Body awareness vs. performance - a new approach to movement

Body awareness vs. performance - a new approach to movement

"I didn't think I would be so tired."
This is one of the most common phrases we hear after a Pilates class.

Not because people underestimate themselves.
But because Pilates often seems quiet from the outside. No loud music, no rushing, no "ten more reps!". It's just concentration, control, breathing - and all the while your muscles are working very hard.


A story familiar to many

Nóra has been training intensively for years. She loved the feeling of being completely out of breath, of "feeling like you've worked". When she first came to Pilates class, she said with a smile:

"This will be a day of rest."

After the first 15 minutes, you could already feel that something completely different was happening. It wasn't the usual muscles that were tired for the first time, but his body began to work deeper and more steadily. At the end of the class he lay quietly on the mat, then sat up and said just that:

"It was tougher than I thought. It just doesn't show on the outside."


Pilates is not easier - it is more accurate

The difference is not the lack of intensity, but the quality.
Pilates:

  • activates the deep stabilising muscles
  • requires constant muscle control
  • works on strength, balance and coordination at the same time
  • and does not allow us to "get away" with movements on the spur of the moment

One of Joseph Pilates' most famous ideas sums up exactly this:

"In 10 sessions you'll feel the difference, in 20 you'll see the difference, and in 30 you'll have a new body."
(After 10 sessions you will feel the difference, after 20 you will see it, after 30 you will have a new body.)

This sentence does not promise quick results, but consistent, real progress - the kind of empowerment that is not only visible but also operational.


Pushing the limits - in a different way

In Pilates, we develop in the same way, we get stronger in the same way, we push our limits in the same way - but not out of strength, but out of control. Muscles not only get stronger, they start to work together more intelligently, and the body doesn't fall apart from the strain, but becomes more stable.

This is the point where body awareness and performance meet.
You don't have to choose between the two - in a well-constructed movement both are present at the same time.


A new question after training

At the end of your next training session, don't just ask:
"Am I tired?"

But also this:
"Is my body working better now than it was an hour ago?"

If the answer is yes, you are on the right track.


✨ A pilates nem könnyű edzés.
But it teaches you how to be at once strong, aware and able to work under pressure in the long term - and that's the kind of strength that really matters.

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