Pilates has Put Me Back on Track!
October 29, 2009 by Leslie Braverman · Leave a Comment
My name is Meg, and I have been taking the Beginner/Intermediate reformer class with my mom since June. My mother was theinspiration to finally make the financial commitment and start taking weekly classes. She has had amazing results in her posture and strength not to mention a boost in self-confidence. I have always been a very active person from taking dance classes since I was 3 to competing in running and field hockey at the collegiate level. I was blessed in not experiencing any major injuries during my lifetime and believe this was due to the strength training I received in dance. When I moved to Portland three years ago, I didn’t run consistently and stopped taking dance classes. This resulted in losing a great deal of the strength and flexibility that helped keep me injury free.
It was a wake up call for me back in March when I broke my ankle while playing an indoor soccer game. I had never broken a bone before or had to use crutches, and I realized that I had been taking my physical health for granted. The healing process has been long and painful, but I took the necessary steps to get things back on track. The reformer classes have been a huge part of my rehabilitation and I feel that my ankles are now stronger than they ever were. I have also finally gotten back into running again and due to my injury have a entire new appreciate for my ability to do so. I am running faster and stronger than I did during the years in was in the best shape of my life and I truly believe that pilates has made the difference. I had a very successful relay race performance about a month ago and will run my first 10K road race at the end of October. I have a feeling I will perform well due to my increased strength and flexibility.
I look forward to going to my reformer class each week and can’t thank Pacific Northwest Pilates enough for bringing about this personal transformation.
Thanks, Meg
How Pilates Changed My Life
October 11, 2009 by Leslie Braverman · Leave a Comment
My sixth grade teacher, Mrs. Nelson, sternly warned me that I was going to be sorry if I didn’t learn to stand up straight. This was both confusing and horrifying. I didn’t have the faintest idea of how to stand up straight, but I understood the dire necessity of doing so. A deep dread of a doubtlessly benighted future filled me. I’d already thrown a fit and refused to go to the physical therapist a few years earlier. The mats smelled funny, and it was all so creepy.
Decades later, I can proudly say that Pilates has enabled me to finally stand up straight. Even my mother said she’d never seen me look so straight, and she’s been watching the whole time. Dance and yoga gave me strength and flexibility, but my body evolved its own quirky ways of working with its dysfunctional spine. I’m here to say that Pilates has straightened me out, Mrs. Nelson.
Pilates has helped me find and use essential supportive muscles that I had never really located before. Pilates has shown me how to push the marble with my nose and that’s been the beginning of it all for me. The upward extension of a spine trained from childhood to curve down down down is a glorious and difficult movement. Upward is not natural for a myopic bookworm. As I’ve struggled to feel wide across collarbone, I’ve moved into an unknown dimension. And Pilates has given me the abdominal muscles that save my poor back from doing all the work. And I’m grateful. If I’m away too long, my back complains, but now there’s a way to fix it. Pilates is forever.
Sherry Charles
Pilates Positive Impact!
October 9, 2009 by Leslie Braverman · Leave a Comment
As you know, Pilates has certainly made a difference to me.
A masseuse told me several years ago about one of her clients saying that Pilates had transformed her body. I went to that Pilates studio because I had been having trouble sleeping from pain in my shoulders, hips and legs and when gardening I would end up with hobbling lower back and hip pain. I was also having pain from yoga postures even though I had practiced for years. The Pilates studio helped me understand how my posture and walking were causing me problems. My sleep improved and I no longer had pain when gardening. But they were unable to answer many of my questions, I still had many physical issues, and I felt more was possible.
A chiropractor referred me to the Pacific Northwest Pilates studio and I found my answers. Now I am stronger, feel better, and understand more about my overall body structure, alignment and posture, and how those affect how I feel. I also know what exercises will help my particular problems and what to avoid. At first I had great difficulty even comprehending how certain body movements could be made and Leslie would not only have to demonstrate them to me, but also she would have to move my body as apparently my mind and body had lost all awareness of how to do it. Fortunately, it would usually take only a few weeks of practice for my body to remember.
I came to realize that the root of my problems were the results of major surgery in 2000-2001, along with chemotherapy, radiation, and a PIC line in the right arm for 6 months, and probably also from birth trauma, childhood habits, and major surgery in 1976. My body had found ways to compensate but I had never realized exactly what was happening and what were the lingering effects. Pilates is giving me that awareness and the means to work on changing how my body functions. I have a long way to go, I still have some pains, and some of my structural restrictions limit how much strength I can gain yet, but I now have the tools and the help I need to improve. I am more able to feel how my body should move and I get results when I do my home exercises. I take a reformer class that helps me practice using my body correctly. The class also brings to my attention any restrictions I have not yet dealt with and when that happens, I have found that a private session focused on that issue always provides me with the answers for the problem. I no longer feel at the mercy of the unknown, I have some control over how my body feels. To me, it’s a miracle. One that would not be possible without the guidance of the Pacific Northwest Pilates studio.
