What is Pilates and what are the Benefits?
Pilates (or the Pilates method) is a series of about 500 exercises
inspired by calisthenics, yoga and ballet. Pilates lengthens and stretches all
the major muscle groups in the body in a balanced fashion. It improves
flexibility, strength, balance and body awareness.
In the 1920s, physical trainer Joseph Pilates introduced Pilates
into America as a way to help injured athletes and dancers safely return to
exercise and maintain their fitness. Since then, Pilates classes in Sydney has been adapted to suit people in the general community.
Pilates can be an aerobic and non-aerobic form of exercise. It
requires concentration and focus, because you move your body through precise
ranges of motion. Pilates lengthens and stretches all the major muscle groups
in your body in a balanced fashion. It requires concentration in finding a
centre point to control your body through movement.
In Pilates, your muscles are never worked to exhaustion, so there
is no sweating or straining, just intense concentration. The workout consists
of a variety of exercise sequences that are performed in low repetitions,
usually five to ten times, over a session of 45 to 90 minutes. Mat work and
specialised equipment for resistance are used.
The Pilates method is taught to suit each person and exercises are
regularly re-evaluated to ensure they are appropriate for that person. Due to
the individual attention, this method can suit everybody from elite athletes to
people with limited mobility, pregnant women and people with low fitness
levels.

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