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http://www.goldsgym.com/middletownny
Golds Gym
15 Industrial Drive
Middletown NY 10941
845-344-4653
Know Your Own Strength






http://www.goldsgym.com/middletownny
Golds Gym
15 Industrial Drive
Middletown NY 10941
845-344-4653
Janell Hartman walked out of her first yoga class 10 years ago. She was used to pushing herself running and lifting weights, and yoga seemed way too easy. When the teacher told her students to sit with legs out straight and reach for their toes, Hartman stood up and left. She figured she could stretch on her own. Yet here Hartman is now, a yoga teacher herself, weaving among her students in a candlelit room on Capitol Hill in Seattle, gently pushing one's back, readjusting another's leg.
Guilt brought her back to a second class after she ran into the teacher, who urged her to give yoga another try. But before long, Hartman kept going because yoga made her feel so good. Not physically so much. Emotionally. Yoga must soothe something that ails us. How else to explain how popular it's become? Sure, it's a form of exercise, but there are faster, cheaper ways to get fit. Yoga — with its Indian roots and thousands of years of history — now seems nearly as assimilated into U.S. culture as pizza. Nationwide, an estimated 15.8 million people practice it.
Just 15 years ago, most people weren't quite sure what yoga was, much less what to make of it. Now just about every neighborhood boasts at least one yoga studio. It's hard to find a health club that doesn't offer yoga classes. And the variety of styles is dizzying: the ‘hot” yoga done in 100-plus degree rooms, the strenuous Ashtanga, the alignment-focused Iyengar. There are yoga classes for pregnant women and prisoners, for toddlers, scientists and barbers. Yoga's still largely a middle- and upper-class pursuit. With classes that cost roughly $5 to $16 each, that tends to limit who shows up. And no longer does every new yoga class fill to the brim. Still, yoga has never been more mainstream. Or such big business — about $5.7 billion a year, according to Yoga Journal. For awhile, Gucci sold a $600 yoga mat. Nowadays, the average shopper can pick up one for less than $20 along with toothpaste and shampoo at the local grocery store. So what's so great about spending a few hours a week stretching and straining on a thin piece of plastic, cheap or expensive? It's easy to view yoga as the latest fitness craze for those of us who don't want to run marathons or climb mountains. Or dismiss it as a pastime for women seeking a sexy ‘yoga butt.’ Yet when yoga believers like Janell Hartman talk about what they gain from yoga, they could just as easily be talking about church. It centers them. Makes them calmer. Yoga, they say, makes them better people.
For Many, Yoga Is Good Therapy In Our Stressed-Out, Over-The-Top World
Exercise can sometimes feel like a burden that must be done in order to maintain our lifestyles. Finding a type of exercise program that can offer a fun and flexible program is something that many are hoping to come across.
For instructors who have taught different types of exercise programs, the idea of making a balanced yoga pilates class to incorporate both programs or to alternate between programs is a great way to help people get in shape.
Keep in mind that there is a difference between yoga and pilates, but they also have enough similarities that many fitness centers are beginning to see the benefits of a balanced yoga pilates studio.
Many owners use the term yoga pilates balance to emphasis the smooth transition that can be done between the two work out programs and want their clients to know that they offer both of these work outs and some balance yoga pilates studios incorporate the two to make for an all inclusive work out.
What A Balanced Yoga Pilates Workout Could Look Like
Since many places are realizing the benefits of both yoga and pilates, some offer clients the benefits of stretching with yoga with reformer work of pilates. The reformer is a machine that is used in pilates work to stretch and lengthen and strengthen muscles so that a person has a very strong core. The core muscles are found in the abdomen and back and by maintaining a strong core many find that they have better posture and more energy.
Yoga too concentrates on inner strength and control of positions. With yoga intricate positions need to be maintained for several seconds. These positions are used to help keep the body strong and also work with releasing stress. Both types of exercise teach people to control their movements and use all of their strength to maintain these movements.
A balanced yoga pilates workout could also involve rotating workouts. One day yoga another pilates, this can give the benefits of both programs without letting the routine become boring. Many enjoy varying the routine because it enables them to connect their mind and body with yoga and also get a complete difficult work out with pilates.
By offering these two workouts many studios and even recreation centers find that they have clients that participate in both workouts several times a week. This allows clients to again, be able to expand their work out routines and still reap the benefits of both programs unique styles and movements.
What is Pilates?
Pilates is a whole body exercise system, developed by founder Joseph Pilates during, and in the years following the first World War. Before the war German-born Pilates was working as a boxer and circus entertainer in England. When war broke out in 1914 he was held in an internment camp in Lancaster, along with other 'enemy' German nationals. It was during this time that he began to develop the series of original exercises he called 'contrology', which we now know as Pilates or the Pilates Method.
The focus of Pilates is on developing core strength (deep abdominal, back and pelvic floor muscles) and improving posture through a series of low impact and low repetition stretching and conditioning exercises. Pilates is based upon an understanding of human anatomy and and is designed to elongate, strengthen and restore the body. Pilates strengthens the muscles and gives a more sleek, toned appearance without adding muscle bulk. There is also a strong 'mind over matter' belief:
"It is the mind itself that shapes the body"
Joseph Pilates
Pilates can be either floor-based matwork exercises or can use a wide range of apparatus, specifically designed for Pilates. Most people start with matwork and may progress to apparatus once they are confident with the skills of matwork Pilates. Apparatus classes tend to be in smaller groups than matwork classes and may even be on a 1:1 basis. Equipment includes items such as the reformer, cadillac and wunder chair.
Who can benefit from Pilates?
Pilates is a slow, flowing series of exercises which are safe and effective at all levels of fitness. Doctors, Physiotherapists and other health professionals regularly presribe Pilates to patients for the following reasons:
* Injury rehabilitation
* Relief of stress and tension
* Maintenance and improvement in bone density (osteoporosis)
* Ease arthritis pain
* Ease back pain
* Improvement in posture
* Improvement in flexibility
* Improvement in balance and coordination
* Improvement of lung function and circulation
* Excellent ante and post natal exercise
* Insomnia
* Incontinence
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