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Is Pilates the Key to Strength Training Stability? Here’s the Classic Pilates Workout, Explained by an Instructor

If you’re a barbell devotee, you may be quick to dismiss quieter forms of exercise like walking, yoga, and Pilates. But that would be to the detriment of your routine. These low-impact forms of working out offer tremendous benefits — and we’ve chatted with a certified Pilates instructor to highlight the best parts of (you guessed it) Pilates workouts.

Believe it or not, Pilates exercises may just be the cheat code that makes your most demanding lifts both safer and easier. Aside from offering a strenuous core workout, Pilates is said to alleviate chronic lower back pain, improve posture, and upgrade overall stability. Even more convenient is how you can easily try out a Pilates workout plan at home. 

A person doing the second push-up position with the body close to the ground.

Editor’s Note: The content on BarBend is meant to be informative in nature, but it should not be taken as medical advice. When starting a new training regimen and/or diet, it is always a good idea to consult with a trusted medical professional. We are not a medical resource. The opinions and articles on this site are not intended for use as diagnosis, prevention, and/or treatment of health problems. They are not substitutes for consulting a qualified medical professional.

What Is Pilates?

Pilates as we know it today is more about TikTok than world history. But the exercise method comes from an internment camp during World War I, established after the British government passed the “Aliens Restrictions Act” of 1914. This resulted in the interment of anyone the government deemed an “enemy alien.” Over 24,000 people were subsequently imprisoned at Knockaloe Camp, including Joseph Pilates. (1)(2)

Witnessing the physical deterioration of fellow prisoners and sparked by the metal coils attached to the headboards of hospital beds (think: modern-day Pilates reformers), Joseph Pilates engineered a form of exercise that was meant to strengthen the body and calm the mind, even during confinement, illness, and injury. (2)

[Read More: Mobility vs. Flexibility — Why It Matters and What It Means for You]

What does that involve? As originally conceived, Pilates is a collection of 34 mat-based movements. The original name of Pilates’ workout routine was called “Contrology,” and stemmed from the concept of achieving strength by maintaining total control over your body. All of the moves in the original Pilates playbook are bodyweight exercises intended to boost strength and flexibility. (3)

A quick but important note: “Pilates” has been legally deemed to be a generic term, so many workouts have been developed as derivatives of the original Pilates routine. As a result, several workout routines and styles claim to descend from Joseph Pilates’ original set of 34 movements. This is true whether they are mat-based Pilates and require no equipment, or use Pilates reformers and call for specialized equipment.

Try This 20-minute Pilates Workout 

There are certainly endless variations of Pilates sessions to try, with many promising — and providing — a solid ab workout that even beginner Pilates enthusiasts can take on. From home workouts to 30-minute full-body Pilates sessions in the studio complete with reformers, there are Pilates options for so many people out there.

But to Pilates purists, there is only one Pilates workout.

[Read More: The Best Yoga Poses for Beginners to Support Bigger, Better Lifts]

The traditional 34-exercise mat Pilates routine was prescribed in a precise sequence. If you adhere to the original timeframe for completing the exercises, they are likely to take you an hour to complete. However, this is by no means a binding rule, as the benefits of Pilates can be achieved over shorter workouts.

The Workout 

When you’re talking about the original version, the primary difference between a beginner-friendly Pilates workout and an intermediate Pilates routine is the number of exercises you can perform

Some movements may require you to improve your strength and flexibility over several training sessions. Even if you can’t complete every move the first time, this is a full-body Pilates workout that will sculpt your muscles and make you feel good without adding stress to your lower back.

[Read More: The 10 Best Leg Stretches to Bolster Your Lower Body Training]

Even if you’re only getting 10 to 20 minutes, you can run through the series and get a lot done and feel a lot better,” encourages Butcher. “It’s also okay to do fewer movements, like 25 of the 34. Many of the classes that I teach do not have all 34 movements in them. That’s something people have to build up to as opposed to being able to do it right off the bat.” 

You can also customize the movements as needed. For example, with high scissors, there’s no need to brace your body weight on your hands. You can easily perform this move lying down as normal, doing slow, controlled lying scissor kicks with straight or even bent legs.

