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Pilates Self-Care Saturday: When Doing Less Actually Does More
Calm standing posture, eyes closed, focusing on breath and gentle body awareness. There’s a strange belief in our industry that self-care needs to look productive. A longer session. A harder class. More exercises, more effort, more sweat. Somewhere along the line, rest became something we have to earn. But the body doesn’t work like that. It adapts when you give it the right input, and it restores when you stop interfering. Self-care, from a Pilates perspective, isn’t about d

Michael King
Mar 213 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Control Before Range of Movement
Controlled mat-based roll over demonstrating spinal articulation, precision, and supported movement through centre In Pilates teaching, there is a constant temptation to prioritise how far a client can move rather than how well they can control that movement. It is understandable. Greater range often looks more impressive, both to the teacher and the client. It gives the illusion of progress. However, without control, that range has very little value and often reinforces poor

Michael King
Mar 192 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Teaching With Integrity
A Pilates teacher leads with confidence while a class responds with mixed reactions. One of the realities of teaching Pilates is that you cannot control what other people think about you. As teachers we do our best to prepare. We study the method, we attend courses, we observe movement carefully, and we try to explain exercises in ways that help our clients move with more control, strength, and awareness. We work to improve our knowledge and our skills because we know that te

Michael King
Mar 122 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: The First Five Repetitions Matter Most
Pilates teacher observes client performing controlled Roll Up, focusing on alignment and early repetition quality. When teaching Pilates, we often say that quality is more important than quantity. One of the best examples of this is what happens in the first few repetitions of any exercise. The nervous system learns movement patterns very quickly. In fact, the brain begins organising and refining a movement from the very first repetition. Those first few repetitions teach the

Michael King
Mar 92 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Strength vs Endurance Training
Pilates inspired plank position highlighting stability, endurance training, and controlled bodyweight strength work. Walk into any fitness space today and you will hear the words strength, tone, and endurance used almost interchangeably. Clients ask for strength training when they mean a harder workout. Others say they want endurance but really mean they want to feel less tired. For Pilates teachers it is useful to understand the difference, because the Pilates method often s

Michael King
Mar 62 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: The Tools of Our Trade
Wooden reformer frame mid-assembly inside a busy industrial workshop. Today I found myself standing in the middle of six enormous factory buildings, watching reformers being built, and honestly, it felt completely aligned with my world. Three hundred people working, wood being shaped, upholstery being stitched, springs lined up with absolute precision. I kept thinking, this is where our daily language is made. This is where the tools of our profession begin. When I walked int

Michael King
Mar 32 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: The Forward Lunge and the Honest Balance
Controlled forward lunge on the Reformer with integrated overhead arm balance. There is something about finishing a movement with the arms lifted overhead that makes everyone feel slightly heroic. The carriage is still, the spine is tall, the legs are split, and for a brief moment the body looks organised and powerful. Or at least that is the intention. In today’s Movement Monday I want to talk about the forward lunge on the Reformer, and more specifically that final balance

Michael King
Mar 22 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Refining Your Teaching, Raising Your Standards, and Staying True to the Method
Demonstrating alignment and intent while students build strength and awareness. There is something about a Tuesday that invites reflection. Monday is noise. It is catching up, answering messages, and fixing what fell apart over the weekend. Tuesday is quieter. It gives you just enough space to think. In Pilates, we talk constantly about control, precision, and awareness. We cue breath. We watch alignment. We adjust a shoulder blade by a centimetre and call it progress. Yet as

Michael King
Feb 242 min read


Pilates Move Up Monday: The Back Stretch on the Tower
Controlled spinal articulation on the Tower with precise knee bends at the top. After teaching Pilates Tower all weekend, I was reminded how valuable this exercise is for building real understanding of articulation and shoulder support. Pilates Back Stretch, performed with the push through bar from above, is one of those movements that quietly prepares clients for more complex work like Short Spine and High Frog. It teaches where the lift actually begins. Set up matters. Use

Michael King
Feb 232 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Cardiovascular Training for Pilates Clients
Active older adults power walking with poles through leafy park path. There is a quiet gap in the Pilates world, and it sits somewhere between beautiful control on the Reformer and the simple act of walking up a hill without losing your breath. We spend hours refining alignment, cueing the centre, improving hip stability and shoulder mechanics, yet many teachers hesitate when the conversation turns to cardiovascular training. It is almost treated as if it belongs to another i

