How To Write The Perfect Pilates Book – by Karena Thek

How To Write The Perfect Pilates Book By Karena Thek   “Do you have any advice for someone who wants to write the perfect Pilates book?” Having written three Pilates books, it’s a question I get frequently. While my books are way less than perfect, here’s what I’ve learned along […]

Building My Bridge – by Tracy Maurstad

Building My Bridge – by Tracy Maurstad Like a lot of teachers, I picked my initial training program the same way many clients pick a Pilates studio – mostly because it was conveniently located. In 2007, BASI offered its first training in Las Vegas. They had a good reputation, I […]

The “Industrialisation” of Pilates – by Mike Perry

I wonder if anyone would argue that there is a better way to train to be a Pilates teacher than to serve an apprenticeship under an experienced teacher within a Pilates studio. I imagine that modular training courses exist not because they have the best outcomes, but rather because they […]

Why I Quit Teaching Pilates – by Carol Robbins

Why I Quit Teaching Pilates by Carol Robbins   Click Here to Subscribe and Receive Full Article   I am one of those people inexplicably afflicted with the horse bug. None of my relatives or ancestors rode, although my mother’s mother was Irish, so it could have been in the […]

Let’s Bring Fun Back to Pilates … Seriously – John Garey

Let’s Bring Fun Back to Pilates … Seriously  – John Garey My mission is to provide fun, inspiring training for professionals. Less than a year ago, I launched John Garey TV – an on-line instructor resource for Pilates and fitness. I’ve taught Pilates and fitness instructors in more than 14 […]

About Pilates, Ribs and Spirals by Anna Schrefl

About Pilates, Ribs and Spirals by Anna Schrefl When we walk and run, turn, twist, bend forward or to the side, our spine needs to be flexible in order to allow these movements. In addition to the spine, our ribs need to have mobility as well. In our Pilates training, […]

The Prime Male – by Kevin Bowen

The Prime Male – by Kevin Bowen You can count on men of a certain age to have acquired many things: life lessons, wisdom, knowledge, and (of course) material things. Along with those things, they more than likely have also acquired poor movement mechanics and a few injuries. These men […]

Why I Chose STOTT PILATES – by Alison Salmond

Why I Chose STOTT PILATES by Alison Salmond   Choosing any training programme, whatever the subject area can be extremely time consuming and challenging for anyone.  At present, there are many Pilates instructor training programmes; some offer mat-based courses, whilst others offer both mat- and equipment-based training programmes. Aspects to […]

Pilates Stopped Working For Me – by Karena Thek

Pic of Karena in the water – I had a great team to get me back in the ocean: Surgeon, physical therapists and Pilates Instructors! Pilates Stopped Working For Me by Karena Thek I’m one of those people. You know those people who credit Pilates with giving them back their lives, their […]

Giving in a Win-Win Way – by Dana Auriemma

Waiting to begin a pop-up class at a dance theatre studio Giving in a Win-Win Way by Dana Auriemma I’m stingy about sales. I’ll hardly every run a traditional discount or promotion in my studios (for reasons you can read about in this past Pilates Intel article). But that’s not […]

The Art of Breathing – by Kathy Corey

(Kathy Corey holding an original Pinwheel made by Joseph Pilates. Photo courtesy of Pilates Anytime) The Art of Breathing – by Kathy Corey In Return to Life (1945), Joseph Pilates wrote, “Breathing is the first act of life, and the last.  Our very life depends on it.”  Breath fuels our cells […]

My #Pilates45 – by Clare Dunphy

My #Pilates45 – by Clare Dunphy   I love sharing the work of Pilates and consider myself to be a bit of a Pilates nerd.  Most of you reading this article probably are too, so we are in good company.  The problem is that we all live pretty far away […]

Pilates & ADHD – by Laura Browning Grant

Pilates & ADHD – by Laura Browning Grant Background Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) was first classified in the 1920’s and was believed to be caused by a brain injury suffered at an early age.  Though this theory has since been disproved, my personal research, observation and interaction with others […]

Why Balanced Body? by Sylvia Byrd-Leitner

Justice for the body…Pilates for one and for all! Ken Endelman is the owner of Balanced Body. He is warm, friendly, approachable and quick to smile…quick to self deprecate. He is a man of his word. He is a family man. He is deeply protective. He is not to be […]

Take a Deep Breath – James Crader

Take a Deep Breath – James Crader When a new client walks into my studio, after taking an eval and having them walk around for me to observe movement patterns, the next order of business is to watch them breathe. I’m looking to see how their body processes the endeavor. […]

Scolio-Pilates – the Review by Rebekah Le Magny

Scolio-Pilates – the Review   by Rebekah Le Magny Karena Thek Lineback, a former dancer and a sufferer of scoliosis, discovered Pilates while still a student. She has authored three books, The Pilates Golf Athlete, Osteo-Pilates and Scolio-Pilates, and is currently working on a new project, Neuro-Pilates. Karena travels the […]

The Pilates Journey – by John Garey

The Pilates Journey – by John Garey I believe there is a reason we all discover Pilates. Pilates is not something most of us just happened to start to practice. In my experience, people start a Pilates program because of a very specific goal or challenge that forms the basis […]

Fred’s Vectors – by Brett Miller

Fred’s Vectors – by Brett Miller COME AND CHECK OUT FRED’S VECTORS – THE GALLERY Surprise! Surprise! Occasionally I like to waste some time browsing on Facebook. I can guess that like many of you, in my feed (that is an ugly word, feed, but indeed, that is the word […]

No Side-Bending for Scoliosis? – by Karena Thek

It is logical, isn’t it? To side-bend for scoliosis? After all, if you see a curve in the upper back, or thoracic spine, that side-bends to the right, doesn’t it make perfect sense to reverse that by side-bending to the left? Yes, it makes perfect sense. And I’ve done it […]

Getting Real with Deborah Lessen

Deborah Lessen has been around for a long, long time, and she is to me a cult figure in the Pilates world.  I see her as the unofficial grand ‘teacher of teachers’ because she is sought after by many ‘big Pilates names’.  I met Deborah last year at the PMA […]

The Pilates Wunda Chair™ – By Kathy Corey

Originally designed as the first piece of Pilates home exercise equipment and a living room chair for small New York apartments, the Wunda Chair is certainly one of the most challenging and effective pieces of Pilates equipment.  Because Mr. Pilates wanted his program to be accessible to everyone, he created […]

Mental Matwork – by Eme Cole

Take a moment to sit relaxed on a mat with your legs straight out in front of you. Picture your favorite color and imagine that color filling your toes. Follow that color as it travels through your feet, your ankles up your shins, knees, hips, through your pelvis, abdomen and […]