Thanks You.
Pilates & Gardening: Or how to hoe without hurting
February 21, 2009 by Jean Leavenworth · 3 Comments
This question was emailed to us:
Hi all! I have a great client who struggles with on and off lower back sensitivity. She is concerned that her issues will put a damper on her gardening this spring (we live in Chicago, and we take our warm-weather activities very seriously!)
Can you recommend some postural suggestions that might allow her to continue gardening, pain-free? Also, we would appreciate exercise recommendations to prepare her for the beautiful summer garden months?
Many thanks.
Salle Huber
Hi Salle-
Thanks so much for your inquiry. Here are some suggestions for your client:
- Work in neutral spine as much as possible. Often what irritates our back from a gardening session is the constant bending over or staying in a flexed spine position for too long. When weeding or preparing the soil, try to squat down as low as possible while maintaining a neutral spine and pelvis. If squatting is uncomfortable, buy a kneeling pad, but again try to work with a neutral spine while on the knees.
- Vary your activities. There is always a lot of work to be done at the beginning of the gardening season. Tilling the soil or adding compost or fertilizer to the soil. Weeding or removing old plants to get ready for the new. etc. Instead of spending two hours preparing a plot, spend 30 minutes doing that and then switch to another activity like pruning trees or watering. Then go back to the more labor intensive activity. Often, we get so involved in whatever activity we are doing that we spend too much time in one position and that will irritate the back.
In terms of exercise ideas, definitely working the core muscles, (abs, glutes, spinal muscles etc) will allow your client to remain more pain free during her gardening activities. Try adding in some squats or some waiters bows to see if she is able to maintain a neutral spine in a squat position. Waiters bow is a core exercise where you sit on the edge of the cadillac or a couple of reformer boxes (in other words a slightly higher seat than a normal chair) The feet should be firmly planted on the floor though. Have your client hinge forward from the hips maintaining a neutral spine.

Certification student, Patricia Sinclair, demonstrates the waiters bow
The arms can reach forward slightly as the spine hinges forward. Once there is

Standing upright, before hinging to return to bench
enough weight in the feet, the client should be able to stand up. Then reverse the waiter’s bow to sit back on the edge of the cadillac or the boxes. These movements should be performed slowly with control so that no momentum is necessary and there should be no change in the spinal alignment as the client shifts from sitting to standing. Using the pelvic floor, transverse abdominals and multifidus muscles are essential to doing this exercise with control and fluidity.
Using a squat to get down close to the ground or to lift plants or heavy objects can help prevent strain to the back muscles. Again, make sure the abdominals are engaged and use an exhale to perform the lift or the difficult part of the movement. Check out some other great exercises in this article by Leslie Braverman; Pilates and Posture

Patricia demonstrates a good neutral spine while squatting to lift a pot.
Taking periodic breaks to stretch is also a great way to check in on your body and make sure you are not over doing things. Gardening can be a true delight, but it is important to gage your strength and endurance so that you can enjoy your garden throughout the growing season!
Pilates and Posture: Kyphosis-Lordisis
January 30, 2009 by Leslie Braverman · 5 Comments
One of the classic postural types is called Kyphosis-Lordosis. Characteristically, Kyphosis-Lordosis is a posture in which all the natural curves of the spine are exaggerated.
As seen above, the figure on the left side has increased the curve in the neck (hyper-extension), displacing his head into a forward position; notice the figure’s chin on the left is forward of his sternum, unlike the figure on the right where the head is erect and the chin is in-line with the sternum. In addition, the curve of the upper back (thoracic spine) on the left is more pronounced (increased kyphosis) and the shoulders are rounded forward. Likewise, the curve of the lower back (lumbar spine) is also exaggerated (hyper-lordodic). The exaggerated curve of the lumbar spine is accompanied by a tipped pelvis (anteriorly tipped).
In this set of pictures below, you can see the shape of the bones more clearly. Although the figures are facing the other direction from the figures above, you can compare the curves of the spine and position of the head and pelvis more clearly here. The figure on the right displays the ideal curves while the figure on the left displays Kyphois-Lordosis
So, what can be done in pilates to help offset this particular postural alignment?
First, you must understand what muscular imbalances are associated with this posture.
Because of the position of the head and neck, a small pad or other prop may need to be place behind his or her head during all exercises that are conducted on their back (supine). This will help to keep the head and neck in a more ideal posture. In addition, the individual may need to work in an imprinted position more frequently than in neutral. He or she may be able to eventually work in a neutral position as they become stronger.
Take a look, again, at the curve in the lower back. Notice how the muscles of the lower spine are shortened and the muscles on the front side (the abdominals are lengthened.) This individual will need exercises that encourage he or she to lengthen the tight lower back muscles and recruit the weak abdominals.
