It’s the end of the month and I’m feeling sneaky. So we have squat pop ups this week, which are like the bottom half of a burpee. Four rounds.
1 min cardio | |
| |
woodchoppers | 30 |
flies | 20 |
squat pop up | 10 |
opposite knees | 30 |
bench press | 20 |
plank saw | 10 |
It’s the end of the month and I’m feeling sneaky. So we have squat pop ups this week, which are like the bottom half of a burpee. Four rounds.
1 min cardio | |
| |
woodchoppers | 30 |
flies | 20 |
squat pop up | 10 |
opposite knees | 30 |
bench press | 20 |
plank saw | 10 |
We can Pilates in the wild! Three things to try in daily life:
1. Deep breathing.
2. Aligned posture.
3. Efficient movement.
Another way to refresh the Pilates experience is to take it out of the studio and into the world. This is in line with Uncle Joe’s general philosophy.
What does that mean? It can mean anything from thinking about how we are moving while we are weight lifting in the same way we do while we are doing Pilates—focusing on what our bones are doing, on how and when we exert effort, on the quality of the movement itself—to watching the flow of our breath in line at the grocery store or while we wait for the microwave to beep.
Pilates, like all fitness, is not intended as an end in itself, but rather as a means to a happier, healthier, more zestful life. (Zest is a word that Uncle Joe liked a lot!)
Go get zesty!
Pilates, like all practices, can fall into ruts. We show up, we plop down on the reformer and we go through the motions. Uncle Joe would applaud that we showed up and yet be disappointed in our behavior, maybe.
One of the easiest ways I’ve found to wake up in Pilates is to switch equipment. For a lot of the repertoire, there are versions of the exercises for use on the reformer, or trap table, or ladder barrel, or chair, or spine corrector, or mat, or all of the above. When we move from one piece of equipment to another, we may find ourselves in a different relationship to gravity. We may experience resistance in different ways. We may learn different qualities of motion.
If we are habitual users of the equipment, doing a mat workout can be instructive. Similarly, mat class habitués may find enlightenment in using the equipment.
Change is good in this context, friends.
We’re working balance in a variety of ways this week. Obviously, the single leg work works on it, but the skier jumps and the dumbbell pullovers with bridge also recruit what we need when we have to balance. Three rounds.
tap backs | 30 |
1 leg deadlift | 20 |
1 leg squat | 10 |
| |
squat raise | 30 |
gorilla row | 20 |
curls | 10 |
| |
skier jump | 30 |
db pullover with bridge | 20 |
brains | 10 |
More strength fresheners:
1. Change the tempo.
2. Try a circuit.
3. Swap machines for free weights or vice versa.
4. Change the usual order.
Another approach to freshening our weight workouts is to adjust the variables. These include the number of reps, the number of sets, and the intensity (or what weight we use as a percentage of our single rep maximum).
Captain Obvious would like a word here. We don’t want to increase all the variables at once. If we choose, for example, to do a lot more reps, we’re going to need to choose lighter weights. We need to be fresh-minded (yes, I just made that word up), paying attention to our bodies as we work to know when we have had enough.
Again, we don’t have to switch all the variables for all our workouts. Making one a week or one a month different can be plenty to keep our bodies entertained and growing.