Michael King
Feb 203 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: Shoulder Bridge on the Reformer
Instructor guides single leg shoulder bridge on Reformer with precise alignment Today I want to spend a bit more time on the Pilates Shoulder Bridge on the Reformer, because although it looks like a simple strength exercise, it is one of those movements that quietly reveals everything about how someone is using their body. I often say that once you lift one leg, the truth appears. The pelvis will either remain organised and steady, or it will rotate, drop, or grip. There is n

Michael King
Feb 163 min read


Pilates Soulful Sunday: Pressing the Pause Button
A deliberate pause before the week begins again. This weekend did not pause itself. We chose to pause it. Most weekends we do not get that choice. The diary fills, commitments stack up, and the rhythm carries us forward. This time, we stepped out of it on purpose. We celebrated anniversaries. We stayed at home. We let everything continue without us for a couple of days. That decision mattered. When you teach Pilates & movement for a living, your energy is rarely neutral. You

Michael King
Feb 152 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Pilates Teaching Systems
Group Pilates class preparing through movement before structured matwork begins. Every teacher develops a system, whether they admit it or not. The question is whether it is intentional. Over the years I have become clear about mine. It starts with mobility. Not because it sounds progressive or modern, but because without movement options, alignment is simply a shape people force themselves into. When a client walks in, they are not a blank canvas. They arrive with their day

Michael King
Feb 123 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Catching yourself Teaching on Autopilot
A quiet moment where teaching slows down, hands guide lightly, attention stays fully present. Some classes I catch myself mid sentence and realise I am teaching on habit. Same cues. Same order. Same rhythm. It works. Until it does not. Usually I am the one who stops learning first. Teaching Pilates sharpens your eye for movement. What slips past is how rarely we watch ourselves. How we speak. How fast we fill silence. How quickly we correct rather than observe. Thoughtful Tue

Michael King
Feb 101 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Precision Before Intensity
Strong side bend showing control, alignment, and whole body integration through steady breath and focus. Intensity looks impressive. Sweat. Noise. Speed. It gives quick feedback. Precision does not. Precision looks quiet. It asks you to pay attention. Many teachers avoid it for that reason. Pilates Precision changes outcomes because the nervous system learns patterns, not effort. When movement lines up well, the body recruits muscle in the right order. Stabilisers fire before

Michael King
Feb 51 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday. Showing Up Still Counts.
Quiet authority in a matwork class, teaching through observation, presence, and consistency. A Pilates class I taught recently stopped me in my tracks. Not because it sparkled. Not because it broke new ground. It did not. And that turned out to be the point. As Pilates teachers, we live with improvement sitting on our shoulder. Better cueing. Better flow. Better outcomes. There is a quiet pressure every class should move something forward in a visible way. Stronger. Smarter.

Michael King
Feb 32 min read


Pilates Movement Monday. Prehensile and why it keeps getting misunderstood.
Traditional Pilates prehensile foot placement, arch wrapping the bar with toes free and heel lifted. Let’s talk about the foot series without turning it into a checklist. There is a traditional position in Pilates called prehensile. People often shorten it to “the arch on the bar,” which is where the trouble starts. Prehensile is not the ball of the foot and it is not a polite version of metatarsal placement. It is the midfoot wrapping over the bar, just in front of the heel,

Michael King
Feb 22 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday. Working with clients who have had a stroke.
A Pilates teacher supports an older client, guiding controlled arm movement and postural awareness. When someone comes to me after a stroke, safety sits at the centre of the conversation. Not as a formality. As a responsibility. This is the point where good teaching starts. In the UK, stroke recovery begins under medical and physiotherapy care. National NHS and NICE guidance is clear. Exercise forms part of recovery once the person is medically stable, but the early direction

Michael King
Jan 302 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Holistic Teaching
A colourful full body figure showing connected movement patterns across the entire human system. I have just finished running a Level 3 Matwork course for the YMCA. Paperwork always waits at the end, quietly judging everyone. One question stood out. Explain the term holistic. In medicine, holistic means looking at the whole body. Not symptoms. Not single muscles. Not one noisy joint asking for attention. It means observing how the body works together. How it moves. How one ar

Michael King
Jan 292 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Why "Harder" Isn't Always Better (and How I Prove It)
Instructor guides standing balance work, focusing on alignment, control, and calm breath awareness. It usually happens before we even hit the mat. A client looks at me, maybe a bit restless, and says they want something harder . They want more sweat, more effort—the kind of "proof" that tells them the session was worth the investment. I never hear this as laziness. Honestly? I hear it as a compliment to their work ethic. The fitness industry has trained us to believe that if

Michael King
Jan 272 min read
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