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A Recovered Treasure:
The Pilates Method
In a
way, he’s a lot like Edgar Allen Poe.
The famous writer had been deceased for many
years before he miraculously cracked
super-stardom, his once-buried work revamped
from the ashes to be relished by millions
and millions of literature fans.
Well, Joseph Pilates is not Edgar Allen Poe.
The German immigrant is hardly a household
name in 1999, but just like Poe, some
thirty-two years after his death, his lost
treasures are now being discovered as genius
works of art.
You’ve seen the countless infomercials in
the middle of the night, boasting this piece
of exercise equipment and that toning
apparatus. They usually get a famous retired
athlete like Joe Montana to endorse it and
swear by it. You’ll actually watch for a
minute and a half before realizing that you
just wasted 90 seconds of your life.
But the word is out that the Pilates Method
is different. This one actually works.
That’s why, if you look around, Pilates
studios are cropping everywhere throughout
the United States. Many health clubs are
offering Pilates classes on a regular basis
and more and more Pilates machines are
filling household closets where those dusty
sets of golf clubs used to rest.
Upon arriving in New York City from Germany,
Mr. Pilates primarily created his method of
fitness to benefit the dance community, as
it was a success along Broadway in the
1920’s. The exercises provided dancers with
that much-needed agility and grace.
Now, in New York City alone, there are about
40 different studios where the Pilates
Method is taught with more cropping up every
day.
But the Pilates Method has not been
restricted to just exercise outlets. All
kinds of hospitals, clinics, and health
centers are pulling in these machines to
treat patients with spinal injuries, back
ailments, and shoulder cuff problems, just
to name a few.
The Pilates Method is essentially an
exercise that combines toning and
stretching, utilizing a series of rhythmic
movements to achieve balance and grace. It
does not have the effects of heavy free
weights or Nautilus machines. The exercises
you perform are very smooth and controlled
and require specific movements from isolated
muscle groups.
The common Pilates apparatus, called the
Universal Reformer, looks almost like a
magic carpet. Depending on the exercise,
your body weight will rest on the padded
platform, which moves along the base of the
machine through a series of pulleys. The
motions are performed with cables and a
series of different handles, depending on
what motion you’re performing.
These exercises are not performed in sets,
really. It is a long, continual motion that
will target balance and flexibility, every
bit as much as it targets strength and
conditioning. You can do an exercise for
nearly a half-hour, if you’d like.
What’s interesting about Pilates is that
there are no weights involved. No adjusting
the resistance, no sliding that pin down a
couple of plates. The resistance is you!
When your pulling the cables in toward your
chest, the weight that your pulling is
simply your own body weight. And the magic
carpet takes away the use of gravity during
the exercise; only your specific muscles
being worked is what creates any sort of
movement and stability.
Aside from toning up the torso, the Pilates
Method also helps you achieve healthy
breathing and relaxation while vastly
increasing stamina.
With the benefits seemingly unlimited,
perhaps the Pilates Method is a wise choice
for an alternate route if you’re becoming
worn out from those pounding aerobics
classes or squeaky Nautilus machines. Or
perhaps you’re always one to jump on the
latest fitness craze, and for thousands of
Americans and patrons worldwide, Pilates is
certainly that.
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