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Health & Wellbeing





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Both practices are worth exploring and offer amazing health benefits
To improve your overall health and wellness, thereโs no shortage of physical activities you can do on your own or with a group of people. But when it comes to yoga or Pilates, people are often unclear about what separates the two activities and whether they should choose one over the other.
There are some similarities that crossover between yoga and Pilates, but both classes are built off foundational differences. When done on their own or even paired together, both yoga and Pilates can really infuse several health benefits and awareness into your daily routines.
Yoga instructor and retired pediatrician Johanna Goldfarb, MD, E-RYT-200, explains the differences between yoga and Pilates, along with the benefits of each.
Pilates was invented by a German anatomist in 1926 as a way of conditioning the body and providing rehabilitation to World War I veterans. The practice quickly grew as a means of building core strength and improving endurance, particularly for those in the field of ballet and dance who were seeking rehabilitation from injuries.
โThe goal,โ explains Dr. Goldfarb, โwas to help people with injuries to heal using core strength and guided exercises.โ
Yoga, on the other hand, is rooted in a centuries-old spiritual practice meant to enhance your mind-body connection to achieve enlightenment.
But traditional yoga is more than just a workout routine โ itโs a lifestyle that embraces a philosophy and a set of tenets built around nourishing your physical, emotional and spiritual growth. Yoga teaches you how to navigate life by creating and honoring boundaries, embracing a no-harm mentality, surrendering to the divine, and aligning your mind, body and spirit.
And while many Westernized versions of yoga have often emphasized the more physical aspects of yoga (or Asanas), yoga, for many people, is much more than just a simple workout โ again, itโs a way of living.
Still, yoga helps develop strength, flexibility and balance (often in preparation for meditation) by bringing awareness to the connections of your mind, body and breath in every pose. Often, yoga sessions end with a brief meditation to close out the practice.
Pilates is focused more on building your core strength through a disciplined practice of several small-movement exercises during each session. A fundamental set of exercises is basic to each class and is learned first to strengthen your core and teach you how to move with each breath. Over time, you can level up to doing more advanced exercises with the help of an instructor.
While there are traditionally far fewer versions of Pilates, there are many different kinds of yoga that provide a variety of experiences.
Most kinds of yoga practiced in the United States today are rooted in Hatha yoga. Hatha yoga is the oldest traditional East Indian practice of the form. Hatha yoga focuses on mindfulness, meditation and precise posture.
All yoga focuses on the breath and links with movement. But, as yoga has become more commercialized in the West, other kinds of practices have been designed for a multitude of different audiences.
Vinyasa yoga incorporates quick movements from one pose to the next, focusing on the connection of mind, body and breath. Conversely, yoga nidra involves no movement at all in a deep, meditative practice and often takes place at the end of a yoga session.
And restorative yoga is a much slower practice that relies on blankets, pillows and near darkness to provide comfort and space for meditation.
These are just a few of the many kinds of yoga available to learn from. But regardless of the type, each version of yoga offers a variety of different benefits when you make it a part of your weekly routine.
โYoga has much more of a spiritual aspect to it, while Pilates is more about an approach to rehab,โ clarifies Dr. Goldfarb. โPeople come to Pilates often because of an injury or because they want to prevent injury.โ
Despite their differences, yoga and Pilates both share common techniques around:
Both practices rely on supporting your own body weight, but Pilates works to incorporate additional equipment like resistance bands, resistance-based reformer machines, foam rollers, barrels and bars to provide an additional challenge and further strengthen your muscles. Props are used in yoga, too, but more so for modification or to deepen specific poses or stretches.
โThe equipment you use in Pilates is often added to make sure exercise can occur with a safe alignment,โ says Dr. Goldfarb. โIn yoga, props (like blocks, straps and blankets) are more limited and used to make certain poses easier to approach. And as we age and experience physical issues that come up, props can be extremely useful in yoga to help you get into a pose safely.โ
Between the two practices, several of the following benefits arise.
Both Pilates and yoga strengthen several sets of muscles, including:
While Pilates and yoga donโt help you gain muscle mass in these areas the same way you would by doing strength-training exercises, they help tone these muscle groups and increase your strength and flexibility.
Whether youโre moving slowly from one pose to the next or youโre holding a pose for longer lengths of time, both Pilates and yoga focus on maintaining full-body alignment across every single movement. That means your back is often kept straight (but not rigid), with your neck and legs supported and your knees straight, or slightly bent but never locked too tightly in place. In a lunge, for example, your knees are directly over your ankles.
Whether youโre lying flat on a mat, standing tall or in a forward fold, your posture can continue to improve even as you work through a regular series of stretches and poses across both disciplines.
โThe loss of proper posture itself can lead to several medical complications,โ notes Dr. Goldfarb. โA yoga or Pilates instructor is, at every moment, making sure your posture is correct before you start using these muscles because itโs really important when preventing and treating injuries. Both yoga and Pilates will help improve your posture, which is a key source of disability as we age, as well as a source of pain.โ
If youโre dealing with chronic low back pain, low-impact exercises like Pilates and yoga can help. Not only do they assist in building the strength you need to support your body, but they also allow you to stretch out problem areas that are causing you pain like your lower back. Plus, with the help of a physical therapist or certified instructor, Pilates and yoga can both aid with rehabilitation when it comes to certain injuries.
Consistent yoga practices can help you improve your flexibility and regain your range of motion if you havenโt been active for some time or were never flexible. This happens because youโre not only stretching the necessary muscles needed for mobility, but youโre also activating those muscles frequently in a variety of positions. Plus, on days when youโre not doing strenuous exercises like aerobics or strength training, both yoga and Pilates can become a part of your active recovery process to help your muscles heal more efficiently.
You can practice mindfulness in any setting. Both Pilates and yoga use breathwork as a means of looking inward and being in tune with how youโre feeling, whatโs working, and what could use a little bit more support and comfort. Yoga, in particular, often weaves meditative practices into each session and uses it as an ending point largely for building this kind of self-awareness.
โMeditation is as important as any physical movement in yoga because it teaches your mind and body the importance of being in the moment and having periods of time where youโre not doing anything โ youโre just being still,โ says Dr. Goldfarb.
By enhancing your mental health in these small ways, and by regularly participating in these activities, Pilates and yoga can both help:
Only you, and perhaps your primary care provider, can decide if Pilates or yoga are right for you. While both offer low-impact exercise with a relatively low risk for injury, if you have underlying health conditions or injuries that disrupt your mobility, or if you have high blood pressure or youโre anemic, youโll want to check with your healthcare provider which poses you may want to avoid or modify before diving in to a full-blown class.
Otherwise, Dr. Goldfarb highly encourages people interested in either Pilates or yoga to participate in both classes to get a feel for what they like and what they prefer. In general, if you were to work Pilates and/or yoga into your weekly routine, you may want to do them up to two to three times each week, between other strength training and cardio exercises.
โThereโs such a range of approaches to both Pilates and yoga, so your experience is going to be completely based on where you start,โ says Dr. Goldfarb.
โThe ability to learn how to relax in yoga is what makes it especially important for people who are stressed. If itโs about an injury and you need physical strengthening, you might go to Pilates. But again, youโve got to find the right mix. I would say try both yoga and Pilates before you give up on exploring one or the other. Finding the right class thatโs safe and the right teacher is absolutely key to these experiences.โ

