HUNDRED

July 24, 2009 · Filed Under HUNDRED 

Pilates-Mat-The-Hundred-AdvancedThe Hundred is a classic Pilates Mat exercise.   It is one of the first exercise performed at the beginning of many Pilates Mat class to warm-up the abdominals, lungs, muscles and get your blood oxygenated.

It requires that you coordinate your breath with the pulsing  movement of the arms (100 times 10×10) while engaging your core and extending your legs away from your body.   Be warned the Pilates Mat exercise  it is much to difficult for beginners in its classical form with the legs lengthened out at a 45 degree angle to the floor for 10×10 = 100 reapportions.

Pilates-Mat-Hundred-BeginnerA qualified Pilates teacher will modify the Pilates Hundred  to address the fitness level of each student.

If you begin to shake and loose control you need to modify the exercise to prevent strain and possible injury.


SPINAL ARTICULATION:   FLEXION WITH SHOULDER DISASSOCIATION

Contraindications:  Neck, shoulder, lower back injuries, and osteoporosis

Starting Body Position:  Supine

  • Basic:  Knees and hips flexed 90 degrees with feet off of the floor (“table top”)
  • Intermediate: Knees extended with 90 degrees hip flexion
  • Advanced:  Legs extended 45 degrees or less hip flexion (eyes and toes on same level)
  • Trunk flexion; top of the head to the ceiling; eye gaze to the lower abdominals
  • Arms by sides of trunk with palms facing the floor
  • Basic students or special populations may need to imprint lumbar spine to mat (classical) or place feet on floor to begin with.

Action

  • Pump arms firmly from the shoulders up and down 6 – 8 inches above the floor
  • Inhale for five pumps of the arms
  • Exhale for five pumps of the arms

Repetitions Build endurance to “100 Breaths” (10 sets of 10 pumps for 10 breath cycles)

Purpose

  • Warm-up:  Pumping of the arms increases circulation of freshly oxygenated blood
  • Strengthens powerhouse muscles
  • Shoulder Disassociation; conditions posterior shoulder musculature
  • Pelvic-lumbar stability
  • Strengthens neck flexors

Watchpoints

  • Chin jutting or neck strain
  • Shoulder elevation or protraction
  • Hyperlordosis of lumbar spine for intermediate and advanced levels
  • Flapping from the wrists or elbows vs pumping from the shoulder joint
  • Lack of core strength/control:  No height from the upper trunk or head; movement from head and trunk

Cues

  • “As you exhale, pull your navel through your spine.” 
  • “Top of your head to the ceiling; look at your belly and scoop it behind your hip bones!” 
  • “Imagine you are slapping your arms and hands into water.”
  • “Use your powerhouse to squeeze every atom of carbon dioxide from your lungs!”
















SPINAL ARTICULATION: FLEXION WITH SHOULDER DISASSOCIATION

HUNDRED

Basic to Advanced

Contraindications: Neck, shoulder, lower back injuries, and osteoporosis

Starting Body Position: Supine

  • Basic: Knees and hips flexed 90 degrees with feet off of the floor (“table top”)
  • Intermediate: Knees extended with 90 degrees hip flexion
  • Advanced: Legs extended 45 degrees or less hip flexion (eyes and toes on same level)
  • Trunk flexion; top of the head to the ceiling; eye gaze to the lower abdominals
  • Arms by sides of trunk with palms facing the floor
  • Basic students or special populations may need to imprint lumbar spine to mat or place feet on floor

Action

  • Pump arms firmly from the shoulders up and down 6 – 8 inches above the floor
  • Inhale for five pumps of the arms
  • Exhale for five pumps of the arms

Repetitions Build endurance to “100 Breaths” (10 sets of 10 pumps for 10 breath cycles)

Purpose

  • Warm-up: Pumping of the arms increases circulation of freshly oxygenated blood
  • Strengthens powerhouse muscles
  • Shoulder Disassociation; conditions posterior shoulder musculature
  • Pelvic-lumbar stability
  • Strengthens neck flexors

Watchpoints

  • Chin jutting or neck strain
  • Shoulder elevation or protraction
  • Hyperlordosis of lumbar spine for intermediate and advanced levels
  • Flapping from the wrists or elbows vs pumping from the shoulder joint
  • Lack of core strength/control: No height from the upper trunk or head; movement from head and trunk

Cues

  • “As you exhale, pull your navel through your spine.”
  • “Top of your head to the ceiling; look at your belly and scoop it behind your hip bones!”
  • “Imagine you are slapping your arms and hands into water.”
  • “Use your powerhouse to squeeze every atom of carbon dioxide from your lungs!”

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