#swanthoughts

Musings from your neighborhood Swan Instructors: Pt. 2

We love picking the brains of the instructors at the Swan. They are such a lovely bunch of deep thinking individuals. Check out what they have to say about the current state of their swan brains!

What is your favorite exercise? Why? And walk us through how you execute it?

Johanna: I love serratus push ups and all the exercises that one can feed into afterwards. Not strictly a Pilates exercise but one that can make a lot of the upper body flexion exercises like 100s feel so much better on the neck. The way Eleanor and Julia give details on the serratus push up and me very fond of this exercise and I like to incorporate in most sessions and classes. I love warming up the shoulder girdle and getting the serratus a little more activate as a great support in other exercises.

I tell clients to go onto their hands and knees allowing their ribs to glide down towards the floor and push away without hyperextending their elbows. Floating their ribs above I cue clients to find an “alert spine” spine like an animal. I find it profound when clients energize their whole trunks. I also cue them to think of doing a headstand on the wall as if they could do a horizontal head stand, to find energy through the rest of their body.

From here I have clients go into standard opposite arm leg balance and then into a plank to maintain that rib cage lift or float off their wrists. Then I go into abdominals lying on your back with hands behind the head, maintaining the connection of shoulders blades as you fold forward from the lowest ribs. I like to think of the shoulder blades as hands helping to widen the back and help support the spinal flexion.

Kathryn: I have no honest answer. Ninety percent of the movement I encourage with students are progressive variations on the classic choreography. The principles applied hold much more worth for me. So that being said, stability vs mobility is one of my favorite fundamentals in Pilates.

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Alexis: My favorite exercise right now is simple... Side-lying grapefruit-sized leg circles. Side-lying gives a lot of information about howe we are organizing ourselves and the circles help plug in the femur bones using the natural structure of the hip joint. The whole thing quickly helps me (and you) re-find length and support for standing!

To begin, I grab a block and place it under my head while lying on my side of choice. Bottom leg bent to 90 and top leg long in line with top sitting bone. 

I first start with a couple breaths, allowing the inhale to elongate my spine. Each new breath cycle. I work closer to the back line of my diaphragm while keeping engagement with the lower abdominals. 

After a few breaths I wrap my top hand around the top half of my pelvic structure - it's a good reminder for my body of pelvic motion vs. femur motion.

Before moving into circular motions of the femur I do a couple of straight leg lifts up and down. I'll go as high as I can while keeping the pelvis stable. It's usually no higher than my hip. I am careful to keep my leg right in line with my body (not in front or behind!)

Finally, I will hold my top leg about hip height and double-check in with my spinal length (did it compress?), breath (is it still easily exchanging with the motion?), top hip crest (did it shift into my waist-line?)... I'm ready to circle the femur. 

I start making grapefruit-sized circles and usually go until I start to feel a little fatigue, and then reverse. If my quad starts to grip or I can no longer keep movement out of my pelvis then I will take a rest before finishing. 

KEY!! The length of the leg away from the head is more important than the size of the circle. Feeling some burning? It is a sneaky exercise - you're doing it right!

Alaina: The Roll Over. I had such a hard time with that exercise, so now that I have the tools to conquer it I feel a sense of accomplishment each time I do it. Lying supine legs extended on a 45 degree angle and arms on the mat by you side. On an exhale lift the legs up and over, bringing the legs parallel to the floor. Open the legs, tap your toes to the floor and slowly roll down to the pelvis, circle the legs around to the starting position.

Katie: I have a lot of favorite exercises that shift depending on what I'm focusing on- I tend to gravitate towards simple yet effective and challenging exercises. Right now, my favorite glute exercise is one that I learned in Kathryn's class (a fellow swan).

Lying on your side with the head supported, take a theraband around the top foot and wrap under the bottom knee, holding both ends in the top hand. Legs are stacked like you're sitting in a sideways chair. Lift the top leg to hip height and then extend top leg straight beneath you and bend back in 6x, maintaining neutral pelvis. Then externally rotate the top leg and bend and straighten 6x maintaining the turned out position. I feel it every time!

Eleanor: My current favorite exercise is butterfly knees. This is mainly a stability exercise that takes a lot of brain power and deep core stability to perform well. I like this exercise because it helps balance the pelvis, gets the TVA, multifidi and pelvic floor ready for more complicated exercises to come. 

Place your legs and feet together. With a really long and supported pelvis position, allow your knees to fall away from center without disrupting your pelvic and lumbar suppport. You will be rolling onto the outsides of your feet. Keeping your length, bring your inner thighs back together. Repeat a few times to feel really stable. Once you feel stable, alternate opening one leg at a time, moving only in a range of motion where you can truly maintain your pelvic and lumbar stability. If you have a side that feels more challenging, you may do a few extra on that side - really try to make yourself feel even by the end of the exercise.

