Body Basics - A Pilates Newsletter - More About Breathing
Body With Soul Inc February, 2006 Louise Forscher
8601
International Ave #273
Canoga Park,Ca 91304
Phone: 818
775 9548
Cell: 818 599 0901
LouiseForscher@sbcglobal.net
Website:
pilates-exercise-and-equipment.com
BODY BASICS A
PILATES NEWSLETTER - MORE ABOUT BREATHING
Hello and we are now swinging into 2006 and sticking to
those New Year's resolutions. Keep going!!!
Being physically fit is a part of not only a healthy body but a
healthy mind and spirit.
Pilates was designed to give you complete control of your own
body. This is seemingly something only for athletes and dancers.
Not so - it is within anyone's grasp and it can be attained on a
daily regimen of 10 - 20 minutes or even 4 times a week.
Control of muscles is a sense that can be developed like seeing,
hearing and smelling.
Just like you use your hearing or sight, you can use your
muscles and it can become just as inherent as sight or hearing.
Pilates is a skill attained that not only increases the clarity
and sharpness of your mind, but also your physical fitness.
That's a pretty good deal.
The hot body tip this month is again breathing. Why again?
Because it is the foundation of physical fitness.
With a fully functioning breathing system the muscles and blood
are fully oxygenated, the impurities removed and the heart
helped. All these work better.
Here is a little exercise: Lying down on your back, knees up,
feet flat on the floor, pelvis in neutral (see Body Basics 2)
and a cushion for the head and upper shoulders.
If you possess a theraband, have it under your body around your
ribcage and held with one hand over your breastbone - some
tension on the band.
If you don't have a theraband, place your hands on the sides of
your ribcage.
Inhale through the nose and feel the ribcage flattening into the
floor underneath you and the ribs coming out sideways away from
the spine. You will feel the theraband expand or the ribs come
out into your hand. Try not to lift your shoulders or upper
breastbone.
Inhale through the nose until you feel no more air can go in.
Then you will naturally start to exhale through the mouth - let
the ribs drop down and get as much air out as you can.
Light headedness can occur with this deep breathing but after
practicing this daily it disappears.
The trick is to expand the ribs to get air in - not the
abdominals below.
If you have trouble keeping your abs out of the inhale, try this
isolation exercise.
Breathe in - hold your breath for a short time and push your
lower abs in and out. Then exhale and use the lower abs to help
push the breath out.
By all means use the lower abs to help you push the air out by
flattening them across your lower belly. When you inhale though
keep the expansion in the ribs.
Got it? Good. Practice it daily. The above ab isolation is
directly from Joseph Pilates and here is what he says about
breathing:
"It may seem silly to say at first, but many millions of people
never learn how to breathe properly. True heart control follows
correct breathing. This simultaneously reduces heart strain,
purifies the blood and develops the lungs."
Here are some more success stories from my clients.:
This lady has been a dancer and done Pilates before. Being too
busy to write something up she told me her wins and I wrote them
down.. She says with the foot work I gave her, a long standing
misunderstanding about how to use her feet was resolved and as a
result she feels much more stable with the ground up through her
legs and in her core area because of that firm connection below.
She also says that getting her to drop her breastbone and keep
it down and anchored towards her mid back has provided a stable
center for her shoulders to move from and she feels much more
stable in that area so that a chronic shoulder condition is now
releasing and starting to relax. Release exercises for the
shoulder have also contributed. Her spine was also compressed
opposite to her breastbone from continually and automatically
lifting the breastbone creating a curve in the spine. This curve
in her back has now relaxed, more mobile and the muscles are no
longer locked tight. Basically she found the three stable points
of the body when exercising or the three anchor points as I call
them. The feet, the pelvis and the spine opposite the
breastbone. . Success Story:
"I suffered lower back pain on and off for 30 years. My back
would 'go out' from time to time to a point when I turned 50 it
was going out about 4 times per year and would take several days
to a week to get out of the pain band. My wife trained as a
Pilates instructor a couple of years ago and at that time I
started doing Pilates once or twice a week. I then got to a
point where for about a month I was doing it for about 10
minutes 4 times a week which is not a whole lot of investment of
my time.
Now I do it one good hour a week.
The success I have had is that my back has not gone out in over
a year. The little I have done in Pilates has been enough to
change my body to the point where I no longer experience the
repeated back problem I once had." G.F.
Yours Louise Forscher