About Pilates

Curso de Instructor de Pilates

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Author: Richard Weil, MEd, CDE
Medical Editor: William C. Shiel Jr., MD, FACP, FACR

 

Pilates is a popular method of exercise in the United States, with more than 5 million individuals participating. What is Pilates, and should you be doing it? I’ll answer those questions and more in this article.

What is the origin of Pilates?

Admittedly, the history of many ancient fitness activities is sometimes sketchy. Tai chi, swimming, yoga, and even running all started thousands of years ago, and although there is some documentation, the precise beginnings are unknown. Things are different with Pilates. The beginning is clear. It was created in the 1920s by the physical trainer Joseph Pilates (1880-1967) for the purpose of rehabilitation. Some of the first people treated by Pilates were soldiers returning from war and dancers such as Martha Graham and George Balanchine (to strengthen their bodies and heal their aches and pains). Since the 1920s, the basic tenets that Joseph Pilates set down have been preserved, and to this day, even with some modifications, the Pilates remains true to its origins.

What is Pilates?

The Pilates “method,” as it is now known, is an exercise system focused on improving flexibility, strength, and body awareness, without necessarily building bulk. The method is a series of controlled movements performed on specially designed spring-resistant exercise apparatus (the Reformer, the Cadillac, the Spine Corrector, the Ladder Barrel, and the Wunda Chair) or on the floor (mat work), and the sessions are supervised by specially trained instructors. Pilates is resistance exercise, not aerobic (cardio), although the heart rate will certainly rise for a deconditioned individual. However, it’s closer to weight lifting than it is to jogging, biking, or other aerobic activities, and so you should consider it resistance exercise.

Two of the key elements of Pilates are core muscle strength* and spinal alignment. The core musculature is loosely defined as the spine, abdomen, pelvis, hips, and the muscles that support these structures. Some of the main core muscles are the erector spinae (located in your back along your spine), the internal and external obliques (the sides of your abdomen), the transverse abdominis (located deep in your gut, this muscle pulls your belly button in toward your spine), the rectus abdominis (the “six-pack”), and hip flexors (in your pelvis and upper leg).

During a Pilates session, whether it’s on the machines or the floor, your instructor will continuously prompt you to concentrate deeply on your core muscles, as well as on your breath, the contraction of your muscles, and the quality (not quantity) of your movements. These are also key elements of Pilates, and your instructor will emphasize them at every session. The objective is a coordination of mind, body, and spirit, something Joseph Pilates called “contrology.” In his first book published in 1945, Pilates’ Return to Life Through Contrology, the 34 original exercises that Pilates taught to his students are described along with the guiding principles of contrology. Continue reading

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How to Design a Damn Good Program, Part 1

by Christian Thibaudeau

English: July 2007 CrossFit Trainer certificat...

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One of the great things about T-Nation is that it gives you the ability to interact directly with the major contributors via the Authors’ Locker Rooms. Each author has a “room,” where readers can ask questions about training, nutrition, life, the universe, and everything else. And most of the time, we authors even know the answers!

Without fail, the one question that people always ask me is, “Can you give me some feedback about this program I’ve designed?” It’s a great question, and I’m always happy to give my evaluation. After all, following a ready-to-wear program is okay, but my hat is off to people with the imagination to take the training principles they’ve learned here on the site, and apply them to designing a program custom-tailored to their own goals.

Of course, not all of the programs I see are winners. Some of them, in fact, make me downright cringe. Bad exercise selection, illogical exercise placement within the workout, the wrong intensity for a given goal: you name it, I’ve seen it.

What I’ve also seen is people (typically beginning and intermediate lifters) trying to design the next Super Ultra Mega Total Body Blaster Program, which you’d need PhDs in kinesiology, exercise science, and maybe even rocket science in order to decipher. Continue reading

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Bodybuilding Workout Schedule

By TS Jordan, eHow Contributor

Bodybuilding

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As every experienced lifter knows, bodybuilding is far more than getting under some heavy weights and grunting. Bodybuilding is a war–a war against your body’s natural inclination to avoid adding excess muscle mass. Like any war, tactics reign supreme. The more planning you do today, the more progress you will make in the future. To that end, discover some solid advice about planning a bodybuilding workout schedule.

 

  1. Split vs. TBT

    • The first question that must be answered when ruminating over the proper bodybuilding workout schedule is whether to use “split” training or “TBT” (total body training). Bodybuilders have advocated split training since the dawn of the sport, but TBT has made a recent entry onto the scene as a viable alternative for those whose passion for bodybuilding is coupled with a hectic lifestyle. Split training involve training each muscle group once a week in a series of “splits,” where workout days are devoted to training specific muscles (for example, one day of split training could be a back and biceps day). On the other hand, TBT attempts to work the entire body with every gym session. While bodybuilders on a split are in the gym four to six days a week, those focusing on TBT normally lift for three. Therefore, the cost/benefit is less time spent in the gym for slightly impaired gains. The general rule is that the more serious one becomes about their training, the more sense split training makes. Continue reading

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76-Year-Old Man Releases Personal Exercise Program

Information provided by Calvin Hill – Published: 2010-06-10

Author assures readers that exercises do not require expensive equipment or a personal trainer and can be done in the comfort of their own homes.

Author Calvin Hill has released his new book Staying Fit after 60: Introducing the Exercise for Life Program to share the health and life-savings benefits of the program he has developed. He puts it bluntly: “I’m telling seniors, you can get old without feeling old.” Continue reading

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