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  • A History of Pilates

  • Joseph Pilates was a fitness guru and inventor born in eighteen eighty-three

  • near the Northern German city of Dusseldorf.

  • his father was a prize winning gymnast of Greek ancestry.

  • His mother was a naturopath

  • who believed in stimulating the body to heal itself without drugs and surgery

  • His mother's healing philosophy

  • and father's physical achievements

  • were to greatly influence Pilates' ideas on therapeutic exercise.

  • Pilates was a sickly child

  • suffering from asthma, rickets, and rheumatic fever.

  • To make matters worse, the bigger children at school taunted him by making fun of his

  • name

  • He became determined to overcome his physical disadvantages,

  • and dedicated his life to improving his life to improving his health and strength.

  • He focused on breathing techniques to assist with his asthma,

  • and by exercising outside in his shorts, was able to cure his rickets

  • which is caused by a Vitamin D deficiency.

  • by the age of fourteen he was fit enough to pose for anatomical charts.

  • He loved skiing and being outdoors. He e studied bodybuilding, yoga, martial arts

  • and gymnastics.

  • You can recognize the influence of these activities in the Pilates technique.

  • For example the long stretch and up stretch on the reformer

  • are drawn from "downward-facing dog" and "plank" in yoga. He uses punching and

  • sidekick movement similar to martial arts and some exercises on the chair

  • are similar to gymnastic ring work.

  • the natural movements of animals also inspired him and this can be seen in

  • exercises such as the cat stretch on the Cadillac.

  • In 1912 Jospeph Pilates moved to England and earned a living as

  • a professional boxer, circus performer,

  • and self defense trainer at Scotland Yard

  • during world war one however

  • the British authorities interned him, along with other German citizens, in a

  • British Enemy Citizens' Camp on the Isle of Man.

  • the health conditions in these camps were poor

  • but Pilates insisted that everyone in his participate in daily exercise routines

  • which he had devised to help maintain their physical and mental well-being

  • Some of the injured German soldiers were too weak to get out of bed.

  • not content to leave his comrades lying idle, Pilates took springs from the beds

  • and attached them to the headboards and footboards of the iron bed frames,

  • turning them into equipment that provided a type of resistance exercise

  • for his bedridden "patients".

  • These mechanised beds

  • were the forerunners of the spring-based exercise machines,

  • such as the Cadillac and the Reformer,

  • for which the Pilates method is known today.

  • Pilates legend has it that during the great flu epidemic of 1918,

  • not a single soldier under his care died.

  • Remarkable considering the terrible living conditions of the internment camps.

  • After the war,

  • Joseph returned to Germany

  • and collaborated with experts in dance and physical exercise,

  • such as Rudolf Laban.

  • In Hamburg, he trained police officers.

  • He was also pressured to train members of the German army but left his native

  • Germany, disappointed with its political and social conditions,

  • and immigrated to the United States.

  • On route he met his future wife,

  • a young nurse named Clara

  • The couple founded a studio in New York City

  • and taught and supervised their students well into the 1960s.

  • His method, which he and Clara originally called "Contrology",

  • encouraged the mind to control muscles.

  • it focused attention on core postural muscles

  • that help keep the body balanced and provide support for the spine.

  • In particular, Pilates exercises teach awareness of breath and of alignment of the

  • spine, and strengthen the deep torso and abdominal muscles.

  • Pilates came to believe that "modern" lifestyle, bad posture,

  • and inefficient breathing,

  • lay at the roots of poor health.

  • Joseph Pilates' New York gym

  • put him in close proximity to a number of dance studios, which led to his

  • "discovery" by prominent members

  • of the dance community, including George Balanchine and Martha Graham.

  • The Pilates repertoire itself has many references to classical ballet and also

  • the Graham technique,

  • for example: the ballet stretches on the Cadillac and Ladder Barrel, the round back

  • and straight back in the stomach massage series on the Reformer.

  • Many dancers, actors, and famous people

  • in New York depended on Pilates for the strength and grace it developed,

  • as well as for its rehabilitative effects.

  • Joseph Pilates wrote two books,

  • Your Health, and Return to Life through Contrology

  • and was also a prolific inventor.

  • He passed away in 1967 at the age of 83, in New York.

  • He had maintained a fit physique throughout his life,

  • and photographs show that he was in remarkable

  • physical condition in his older years

  • He is also said to have had a flamboyant personality.

  • He smoked cigars, liked to party,

  • nd wore his exercise briefs wherever he wanted - even on the streets of New York.

  • It is said that he was an intimidating, though deeply committed, instructor.

  • Although Joeseph and Clara had no children,

  • his legacy and exercise techniques were preserved and developed through the work

  • of his disciples.

  • these disciples

  • These disciples who started our as their apprentices are now called "The Elders".

  • Until exercise science caught up with the Pilates method in the 1980s,

  • it was chiefly dancers and elite athletes who utilized the Pilates technique.

  • Now,

  • Pilates has made it to the mainstream,ces made it to the mainstream

  • with its health benefits

  • and mental discipline widely recognized as being of great benefit to the health

  • and well-being of all types of people

  • no matter their shape, size, gender or age.

  • Today, Joseph Pilates teachings

  • are carried on by the Pilates Elders,

  • their progeny

  • and by a large group of contemporary teachers

  • all over the world

A History of Pilates

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