Being a licensed physical therapist and pilates teacher, I have seen my fair share of client s suffering from various injuries and movement dysfunctions. One of my strongest beliefs as a teacher is that a person must take ownership over his or her own body and exercise program in order to succeed. Often, this includes a daily home program I give them at the end of our first session.
While the matwork is the foundation of what I teach, it can sometimes be inaccessible to someone just learning to move again after an injury or a period of pain. I found myself in the studio wanting to use Roll-Down or Bridge in order to assess spinal articulation, but my client would have too much pain—or fear—to perform the exercise.
The problem was…without being able to assess movement, I couldn’t give an effective and individualized program! Without an effective program, my client couldn’t get past their pain pattern and gain enough strength to perform the movement. I was stuck in a looping cycle of needing to do the matwork in order to help my client progress, but not being able to do the matwork because of pain, weakness or fear. I needed to find a way to use what I had in the studio to improve their body awareness and strength so that they could (and would) perform their home program and matwork when they weren’t in the studio.
I needed a key to unlock the magic of the matwork. Enter the roll-down bar.
The roll-down bar is a simple yet powerful tool to help clients tap into their movement patterns, breath and strength. It gives them just enough assistance to help them feel safe and protected, yet still encourages movement reeducation, pattern reorganization, and muscle strength. Once they can finally experience what a Side-Lift feels like with the bar, they are more likely to transfer that onto the mat.
This story is from the January - February 2020 edition of Pilates Style.
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This story is from the January - February 2020 edition of Pilates Style.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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