Musings from your neighborhood Swan Instructors: Pt. 1

We love picking the brains of the instructors at the Swan. They are such a lovely bunch of deep thinking individuals. Check out what they have to say about the current state of their swan brains!

What are you thinking about in the body right now? We all roll through concepts as we teach and learn from watching our clients? What’s on your swan brain?

Kathryn: Right now conditioning bio mechanical patterns is a big part of my focus. Having clients that could use more balance in aspects of their structure has encouraged me to create small daily routines to help over-active tissue relax with adjustments, rolling, & stretching paired with specific exercise to wake up lesser/weaker tissue. These 5-10 minute set ups train the structure to rebalance during everyday movement as well as during bi-weekly sessions, getting major results in a very short amount of time.

Eleanor: I have been noticing and working on how important it is to connect to your lumbar and pelvic stability before progressing into advanced movements involving bilateral movement and flexion through the spine. This means taking the time to breathe, stretch your quads, figure out how to engage the pelvic floor, really feel length through your hips, activate the tops of your hamstrings evenly and even figuring out how to use your butt as an aid for stability! I have seen lots of really positive change in my clients' general stability and muscle development around their hips. It only takes a few minutes to get really organized but the change it makes in deepening stability and strength is monumental!

Katie: Thoracic extension. I find it a tricky concept in my own body as well as my clients and trying to make it more accessible to multiple bodies. I continue to find fascia a fascinating topic.

Alexis: I'm really interested in what the whole body is up to. Pilates can get really specific, which is interesting, informative, and helpful! But when we think about it, our whole body is connected and we are with the whole thing at all times. Eg. Even when we are doing leg-based work I'm interested in how the rest of the body is responding (shoulders, neck, breath) Sometimes we get so task based that we start to steal from other parts of the body to achieve said task (maybe the spine compresses to try to achieve hamstring length...). This doesn't really win in the long run. We want a whole system that supports itself while supporting the motion.

Johanna: It would have to be connection of the serratus into the abdominals. In addition to Pilates, I take TRX sessions to cross train my knee after having ACL reconstruction surgery. When I am working my upper body in push up like motions, I take my time to get my serratus engaged so I am not dropping my weight into my wrists. It helps me activate my whole trunk.
I love teaching mat-class at The Swan. I love taking it regularly when I am not too busy in my life. It makes such a difference in my body when I do.

Julia:  Hmm my Swan brain is so busy and stimulated it's hard to narrow down! I learn from my clients, my fellow teachers, and the wealth of information available through reading each day. I spend a lot of time ruminating on practice in general (my clients and my own), the body, the mind and movement. Here's a few themes I have been thinking on in recent months.
- Tensegrity As a way to stabilize and reign in a hyper mobile body. As a method to make space in tight places. As a path to find simplicity for the practitioner's awareness of organizing multiple joints in movement. As a clear sensation of efficient movement for the mover. 
-Getting people to standing - It's possible to be very organized on the mat or apparatus and have a hard time translating all that work to standing. It's easy to assume people will be able to take the practice with them when really we need to spend as much time making their beautiful movement patterns function in the planes in which they live.  
-The difference between making it hard for the sake of being hard and when it's hard because you are doing it right, connecting well and working at an appropriate place for your body. This takes patience, deep digging and understanding. I think it leads to longevity and health in movement. 
-What you see vs. what you feel - Hands on listening has started to play a bigger roll in my teaching. Sometimes what you see as a clear initiation is preceded by micro movements or unnecessary tension that is easily felt and not visibly detected. Different than directive touch cues, it has helped me clarify and deepen what the choices of exercises we do. 

#Swanthoughts

We Swans are constantly contemplating things. It is in our natures to be curious and excited about the body and the things that affect the body. A little while ago we began to share these thoughts on our Twitter. In case you missed them, here is a collection of some from recent months. Follow us on Twitter and share your #swanthoughts with us!

maybe it's not what you did on vacay but that you relaxed with a different internal space on vacay that changed your alignment

your shoulder blades have the ability to move like ears

to the femur and the humerus: this body built you a beautiful dome home. it's called a socket. get in it

what do you do when your QL has designs on running the world?

medial glide for everyone!

what's the depth of your hip socket ?

when I strip away all the external layers of muscle, and thought, to the breath alone- there is a felt sense of being a creature

is my subclavius sabotaging me?

we understand erosion in relationship to everything except our body which we expect to be infinite, constant & unbreakable

muscles with tyrannical tendencies: QL, TFL, Psoas

before smart technology & portable music people might have sung while walking

if seating in #nyc was good for your body would we have less clients?

we are meant to eat food not products

those pesky hip flexors. get into everything

it's crazy to stand on your feet all day and never truly be anchored into them

why do articles helping you cut sugar from your diet sport huge pictures of donuts or cake? questionable and unsupportive