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Pilates Fitness Friday: Mobility Before Stability
Gentle shoulder mobility work helping reduce tension before progressing towards stability and strengthening exercises. One of the biggest mistakes in modern fitness is trying to strengthen a body that is already full of tension. We often see clients arrive with tight shoulders, stiff hips, restricted breathing, and overloaded neck muscles, yet the immediate focus becomes strength training. While strength is important, the body first needs space to move before it can stabilise

Michael King
4 days ago2 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: Length Before Movement
Pilates practitioner lengthening the spine against spring resistance on the Cadillac apparatus. One of the things I see repeatedly in Pilates classes, gyms, and movement training in general is people moving first and organising the body second. Humans are wonderfully committed to making life harder than necessary. We collapse into joints, shorten the spine, grip through the neck, and then wonder why the body feels compressed and tired. When many people hear the word “stretchi

Michael King
May 113 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Moving with Balance Through Tai Chi
Tai Chi walking outdoors improves balance, focus, mobility, and body awareness through controlled movement. Today’s Fitness Friday feels a little different. The fitness world is often dominated by intensity, speed, sweat, heart rate zones, and somebody shouting motivational phrases while balancing on a Bosu ball. Yet there are movement systems that have quietly survived for centuries because they offer something far deeper than simply burning calories. Tai Chi is one of them.

Michael King
May 83 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: Knee Stretch and the Truth About Hyperextension
Instructor guiding reformer knee stretch, focusing on elbow control and upper body stability Today we’re looking at the knee stretch, one of those exercises that appears simple until you start watching what people actually do with it. On paper, it’s about trunk stability, hip movement, and controlled carriage work. In reality, it often turns into a quiet masterclass in how the body avoids effort, especially through the elbows. Hyperextension, particularly at the elbows in thi

Michael King
May 43 min read


Pilates Soulful Sunday: From Body Positivity to Body Function
Colourful figures highlight body diversity, promoting acceptance while emphasising strength, presence, and movement. Over the years, the conversation around body image has shifted quite significantly. At one time, body positivity was an important and necessary change. It challenged unrealistic expectations and allowed people to feel more comfortable in their own bodies. That shift had real value. But as with many ideas, once it becomes widespread, the message can start to blu

Michael King
Apr 192 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Pickleball and the Role of Pilates
Pickleball demands controlled movement, balance, and coordination, highlighting the need for Pilates training. Pickleball is one of the fastest-growing sports at the moment, and it is easy to see why. It is social, accessible, and relatively easy to learn. Played on a smaller court with a solid paddle and a lightweight ball, it combines elements of tennis, badminton, and table tennis. The slower pace compared to tennis makes it appealing to a wide range of people, particularl

Michael King
Apr 172 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Physical Activity Is Not Exercise
Everyday gardening keeps her active, but structured exercise would build strength and resilience One of the most important distinctions we can make as Pilates teachers is the difference between physical activity and exercise. It sounds simple, yet this misunderstanding shows up in studios every day. Clients will often say they are “very active.” They walk regularly, they are busy, they move a lot, and they are not wrong. Physical activity is any movement that increases energy

Michael King
Apr 162 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: The Difference Between Stability and Rigidity
Swaying tree adapts to wind, just like stable movement responds without tension. One of the most common misunderstandings in Pilates teaching is the confusion between stability and rigidity. They are often treated as the same thing, yet they produce completely different outcomes in the body. Stability is organised, responsive, and adaptable. Rigidity is fixed, over-held, and resistant to change. The problem is that rigidity is frequently mistaken for control. It can look neat

Michael King
Apr 23 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Strength First, Stretch Second
Controlled stretch showing strength supporting range, not collapsing into passive flexibility Walk into most classes and you will still see the same pattern. People chasing flexibility as if more range automatically equals better movement. It looks good, it feels productive, and it ticks the box of having “stretched.” The problem is, the body does not work like that. Flexibility without strength is rarely useful. In many cases, it is where issues begin. You’ve seen it countle

Michael King
Mar 273 min read


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


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 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


Pilates Technique Thursday: Breathing and Body Position
Standing Pilates practitioners practice lateral rib breathing, hands on ribs to feel expansion and control. Breathing is not only a function of the lungs. It is also influenced by posture. The position of the spine, the direction of gravity, and the movement of the diaphragm all affect how easily the lungs expand. Research in respiratory physiology shows that body position alters lung volumes, breathing mechanics, and diaphragm function. This means that breathing while standi

Michael King
Mar 54 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 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 Technique Thursday: Class Planning With Purpose
Group performing shoulder bridge with single leg lift on mats. Class planning is not a random act. It is not a playlist of your favourite exercises. It is a decision about what your clients need today. We all know the original order from Joseph Pilates’ book. It is elegant. It flows. It challenges the body in a progressive way. But we also know the bodies walking into our studios in 2026 are not the bodies walking into a New York studio in the 1940s. They arrive with tight hi

Michael King
Feb 192 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 Fitness Friday: Lipoedema and movement.
Three women standing together, showing diverse bodies, strength, support, and confidence without judgement. Pilates Fitness Friday often gives me a chance to step slightly sideways from pure Pilates and talk more broadly about movement, fitness, and real bodies. Lipoedema is one of those conditions where this wider conversation matters. Not because exercise fixes it. It does not. But because the right kind of movement helps people live more comfortably in their bodies. When I

Michael King
Jan 163 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday. Christmas Mobility. Why Staying Mobile Helps Your Body Handle Festive Excess
Festive comfort invites stillness. Mobility keeps the body from stiffening during long evenings indoors Mobility has been on my mind this week. Not the dramatic kind. No deep stretches. No heroic routines. Just the quiet stuff we stop doing when the weather turns cold and the chairs get softer. Christmas week is strange for the body. You sit more. You eat more. You move less. Then you wonder why everything feels stiff, heavy, and uncooperative. It is not the food alone. It is

Michael King
Dec 19, 20252 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Ancestral Living and Strength Training for the Older Adult
Older adult walking up concrete steps holding the rail to build steady leg strength. There is something simple about looking back at how people moved before gyms, trackers, and equipment. Strength came from daily life. People carried, climbed, squatted, reached, and walked because they had to. For older adults who want to feel stronger without complicated programmes, using ideas from ancestral living offers a clear and practical way to build strength that feels natural for th

Michael King
Nov 14, 20252 min read
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