So I wrote a blog for one of my amazing friends named Patricia. Patricia has the best travel blog out there called
Fresh Traveler. It's all about promoting sustainable tourism. She's been on a Yoga retreat in Mexico, Thailand and so much more. This is a quick 30 minute work out you can use to re-charge your battery. Use this after a trip holiday shopping to recover from Christmas music, or as a retreat from family and loved ones when you feel you've just been loved a little
too much.
As I wrote this blog I began to realize how little I wanted to read the blog. I wanted someone to read it to me, so I could actually relax. I'v done just that and more. I recorded myself teaching the class with my own original piano music playing in the background. Enjoy and find your Zen. Just click
here or follow the link below.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/c1v7nczz22vjjnl/thankszennedmusic.mp3
Step 1: Lay on your back, with your knees up, and
feet flat on the mat. Your middle toe should line up with your collar
bone and your heels. Arms rest long by your side. If your back is
uncomfortable, you can place a pillow under your head or place your feet on a
stable raised surface.
Step 2: Focus on your breathing. Inhaling
through your noes, and exhaling through your mouth. Feel the positive and
fresh air of your surroundings fill your body, channeling your air where to the
areas that you need the most. Exhaling through an open mouth, feeling any
tightness, or pain in your body release. Focus on channeling the positive
air in through your noes, and expelling the negative air out through your
mouth. Remember, in Pilates, breath
initiates movement. The next 20 minutes, everything you do, you perform
with a purpose, deliberateness.
Step 3: Place your hands on your low abdominal,
even below your belly button. Exhale really deeply forming the word
Haaaaaaah. Pronounce the H like someone from France. See if
you can feel your abs pull up and in. It's not just in (although you can
do that), it's up and in. Think as if
you are pulling your abdominal all the way up your spine, through
your torso all the way up the crown of your head. This activation,
without even moving, will give you the ability to feel the difference between
initiating from your core, verse simply using your brute strength.
Steps 4-6: Pelvic Rocking:
4. Now use this
exhale to rock your pubic bone up towards your chest, flattening your lower
back on the mat. Try to do this without engaging your butt muscles.
Think all front of the body.
5. Inhale and slightly arch your lower back.
While doing this notice your lower ribs. You want to think about
these as pulling down and together like a triangle. We always tend to
think about our ribs in front. It's time to start to think about ribs as
in back as well. The ribs angle in opposite directions, encasing and
protecting, your major organs like the heart and lungs, Think about two
trapezoids, with the wider bottom being your shoulders, and the shorter bottom
being your ribs. They naturally sit as trapezoids, but if you think about
it, you can exhale, and turn the bottom shorter line into a triangle point both
in the front and the back. Think about melting them together. No,
going back to our arch, try to keep your ribs down and together, like a
triangle point.
6. Now, find a place in between the extreme up
and down of your pelvis. This will be your neutral position. I'm
not going to define it as I want it to be unique to you; a place where you feel
comfortable. This is where your pelvis will remain.
7. Repeat Step 3 maintaining your newly
established neutral pelvic position. Repeat and then use this breath to initiate the
movement for the rest of the work out.
Step 8: Marching: Use your exhale to
lift your right (R) leg to table top. The definition is: Knee above the
hip at 90 degrees with shins perpendicular to the floor. This can be
changed. If you feel this in your lower back or the top of your
hips/thighs, pull your knees closer to your chest. This move can be more
difficult for people with less flexibility or lower back issues so be careful.
Continue, alternating sides using your low abdominal to stabilize
your hips. Try to keep your weight equal on both sides of your body.
Step 9: Table Top: Flatten your back with your
abdominal the same as in Step 4. Then exhale one leg at a time into table
top. This is when you may need to make some modifications. Here's a
refresher:
1. Modification for Table Top: Pull your knees
closer to your chest
2. Modification for Table Top: Drop your
heels towards your bottom decreasing the angle at your knee.
3. Modification for Table Top: Place a
small towel under your lower back
4. Modification for Table Top: Rest your
feet on an elevated surface. Some exercises will work here, others won't.
The only other alternative would be to skip table top exercises, which is
totally possible without missing much at all!
Step 10: DOUBLE LEG TOE TAPS: Now keeping your table
top, hinge your legs towards the floor without arching your back or letting
your stomach push into your tee-shirt. Exhale to lift both legs back
up. Repeat as desired.
Step 11: SINGLE LEG TOE TAPS: Now keeping the same
range of motion, alternate sides. Allow one leg to lower and exhale to
lift it up. Then do the other side. Try to only move one leg at a
time. Repeat as desired.
Step 12: WINDSHIELD WIPERS: Exhale both legs up to
the ceiling. Feel free to bend your knees if need be. You want your
ankles over your hips. You can always do this next exercise in
tabletop. Keeping both shoulders and head pointed up towards the ceiling,
drop both legs to your right side. Use your exhale to lift both legs back
to the ceiling. Repeat on the left side. Repeat as desired
Steps 13-15: Abdominal Crunch:
13. Clasp both hands and
place them behind your head. Your feet can return back to starting
position. Lay on your back with your hands clasped behind your head, at
the base of your skull. Before even curling up, press your head back into
your hands for a shoulder stretch. Flap your elbows in towards your midline and away
slowly for a shoulder stretch.
