Improve Your Quality Of Life With Private Pilates Training

By Anna Brown


Anyone who has experienced a catastrophic injury knows the emotional suffering that comes with limited mobility. A sudden and dramatic decrease in personal mobility, independence, and mental status promotes serious depression. For many patients, the physical limitations and mental trauma can be successfully treated with physical exercise, and private Pilates training is just the right medicine.

There are a few differences between this practice and the movements of Yoga, which more people are familiar with. Yoga is almost always focused on the body as its own weight resistance wherein our instructors do utilize some weights or other resistance tools. For someone who is seriously injured, some of the poses of Yoga pose far too much difficulty.

Yoga is designed to work virtually every muscle in the body during a typical class. However, these trainers are providing an excellent workout for someone recovering from an injury. By focusing on strengthening and stretching the spine as well as abdominal, or core, many patients find they are once again able to do many of the activities they used to enjoy.

Such an approach to fitness is ideal for these patients, as many of these poses do not require them to move at all. Their trainer will help them with the parts of the body they no longer have use of, helping to maintain healthy circulation. Working the core itself can be accomplished by simply tightening abdominal muscles for a set length of time.

Spinal injuries and repetitive motion injuries, such as carpal tunnel syndrome, are the most common ways that humans hurt themselves. For someone who has completely lost the use of half of their body, keeping the upper half strong is more than an improvement in lifestyle. When a patient allows themselves to become completely inactive, they can suffer painful bedsores, or even a loss of circulation that can be fatal.

Both disciplines teach the student or patient to focus on the connection between the body and the mind. Individuals who are healing from surgeries or health events in their lives are encouraged to pay close attention to how their moods impact their health. Most patients discover that when they take the time to see their trainer, and follow up with the exercises on their own, their moods improve along with their physical abilities.

Many patients in wheelchairs suffer back pain, and it is not uncommon for them to become alcoholics. However, by improving the strength of their spine, many patients have been able to avoid risky back surgeries that might not even solve the problem. Additionally, with the emotional benefits of exercise, many patients who fall prey to alcoholism find a better way to cope.

Patients who fail to attend their sessions with these trainers do themselves a disservice. Anyone with fitness goals is much more likely to achieve them when they attend a class or submit themselves to the attentions of their trainers. With their quality and length of life at stake, it cannot be more strongly urged that they make these disciplines a habit for life.




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