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Pilates Wellness Wednesday: Visual Nutrition – What Are You Feeding Your Mind?
The eyes reflect nature, quietly feeding the brain with calm, restorative visual input. We spend a lot of time talking about nutrition. What to eat, what to avoid, how much water to drink, how often to exercise. It’s all very well organised, very measurable, and very easy to turn into a list. But there is another kind of nutrition that rarely gets mentioned, and yet it is influencing us all day, every day. That is what we might call visual nutrition. The brain is constantly t

Michael King
Mar 253 min read
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Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Holding the World Without Carrying It
A city in chaos reflects the weight we carry silently into our bodies The world feels loud at the moment. There is always something happening, always something urgent, and it rarely feels positive. News cycles move quickly, opinions move even faster, and without realising it, we absorb far more than we think. It doesn’t just stay in the mind. It settles into the body, into the breath, into the way people arrive in a room before a class has even begun. Yesterday I drove from D

Michael King
Mar 243 min read
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Pilates Movement Monday: Owning the Back Extension on the Guillotine
Strong controlled back extension on Guillotine, demonstrating precision, alignment, and full-body integration There’s something about this movement that immediately exposes everything. You can’t hide behind momentum. You can’t fake control. The moment you take hold of the bar and move into extension, your body tells the truth. Now, let’s talk about the machine, because this is not your everyday studio setup. The Guillotine is one of the less common pieces of Pilates apparatus

Michael King
Mar 232 min read
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Pilates Soulful Sunday: Learning to Sit With Silence
Calm presence by the window as nature changes gently outside without urgency There’s something oddly uncomfortable about silence. Not the kind you get when a class finishes or when the room settles for a moment, but real silence. No music in the background, no phone in your hand, no conversation to lean into. Just sitting, with nothing to fill the space. It sounds simple. It rarely is. Most people reach for something almost immediately. A screen, a task, a distraction. We’ve

Michael King
Mar 222 min read
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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
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Pilates Fitness Friday: Neck and Upper Body Strength
Close-up of neck showing natural ageing and the need for strength and support You’d think by now the neck would have a better reputation. It works all day, holds the head up without complaint, and still gets treated like it might shatter if we look at it the wrong way. In Pilates, the moment someone mentions neck tension, everything changes. The head gets supported, movements get softened, and suddenly the whole session is built around avoiding the area. It feels considerate,

Michael King
Mar 202 min read
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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
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Pilates Wellness Wednesday: Could Prehab Help Some People Avoid a Hip Replacement?
Woman holding her hip, showing discomfort and reduced mobility in daily life This week I heard something on a podcast that stopped me in my tracks. A therapist was talking about how popular prehab exercises have become for people preparing for a hip replacement. What caught my attention was her claim that a large number of her patients ended up not needing surgery at all once they began the right exercise programme. That sounds dramatic, but interestingly it is not as far-fet

Michael King
Mar 184 min read
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Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Still, Sparkling… and What’s Really in the Glass?
Elegant restaurant table featuring curated water menu with still and sparkling selections I was driving the other day, tuned into Radio 4 as usual. It’s one of my favourite classrooms. No effort required, just listen and learn. This time, the subject was water. Not just drinking water. The water industry. And somewhere along the way, we have now created something called a water sommelier. Apparently, choosing water is no longer a simple decision between still or sparkling. Th

Michael King
Mar 175 min read
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Pilates Movement Monday: Leg Springs on the Cadillac
Client performing Cadillac leg spring exercise while instructor observes alignment and leg control. One of the exercises that always reminds me how clever the Pilates apparatus is would be Leg Springs on the Cadillac. At first glance it looks quite simple. You are lying on the table, your feet are in the straps, and the springs are helping to support the legs. But anyone who has actually done the exercise properly knows there is much more going on. The Cadillac, originally ca

Michael King
Mar 162 min read
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Pilates Soulful Sunday: The Tiny Creatures That Feed the World
Honeybee covered in pollen gathering nectar from a bright orange flower in sunlight. On a quiet Pilates Soulful Sunday it is sometimes useful to pause and think about the small things that keep our world functioning. We often imagine that modern life runs on technology, systems, and human effort. Yet one of the most important contributors to our daily food supply is a tiny insect that most people rarely think about. Bees. Bees play a critical role in pollination. Pollination

Michael King
Mar 152 min read
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Self-Care Saturday: Are We Flexible Enough?
Flexibility is often misunderstood. Many people think it simply means touching your toes or pulling your leg behind your head. In reality, flexibility is about how comfortably the body moves through everyday life. It is the ability of joints, muscles and connective tissue to allow movement without strain. When flexibility is present, movement feels easy. When it is missing, even simple actions start to feel awkward or restricted. As the years pass, the tissues of the body nat

Michael King
Mar 142 min read
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Pilates Fitness Friday: Strength Training After 60
Active woman over sixty smiling while lifting light dumbbells during a strength training session. This subject has become increasingly important to me personally because I am now over sixty myself. Once you cross that line you start to think differently about strength, mobility, and maintaining the ability to do the things you enjoy. Even if you are not over sixty, many of your clients will be. In most Pilates studios this age group forms a large part of the community. Unders

Michael King
Mar 133 min read
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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
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Pilates Wellness Wednesday: Steam Inhalation for Winter Chest Congestion
Warm herbal steam inhalation under a towel to ease winter chest congestion naturally. With the colder months settling in, many people begin to experience the familiar symptoms of winter colds, chest congestion, and blocked sinuses. At the moment there seems to be a lot of chest infections circulating again, and unfortunately my own chest infection has decided to make a return. It is never particularly welcome, especially when breathing comfortably is so important for both dai

Michael King
Mar 112 min read
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Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: When the World Knocks on Your Door
Close up of a hand holding a credit card, symbolising rising everyday living costs. Like many people, I sometimes avoid watching too much news. The endless stream of conflict, politics, and global problems can feel overwhelming. It can also feel distant. Something happening thousands of miles away seems far removed from our daily lives. But every now and then the world reminds us that we are all connected. Yesterday I ordered heating oil and realised that the price had double

Michael King
Mar 102 min read
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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
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Pilates Soulful Sunday: When the Seasons Begin to Turn
Bright yellow daffodils beneath old trees in K i rkcudbright under clear spring blue skies. There is always a moment when winter begins to loosen its grip. It is not dramatic. It arrives quietly. One morning you notice snowdrops pushing through the soil. A few days later the crocuses appear. Then the daffodils follow, standing there like small yellow signals that something is shifting. The trees are still mostly bare, but you can see the first hints of change in their colour

Michael King
Mar 83 min read
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Pilates Self-Care Saturday: Is Psoas Pain Always Tightness?
Kneeling lunge stretch demonstrating hip extension while highlighting iliopsoas and quadriceps muscle group. Scrolling through social media recently I came across a statement that caught my attention. It suggested that psoas pain is not always caused by tightness and that the real issue might be pelvic lymphatic congestion. It also claimed that if fascia is dehydrated then stretching or releasing it simply pulls on the tissue rather than helping it. Statements like this often

Michael King
Mar 73 min read
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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
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