14. Find a place where you can see your elbows in your
peripheral vision (while looking at your knees). Now, press your head
into your hands once more, but this time feel your shoulders releasing down your
back. Feel your underarms activate and your biceps. Then,
maintaining the activation of your arms (to support the weight of your head)
curl up the head neck and shoulders.
15. Inhale, pushing your head back into your hands feeling
the back of your neck lengthening and any pressure releasing away from your
neck. On your next exhale curl up a little bit more. Repeat steps
14 and 15 four times. You will basically do an abdominal curl up in four
installments, pressing your head back in between each extra lift. Keep in
mind; you don’t have to go very high at all. By pushing your head back
into your hands, you will be creating extra weight. You can further
intensify the exercise by maintaining your neutral pelvis from laying down to
the full sit up. You’ll notice it will want to tuck up. This will
do nothing for your lower abdominal. It’s hard, but worth the extra
effort in the end.
Step 16: Plank Prep: Come into an all 4’s position. Place
your hands under your shoulders, knees under hips. Cat/cow a couple times
to find your flat back or comfortable back position. Once again, not too
rounded, not too arched. Tuck your toes under, so you can grip onto the
floor with your toe creases. Lift both
knees the tiniest amount off the mat. The lower your knees rest (without
touching the mat) the harder the exercise.
Step 17: To make your Plank Prep a little more difficult we
can incorporate the same exercise we used earlier; Marching. Float your
knees of the mat using your abdominals, same as in Step 16. Now simply
float one foot off the mat, and alternate sides trying to keep your weight
stable. There should be no changes in the position of your lower back
throughout the exercise.
Step 18: Booty Leg Kicks: Knees stay under the hips
as before, but you can rest your wrists. Place your forearms on the mat, but try
to keep the back of your neck active and long. Extend one leg straight
back behind you, all 5 toes on the mat. Place extra weight on the same
side arm. Use your oblique to keep from collapsing into your
stabilization hip. Below is the rest of the exercise series. Be
sure to repeat on both sides.
- All
5 toes extended behind you. Simply lift and lower your back leg
keeping all 5 toes pointed towards the floor.
- Keep
your leg lifted in line with your hip (a little lower if you feel your
lower back). Without shifting your hips, pulse your leg in towards
your mid-line. Then extend the leg away from your center.
Nothing moves but your leg and it stays at the same level, or lower, than
your hip. Your inner thigh connects when you cross over your middle.
Your outer thigh works when you take it away from your middle.
- Extend
your leg straight back behind you. Exhale and lift your belly button to
the ceiling as you pull your knee into the chest. Round your back
as you draw your knee in towards your stomach, pulling your belly button
away from your thigh.
- Bend
your heel straight up to the ceiling, and raise the roof. Flex your
foot and pulse straight up without arching your back. You should
feel this in the gluteal fold and lower abdominal. The gluteal fold
is another word for your butt shelf, or the banana of your bottom.
Where the butt meets the thigh.
Step 19:
Full
Plank: Keeping both forearms on the mat, extend one toe at a time
behind you. All 10 toes down and lift into your plank
position. Hold as long as possible. Repeat on each side.
- Side
Plank Variation: Place one forearm on the mat so it’s perpendicular
to your torso. You can either stack or stagger your feet parallel to your
forearm. Lift your hips and raise your opposite arm up towards the
ceiling. Repeat on both sides holding as long as possible.
The goal is 90 seconds. Of course, feel free to start smaller and
work your way up.
- Reverse
Plank Variation: Sit with your legs extended long in front of you,
your forearms on the mat by your sides. If you have knee issues,
bend your knees and place your feet flat on the mat. With an
exhale, lift your hips off the mat so your support is your legs,
abdominals and forearms. For an added challenge, incorporate your
marching from step 8. Lift one leg at a time and alternate without
shifting your hips or your torso.
Step 20: Pilates Push Up: This can be done in an all
4’s position, kneeling plank, or full plank on your hands and toes.
- Start
standing against a wall with very little space between your butt and the
wall. Nod your chin and start to peel your spine away from the wall
one vertebrae at a time without allowing your bottom to lean back.
If you need to start a little further away from the wall to make this
possible. That's fine. Progressively get closer to the wall
as you continue to advance through Pilates. Just know, if you feel
like you’re about to topple over face first, you’re doing this part of
the exercise perfectly.
- When
you can’t roll any further, safely bring your hands to the floor and in
three big hand-steps, walk out into your plank.
- Slowly
bend your elbows, coming into the bottom part of your push up for the
count of 1 Mississippi, 2 Mississippi, and 3 Mississippi. Then hold
at the bottom for the 3 Mississippi count. Lift up again for the
count of 3 Mississippi's. The slower you go up and down, the harder
the exercise. Start with one push-up. Then do 2 pushups the
next time you walk into your plank. Be sure to incorporate the roll
up and roll down as this one of the hardest parts of this exercise.
Continue to at least 5 pushups. Repeat starting at the number you
finished, and continue back until you are at 1 push up again.