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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
17 hours ago3 min read


Pilates Self-Care Saturday: Creating Space in the Body
Subtle ribcage and pelvis alignment demonstrating controlled length, ease, and efficient movement patterns. We often hear the phrase “create space in the body,” but in many cases it has become little more than a vague idea. It is often confused with stretching further, moving bigger, or trying to achieve more range. In reality, creating space has very little to do with how far we move and far more to do with how well we organise the body. In Pilates, we are not chasing flexib

Michael King
6 days ago3 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
7 days ago3 min read


Pilates Technique Thursday: Are We Really Meant to “Push Out”?
Hands placed on pelvis, demonstrating awareness of abdominal support and neutral standing posture There’s been a lot of talk lately about intra-abdominal pressure and systems like Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilisation. You’ll hear cues like “breathe into the belly” or “expand the abdomen” and, if we’re honest, it can feel slightly uncomfortable to hear, especially if you’ve spent years teaching lift, connection, and control. So the obvious question is this. If we are pushing ou

Michael King
Mar 262 min read


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


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 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


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


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


Pilates Self-Care Saturday: The Quiet Strength Approach
Simple forearm conditioning using dry rice for strength and control. Only the fitness world on social media could turn a sack of supermarket rice into a training tool. You scroll past coffee, cats, and someone hanging off a Reformer, and then there it is. A bucket of rice. Arm buried to the elbow. Caption promising stronger wrists and happier shoulders. It made me smile. But it also made me think. The idea itself is beautifully simple. You place your hand and forearm into unc

Michael King
Feb 282 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


Fitness Friday: Sleep and Muscle Gain, Why You Build Muscle in Bed, Not in the Gym
Muscle repair happens overnight, not during your final set. This week’s Fitness Friday is not about a new protocol, a new gadget, or a clever variation of anything. It is about sleep. The most boring performance tool available, and the one most people ignore. You train. You lift. You increase the load and feel pleased with yourself. Then you sleep five or six hours and expect the body to adapt perfectly. It does not work like that. Muscle protein synthesis, the repair and reb

Michael King
Feb 132 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. What Fitness Means for the Over 60
Fitness after 60 focuses on capability, posture, and moving through daily life with ease. Fitness after 60 has a different job description. It is no longer about proving anything. It is about staying capable. It is about keeping your body useful, reliable, and cooperative. By this stage, your body has history. Joints remember things. Muscles respond slower. Recovery asks for respect. None of this is a problem. It simply changes the rules. Strength still matters, but not for s

Michael King
Jan 232 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: Kneeling Long Box with Straps
Kneeling long box hip extension showing control, balance, neutral spine, and strong glute work. Today looks at a controlled strength movement on the Reformer. You kneel on the long box, place one foot into a strap, take a four point position, and set a light spring. A blue spring keeps the load sensible. Your goal is to avoid fighting the machine. The movement is simple on paper. You extend the working leg straight back and lift it to hip height. You hold a neutral spine. You

Michael King
Dec 8, 20251 min read


Pilates Movement Monday Short Box Series for Deep Core Support and Alignment
Malcolm shows a strong lumbar flexion curve, holding steady control through the centre. Pilates Movement Monday looks at the Short Box Series, a clear way to strengthen your abdominals and sharpen your control through the centre. The work looks simple, but the challenge sits underneath. You train the deep muscles that support your spine while the larger global muscles learn to move in harmony without gripping or taking over. Breath links the whole thing together. Set the Refo

Michael King
Dec 1, 20252 min read


Pilates Fitness Friday: Pilates and Grip Strength
Hand squeezing a soft ball to build grip strength during controlled Pilates work. Grip strength gives clear information about overall strength and long term health. Several large studies show this. A 2015 Lancet study tracked more than 140000 adults and found lower grip strength linked with higher risk of death from any cause. A 2018 BMJ review showed the same pattern in middle aged and older adults. The UK Biobank followed more than 500000 adults and reported that lower grip

Michael King
Nov 28, 20252 min read


Pilates Movement Monday: The Bicycle
Pilates Movement Monday: Bicycle on the Shoulders The traditional Bicycle on the shoulders looks elegant until you try to keep everything lifted, steady, and calm. It challenges your strength through the centre and your control through the hips, and it becomes a lot more manageable when the breath leads the movement. You begin on your back and lift into a supported shoulder stand. Your hands support the pelvis so you stay high through the centre without dumping weight into th

Michael King
Nov 24, 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


Pilates Technique Thursday: Eccentric Work and Spring Control
Focused eccentric control as the springs support balanced, continuous movement through the Pilates method. Springs are the heart of the Pilates apparatus. They create a resistance that feels alive, unlike fixed weights. On the Reformer, the Cadillac, or any spring-based equipment, the goal is not to overpower the spring but to move with it. Romana once told me, “Fifty per cent of the work should be you and fifty per cent should be the springs.” That balance defines the method

Michael King
Nov 6, 20251 min read
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