It is imperative that a student with lordosis of the lumbar spine, learn to use their abdominals to support their back instead of their hip flexors or hip extensors. In other words, often new students with a lordodic tendency (hyper-extension of the lumbar spine) try to use gluts (bum) or muscles in the front the hip to control their back. Because of this tendency to recruit the wrong muscles, they tend to remain unable to control their back even after years of trying to do “abdominal specific” work.
Here are a few exercises you can do to promote good balance of the abdominals, hip flexors and gluts and lengthen the lumbar spine.
First, Practice lengthening the lumbar spine correctly. Here the student is lying on their back with her legs relaxed over a pillow. She is gently elongating her back into the mat (you can slightly see how the purple waist band is tipped toward her belly button in the second photo), so that the curve in her lower back diminishes (i.e more of her low back touches the mat) . It is important to make sure that your abdominals are moving your back instead of your legs. Any gripping in your back muscles or legs indicates that you may not be finding your core muscles correctly.
sit-up:
Now, try to go into a sit-up position without gripping your legs and back. You are trying to keep your back from moving into a bigger curve (i.e. arch away from the floor.) Your movement may be very small. It is important that you train you abdominal muscles to bring your upper body off the floor instead of changing your lower back or using your legs.
Dead Bug:
Finally, see if you can keep your lower back lengthened on the mat (using your abdominals, like you did in the first exercise) and pick one foot of the ground without arching your back away from the floor. If this is too hard, imprint. Alternate legs.
It is also important to teach the upper back muscles (erector spinae) to learn how to extend the upper back. Take a look at the picture of the skeleton above. Notice how the upper back is rounded, this prolonged posture makes the upper back muscles very weak and the muscles on the front side of the chest very tight (the pecs). So, it is important that this individual learns how to move their back out of this curve, open their chest and work the weak upper back muscles.
Here are a few exercises you can do to promote extension of the upper back without creating unwanted hyperextension of lumbar spine:
Turtle:
Finally, because of the way the pelvis tips, the muscles in the front of the hip can become really short and tight. Conversely, the muscles on the opposite side (the bum and hamstrings) are really weak. Take a look at the little girl’s stance below. Because of the angle of her pelvis, you can see the distance between the front of her hip bone and thigh is very short.
Here is a good exercise to open the hip and, simultaneously, use the gluts and hamstrings:
Bridge
All of these exercises are best done under the supervision of a certified pilates expert.
Pilates for Equestrians
January 24, 2009 by Lynda Schnarr · 3 Comments
Pilates and Posture: What is ideal?
January 20, 2009 by Leslie Braverman · Leave a Comment
Yesterday, one of my new students asked me if I thought Pilates could help their posture, and I told her that over the last ten years, I have seen countless numbers of students radically improve their posture through pilates. So, she asked me to analyze her posture and suggest exercises that would be most beneficial for her to do. Of course, I did this for her, and she was able to leave the lesson with five or six things that she could focus on while working in group classes and on her own.
Later, I realized that this would be a great topic to focus on for our blog. So, here is my first entry about Pilates and Posture. Today, I will talk about what is commonly considered “Ideal Posture.” An ideal posture (or standard posture) is something that we strive for.
In general, ”good posture” is one that promotes overall balance for all the joints and organs and minimizes stress and strain throughout the body. Good posture allows joints to glide and move as they were meant to, minimizing unwanted grinding or sheering. Good posture also is “conducive to good alignment of the abdomen and trunk, so that the chest and upper back are in a position that favors optimal function of the respiratory organs” (Florence Peterson Kendall, PT)
As seen in the profile picture below, the spine has its’ normal curves, the pelvis is level (the two hip bones in the front (ASIS) are on the same plane as the pubic bone), the hip joint is centered in the socket and the thigh bones are stacked directly over the bones of the lower leg (tibia and fibula) and the head sits balanced on the spine so that there is a slight (lordodic) curve in the neck and the chin sits in line with the sternum.
The back view of an ideal posture, seen to the right, shows the head balanced (neither tilted or rotated), a straight neck, level shoulders and shoulder blades, a straight spine (right and left sides of the trunk are symmetrical), level pelvis and neutral hip joint and knees. The toes are pointing slightly outward.
Since there is a direct coorelation between the static alignment of the bones and the balance of the muscles which attach to them, pilates exercise can be used as means to change posture. In order to do this effectively, one’s posture should first be analyzed for deviations that appear different from the standard posture. Then, a qualified instructor should be able to select exercises that help to lengthen or strengthen muscles that contribute to the postural deviation. In addition, the instructor needs to be able to successfully guide the student through the exercises, using props or modifications as needed, in order to ensure that the student is effectively changing their habitual movement pattern and using the correct muscle groups throughout.
Stay tuned for more entries about posture and learn about the three classic postural types and which pilates exercises may be most beneficial to focus on in each case.




