[Read More: The Best Mobility Exercises From a Physical Therapist (+ Tips)]

Modifications 

The Benefits of Pilates

Bodies that have been built by Pilates are often known to be strong, firm, and flexible. (4) These attributes are advantageous to anyone interested in maximizing their health and vitality. Moreover, you’re also getting all of this at a low cost to your joints.

Core Connection

If you lift heavy weights, you know the importance of developing a strong midsection. Conversely, you also recognize how quickly a lift can break down if your core isn’t adequately involved in the lift, or if your large muscle groups have to compensate for a lack of core strength. Even at-home Pilates workouts will help you reestablish the connection of your core to the rest of your body.

[Read More: The Stretches That Can Help Your Posture]

“When you lift weights, sometimes you’re being so forceful that your big muscles like your quads, back, and butt start to take over and do all the work,” cautions Butcher. “Then your connecting muscles — even your abdominals — don’t engage as they should. Pilates is a low-impact way to build your core connection and teach your body what to do when you encounter a heavy weight. You’ll intuitively start to make those corrections without having to overload your body.”

Increased Stability

One of the benefits often attributed to Pilates is its ability to help you increase your stability starting with your center, and then progressively extend that stability outward through your limbs. With your back and abdominals properly strengthened and balanced through Pilates, Butcher says your core will become a more stable anchor point for all of your lifts.

[Read More: What’s the Difference Between Passive and Active Stretching?]

“With Pilates, we hold the center strong and then reach out and away to start opening up and building the strength of everything else,” Butche explains. “We don’t individualize arms and legs; we use them as part of the whole. Pilates will help everything become stronger, safer, and more stable.”

Boosted Flexibility

Pilates is strongly linked to improvements in flexibility amongst people who repeat these movements week after week. (5) No, Pilates isn’t as simple as basic stretching, or quite as intent on using your breath to drive limb lengthening as yoga. Instead, Butcher attributes Pilates’ tendency to improve your flexibility to its ability to place your body into a long and strong configuration. 

[Read More: Why Yoga Is Necessary For Strength Athletes]

Flexibility comes from stability,” asserts Butcher. “If you’re stretching your hamstring and your back is round and your pelvis is collapsed backward into that posterior tilt, you’re not really stretching your hamstring. Flexibility increases as soon as you start to learn how to stabilize your pelvis and organize your body during those postures. You need to have a stable core before those stretches start to do anything real.”

FAQs

If you still have questions about whether or not Pilates is the missing ingredient in your workout routine, we’ve supplied answers to some of those questions below.

What kind of workout is Pilates?

At its essence, Pilates is a calisthenic training (bodyweight) workout that prioritizes core strength and flexibility. (6

Is 20 minutes of Pilates a day enough?

Although Pilates was conceived by its founder as an hour-long movement series, 20 minutes of Pilates training is generally sufficient to achieve several of Pilates’ benefits.

What is Pilates training? 

Pilates training involves taking the body through a series of core-strengthening movements that are intended to improve posture, balance, strength, and flexibility. (3)

What are the benefits of doing Pilates regularly?

The benefits of performing Pilates regularly include an engaged core, heightened stability, and improved flexibility. (3)

References

  1.  “The Start of WWI Internment.” Knockaloe.im. Retrieved from: https://www.knockaloe.im/page_346204.html
  2. Olorunshola, Yosola. (2021) “The Exercise Phenomenon Born in a Prisoner-of-War Camp.” National Geographic UK.
  3. Kloubec J. Pilates: how does it work and who needs it? Muscles Ligaments Tendons J. 2011 Dec 29;1(2):61-6. 
  4. Emery K, De Serres SJ, McMillan A, Côté JN. The effects of a Pilates training program on arm-trunk posture and movement. Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2010 Feb;25(2):124-30. 
  5. Desai R, thakrar G, Shukla H. Effects of pilates exercises on trunk strength, endurance and flexibility in computer professionals. Int J Health Sci Res. 2020; 10(12):80-85.
  6. Emery K, De Serres SJ, McMillan A, Côté JN. The effects of a Pilates training program on arm-trunk posture and movement. Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2010 Feb;25(2):124-30. 

The post Is Pilates the Key to Strength Training Stability? Here’s the Classic Pilates Workout, Explained by an Instructor appeared first on BarBend.

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