Toward the end of a long run your calf is in a knot the size of a grapefruit. Is this an over-excited neuron taking out its anxiety on a muscle? Or is your qi depleted? You may need a new recovery technique.
Western hemisphere physios of yore saw the body as an organization of bones, muscles, fascia, and nerves, so bodywork that originated there, like Swedish massage, attempts to heal and realign those parts.
Eastern folk saw the body as a vessel of energy and breath. Bodywork that grew out of that philosophy, like acupressure, sought to open blocked energy pathways and restore balance.
Hereโs a quick look at three types of bodywork from around the worldโthree philosophiesโthat can be used as prevention during training, or for recovery from an injury or race.
Shiatsu is based on theories of acupuncture and Chinese medicine that were imported to Japan around 5 AD. According to Cari Johnson Pelava, director of Centerpoint Massage & Shiatsu Therapy School & Clinic, in Minneapolis, a system of energy, โqi,โ runs through the body on pathways, and along those pathways lie points where one can access that energy to make a difference in the body. Symptoms like pain or fatigue are said to be caused by an imbalance of energy. By applying pressure, kneading, and stretching, a shiatsu therapist can restore the bodyโs energy balance.
โWeโve worked with triathletes pre-event and post,โ Johnson Pelava says. โPre-event weโll focus on tonifying energy so that itโs most accessible to the athlete on event day. Weโll do stretching, hip rotations, and other range of motion work to open energetic pathways. Post-event, weโll work deeper to pull that energy thatโs been depleted back.โ
Thai yoga bodywork has an eastern flavor informed by yoga, Ayurveda, and Buddhism. It combines rhythmic massage, assisted yoga poses, acupressure along energy meridians, healing energy work, and meditation.
Tanya Boigenzahn, director of Devanadi School of Yoga and Wellness in Minneapolis, says Thai yoga bodywork can help athletes with flexibility, alignment, and breath control, as well as their mental gameโmood, concentration, confidence.
Thai yoga is accomplished in a one-on-one session with clothes on. The therapist moves a passive client through positions, stretching tight areas, and encouraging range of motion and mindful breathwork.
Boigenzahn says Thai yoga helps optimize training pre-event, and eases recovery afterward. โAthletes can expect to have a quicker bounce back time, as well as less discomfort after a tough event.โ
Ida Rolf thought that pain, inefficient movement, and imbalance was were the result of the body being improperly organized around its axis. In New York during the 1940s, Rolf began reorganizing clientsโ bodies by manipulating fasciaโthe connective tissue separating muscles and other organsโ which developed into the therapeutic approach called Rolfing Structural Integration. โItโs a combination of participatory bodywork and active experimentation with body movement education,โ says Kevin McCarthy, an advanced rolfer with In|Form Rolfing in Minneapolis. โWe teach clients how to be aware of and work with their body for better function.โ
Rolfing is a holistic approach that seeks to find the source of the dysfunction rather than merely treat the symptom. โParticipatoryโ is a key word, McCarthy says.
โUnlike most forms of massage where youโre lying passively on a table, weโre asking, โCan you stand up using the outside of your leg? Do you notice the difference in how that feels?โโ he says. โWeโre using the body to repattern the brain.โ
Because it involves education, rolfing is not a one-and-doneโa rolfing treatment is actually usually a series of 10 sessions.



Join the Cavan Adventure Team on this special sunset paddle to Clough Oughter Castle to mark summer Solstice and the longest day of the year. Visit https://cuilcaghlakelands.org/event/sunset-paddle-to-clough-oughter-castle/โฆ for booking info!
Summer Solstice 21st June 7.00pm – 10.30pm