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Pilates Technique Thursday: Stay Strong in Your Teaching Identity
Pilates teaching goes beyond social media, creating strength, trust, and lifelong learning. Over the last couple of weeks, there have been articles in the national press about Pilates. Some of them have not shown the industry in a positive light. But we need to remember something important. We are not defined by Instagram. We are not defined by social media trends, dramatic images, or movements designed more for performance than teaching. Instagram may show creativity, but it

Michael King
May 72 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 Self-Care Saturday: Scented Candles, Calm Spaces and What to Look For
Warm candlelight glows beside sleeping cat and crackling fireplace comfort. There is something about lighting a candle that changes the mood of a room in seconds. The light softens, the atmosphere shifts, and suddenly even a normal Saturday can feel a little more thoughtful. Many of us enjoy scented candles as part of self-care. They can help create a sense of calm before bed, during a bath, while reading, or after a long week of teaching and moving. Humans do love setting fi

Michael King
May 22 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Bone Health and Exercise
Healthy mature woman builds upper body strength with controlled band training. Bone health is one of the most important subjects in fitness, yet it is often ignored until a problem appears. Many people think about muscles, weight loss, or flexibility, but rarely think about the strength of the skeleton that supports everything else. Quietly, year by year, bone density can reduce if we do not challenge the body in the right way. As we age, bone tissue naturally changes. For so

Michael King
May 12 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Warm-Up or Preparation?
Teacher guides standing preparation sequence, helping clients reconnect with posture and movement awareness It’s interesting how often we use words in our industry without really questioning what they mean. One of the most common is the term warm-up. In the world of aerobics and cardiovascular training, a warm-up has a very specific and clearly defined purpose. It is designed to raise the body’s core temperature, increase heart rate, and prepare the system for more intense ph

Michael King
Apr 303 min read


Pilates Wellness Wednesday: Are You Thirsty... Or Have You Forgotten How to Notice?
Healthy woman over sixty drinks water post-workout in a calm studio. One of the quieter changes that can come with age is that the body does not always send the same clear signals it once did. Hunger may feel different, recovery may take longer, sleep can become less predictable, and thirst can become strangely unreliable. Many people over sixty do not necessarily lose the need for water, but they may lose some of the urgency that tells them to drink it. A magnificent bit of

Michael King
Apr 292 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: When “You Must” Starts to Blind You
New Pilates teachers learn that confidence should never replace curiosity. There’s a phrase heard far too often in teacher training rooms: “You must do it this way.” Usually it arrives with great confidence, a pointed finger, and the sort of certainty normally reserved for people explaining parking rules. New teachers hear it and naturally assume they are receiving sacred truth. After all, the person at the front has a manual, a qualification, and an expression suggesting dis

Michael King
Apr 283 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: Reformer Single-Leg Footwork – Under the Bar or Tabletop?
Supine position on reformer, controlled single-leg press demonstrating stability, alignment, and smooth coordinated movement. This week I want to look at a small variation on the Pilates reformer that can make a very big difference, especially when we start thinking about posture and muscle balance rather than just getting through the movement. We’re looking specifically at single-leg footwork on the reformer. The question is simple. Do we bring the non-working leg into table

Michael King
Apr 272 min read


Pilates Soulful Sunday: Why We Need to Stop Saying Sorry
A moment of apology highlights habit versus confidence in communication and presence There’s something oddly comforting about how much we apologise. It’s almost part of the culture. Someone walks straight into us and we’re the ones saying sorry. A meal arrives cold and we apologise before even mentioning it. It’s polite, it’s ingrained, and if we’re honest, it’s a little bit ridiculous as well. So as we sit here on a Soulful Sunday, just before the week begins again, it’s wor

Michael King
Apr 262 min read


Pilates Self-Care Saturday: Energy Management, Not Time Management
Calm moment by the window, restoring energy before moving through the day We’ve all said it. “I just don’t have time.” It’s become the standard excuse, and strangely, nobody ever questions it. We nod, agree, and carry on being exhausted. But here’s the uncomfortable truth. Most people don’t have a time problem. They have an energy problem. You can give someone an extra two hours in their day, and if they’re already tired, overwhelmed, or mentally drained, they won’t suddenly

Michael King
Apr 253 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: You Are the Method, Not the Movements
A dedicated Pilates teacher guides a participant through an exercise, ensuring proper form on the mat. There’s a persistent idea in the industry that if you learn enough exercises, attend enough courses, and collect enough repertoire, you somehow become a better teacher. It sounds tidy. It feels productive. It’s also not true. Pilates does not work because of the movements. It works because of how those movements are taught. Two teachers can deliver the exact same exercise, o

Michael King
Apr 232 min read


Pilates Wellness Wednesday: Loving Our Pets Without Ignoring the Chemicals
A joyful mix of cats and dogs, different breeds, united and looking up together. I have always believed that if we have animals in our care, then we do our best for them. With our two cats and one visiting barn cat, that has meant following the vet’s advice, buying the recommended flea and worm treatments, and applying the dose to the back of the neck while they look at us as if we’ve betrayed them forever. Like many pet owners in the UK, I assumed that if something is widely

Michael King
Apr 224 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Microplastics, Red Wine, and Reality
Brightly coloured microplastics scattered across sand, highlighting hidden environmental contamination in everyday life. As many of you know, I spend a lot of time driving, and one of my regular companions is Radio 4. On a recent journey back from Bristol, I listened to a programme on microplastics. Not exactly light entertainment, but it certainly made the miles go quicker. What struck me most was just how widespread microplastics are. They are not just in oceans or remote e

Michael King
Apr 213 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: The Breath-A-Cizer and the Art of Controlled Breathing
Focused breath training using Breath-A-Cizer to improve control and precision. It’s worth starting with a reminder that Pilates is much more than just the Reformer. While the larger pieces of apparatus tend to dominate studios today, the original system included a wide range of smaller tools that Joseph Pilates designed for very specific purposes. We have wrist exercisers, foot correctors, and devices like the Breath-A-Cizer, each created to isolate, educate, and improve par

Michael King
Apr 203 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 Wellness Wednesday: Gut Health and Movement
Digestive discomfort shifts body alignment, limiting diaphragm function and affecting controlled, efficient movement. Gut health has become one of the most talked about topics in wellness. Most of that conversation is focused on supplements, powders, and quick fixes. What is often missed is something much simpler. If your digestion is not working well, it will change how your body moves. This is not theoretical. It is practical and visible in front of you every day as a teach

Michael King
Apr 152 min read


Pilates Thoughtful Tuesday: Digital Overload and the Disappearing Attention Span
Constant digital distraction reduces awareness, limiting focus needed for effective Pilates practice Watch any class today and you will see it, even if no one is holding a phone. The body is in the room, but the mind keeps drifting somewhere else. Instructions are heard but not absorbed. Movements are performed, but not truly experienced. There is a sense that something is missing, and more often than not, that missing piece is attention. This is not about a lack of motivatio

Michael King
Apr 143 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: Pilates Knee Stretch
Client performing knee stretch on Reformer, demonstrating controlled spinal alignment and core engagement The Knee Stretch on the Reformer is one of those exercises that looks simple, feels demanding, and quietly reveals everything about how someone moves. Traditionally taught with a rounded spine, it has evolved over time to include a neutral position, giving us two very different but equally valuable approaches. The Traditional Rounded Back In its original form, the Knee St

Michael King
Apr 132 min read
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