I love efficiency. I think anyone who has ever had to get a
kindergartener ready for school in the morning has a certain amount of fondness
for it due to the absolute lack of same in the mind of most
five-year-olds. Who knew it could take
45 minutes to put on clean underwear, pants, and a shirt? But wait!
There are still shoes and socks!
Efficiency culture,
however, has its downside. We get overly
focused on how-much-how-fast-how-streamlined it all is. We had better find yet another way to
multitask while driving or reading or working out—if only we could do more in
our sleep!!! Yeah, no.
One of the beautiful
things about Pilates is that it helps us be present right now, doing one
thing. We can focus on how putting our feet
in the reformer’s straps make our hips feel, how expanding our chests as we
inhale into spinal extension lifts our mood, how stacking our bones gives us a
sense of stability. We can slow down and
notice.
I could argue that this
is a stealth efficiency, that this very process of single-tasking or
mindfulness or whatever we choose to call it improves our later
performance. It would even be, in some
senses, true. I’m not going to make that
argument, however. The moment is
enough. We are enough. Right now.
Just the way we are. We do our
fitness work to learn that one thing, at least I hope so.