. We call this three-dimensional breathing. It is what actually happens anatomically. Our teacher physical therapist Irmgard Bartenieff knew her anatomy and also was trained in the 3-D use of space for all human movement through a system called Laban Movement Analysis.

3D breathing is simply allowing the diaphragm to move downward to begin the inhale AND being aware that this plunger action happens throughout the full cylinder shape of our torso. It presses down evenly in the front, back and sides of our abdominal region. So if we engage our deep abdominals for better posture the movement of the diaphragm will EVENLY move our abdomen down and out. The result will be that not only our “belly breathes” but our lower back gets a massage from the movement into that area. This is important. So much back pain can be relieved by 3D breathing into all directions of the torso. It helps posture, keeps muscles balanced, and increases our respiratory capacity (more oxygen).

People trained as CMAs – Certified Movement Analysts in your area can help teach this. There is nothing like learning through direct experience with a teacher demonstrating and giving you physical cues.

I hope you find this useful, and pleasurable! Keep asking your great questions.

Finally Affordable Pilates Equipment Classes

Movements Afoot LogoOur new Pilates Mat/Springs/Props
will bring you to a new fitness and well-being.

The original Pilates Mat is very difficult.
The mat exercises like rollup and rollover require great
flexibility and strength to do correctly.

Joseph Pilates’ props like the springs, spine corrector and the magic circle are great tools to teach you need connections of strength and ease of motion throughout your entire body.  If Joe was alive today, he would have love the physioball.  the balls brings also the same concepts of his work.

SIDE LEG SPRINGS

Here is my favorite exercise, side leg springs. It works on your inner thighs, hamstrings, core and flexibility of the hip.

Enrollment is limited for more personal attention.  You can register online even the day of the class.  Reservation is highly recommended. Sign up now!

  • Mondays
    6 PM
  • Tuesdays
    12:30 & 6:30 PM
  • Wednesdays
    12:30 PM
  • Thursdays
    Noon & 7:10 PM
  • Saturdays
    10 AM

None of these times works?  Let us know what times work for you.  I need at least 2 people to start a class.  I also would love to start some classes for special needs/interests.  I was talking with a client about a class for her teenage daughter.  Let me hear your ideas/times.

Single     $20
10 class card      $190    90 days
20 class card    $360    90 days
*Month Special card    $64    30 days

*All sessions must be reserved for a class at the same time/day each week with this purchase. It is your responsibility to cancel your reservation 24 hr. Prior to the class. Otherwise you will be charged.  Only one make-up is allowed within that 4 week time. Reservations are a must for this series! 
Call Movements Afoot to arrange this special offer (212) 904-1399.

Backing Into Pilates

By Jennifer Whittemore, Teacher at Movements Afoot

Pain cut through the morning silence. My back ached and my left leg was lit up like a live wire. Breathing was difficult: moving, impossible. I knew immediately that I had inherited the family curse—I had herniated a disc in my lumbar spine.

It took three days before I could get off the floor and into the doctor’s office. Though my mobility had mostly returned, the pain was constant and numbness in my left foot made my gait unsteady.  I was familiar with these symptoms because my mother had three discs removed from her spine in the eighties. I had watched her downward spiral for the two years prior to the surgeries and her slow post-operative recovery. This was not a future I looked forward to.

The doctor sent me for an MRI, which returned questionable results. A minor protrusion seemed present at L5/S1, but it was unclear whether the disc was pressing on the left nerve root. The doctor suggested a cortisone shot and a check up in six months. No one was mentioning surgery, but the specter of my mother’s experiences loomed large.  I was only 20 and not ready for the kind of consequences she faced: arthritis, further surgeries, immobility and chronic pain.

I scheduled the shot and prayed. I hurt so much that I couldn’t carry my textbooks to and from class. Sitting was agonizing. During lectures, I would either stand in the back of the classroom or lay on the floor when I became too exhausted. I couldn’t move much, save for the hour a day I would spend swimming laps in the college pool. I was told not to do this—the side-to-side motion of the crawl would cause further injury—but I couldn’t bear the stasis. I was simultaneously fit and disabled—a very strange place to be.

Sadly, the cortisone shot offered no relief. I went back to the doctor after six months and surveyed my options. He told me I was a likely candidate for surgery. I asked if I could try physical therapy and he reluctantly gave me a prescription. The sessions consisted of electro-stimulation, followed by traction, and a few take-home exercises. Afterward, I would feel briefly elongated and then descend into ever-more intense pain. I went religiously three times a week for three months before giving up. My chart read: “Patient enthusiastic. Progress, minimal.”

At the nine-month mark, I haunted the library stacks in search of information. Statistics abounded regarding the poor success rate of back surgery. Patients who had had surgery fared much the same as patients who waited a year with no treatment. At my age, the wait-and-see approach was the obvious choice, but I was having a hard time holding it together. Without the aid and support from friends, I don’t think I could have survived.

During my investigation, I came across Joseph Pilates’ original mat series. Pilates was very much a part of the modern dance community, but was not widely known in other circles. After my first attempt at the exercises, I suffered a serious setback. Even though I had always been an active person, I wasn’t very core-connected. I didn’t understand how to use the triumvirate of musculature—the deep abdominal muscles, pelvic floor, and paraspinal muscles—required to stabilize my spine.  My low back took over and I strained it as soon as I attempt to perform the hundreds.

I was lucky that I had friends in the dance community who directed me to an instructor with expertise and compassion. I first studied with a dancer and teacher who had extensive experience in Pilates and Body-Mind Centering. Her approach was rehabilitative and focused on helping me stabilize my spine.  Cathie Caraker was a caring instructor who encouraged me to keep moving and exploring my relationship to my body.  She offered far more than Pilates—she offered movement education, which helped forge a connection with my body that would serve me through many physical passions. Within three months, I was pain free.

It was years later that I decided to become a Pilates and Yoga instructor. The “cure” that I found as a young person morphed into a deep-rooted curiosity about the process of physical transformation. During my back pain episode, friends and family were crucial support systems, but the healing journey was ultimately my own. Pain, in the broadest sense, was an indicator that something needed to shift in my body, mind, and spirit to make way for a deeper understanding and appreciation of life.  I had to face my fears and take on new ways of treating my body so that it could repair itself and stay well.

With back-pain clients, I am acutely aware of the distress that comes from living life in constant suffering. I see my role in the process as part inspiration, part expert, and part witness.  My work focuses on identifying clients’ pain patterns, strengthening the core and deep spinal stabilizers, and improving whole-body functional movement. My mantra is awareness—when we perceive what is going on in the body, we can relax into our strength. We not only get longer, leaner, and more supple, we begin to move with intelligence.  I have seen many clients shift from disability to athletic ability in a few short months.

I encourage anyone in this situation to reach out for help. Pilates and yoga have kept me active and free for many years. They can do the same for you.

For more information, see Jennifer’s website innerpillar.com or contact her at jennifer@innerpillar.com.

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