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LEVITY and Diversity

LEVITY, Newson December 5th, 20092 Comments

By intermixing exercises within the families of movements, participants should always be mentally and physically challenged. Levity instructors learn and speak a code of proper movement sequencing so that students are imparted with a progression for safely warming up the body. Levity instructors are empowered with a greater understanding of how to work with a variety of body types and needs so that each student may be challenged at the appropriate level.

Click here to contact Jessica regarding the LEVITY workout.

LEVITY Explained

LEVITY, Newson December 5th, 20092 Comments

Just like a builder use scaffolding to renovate an existing structure, LEVITY accomplishes strength and integrity in the body by teaching by using a simple 5 lb plate weight with open handholds. This weight is always connected by hand or foot ALWAYS below the joints BUT with a strong straight connection.

Click here to contact Jessica regarding the LEVITY workout.

Samples from the LEVITY Films project.

LEVITYon December 5th, 20091 Comment

Gorgeous cinematography and editing by Reed & Sarah ofGrow Film. Music by Neotropic.

Movement and Pregnancy

LEVITY, The Bodyon December 4th, 20092 Comments

Studio Levity specializes in prenatal and postpartum Pilates and GYROTONIC© in the NE Broadway area of Portland, Oregon.


ABOVE: News Feature from Portland, OR’s CBS Affiliate KOIN 6 featuring Jessica at her previous studio in a piece on prenatal Pilates. Two minutes, thirty-five seconds.

Having experienced two successful and enjoyable pregnancies, Jessica is confident in the process of working with pregnant clients. With the mantra of “whatever I feel today, I may not feel tomorrow” , a major part of successful pregnancies is a woman’s mental intention. Rather than attach to the aches, pains and unfamiliar sensations of pregnancy, Jessica believes in empowering women to embrace pregnancy through conscious movement.

Pregnancy can present physical challenges such as lower back pain, rib discomfort, sciatica, pubic synthesis, gait impairment. heightened nerve sensitivity, and cardiovascular difficulties. With customized workouts that address the body as constantly changing, symptoms of pregnancy can be managed and lend to an easier birth experience.

My Pregnancy Workout with Pilates & GYROTONIC©

Focusing on keeping the base strong, alignment is reinforced relative to the changes occurring in the body. Core strength is emphasized without causing strain to the loosening ligaments. Flexibility balanced with strength. Arm strength is a great focus as strong arms are important for holding, llfting, and supporting the baby post partum.

GYROTONIC© uses traction and weight to assist and guide throughout workouts. Oppositional movement,, spinal movement, and supported movement serve as the foundation for conditioning the body throughout pregnancy.

Pilates helps to build alignment and core strength.

LEVITY teaches the principles of opposition and serves as a guided aid for home use so that private sessions may be bridged and reinforced.

Pilates & GYROTONIC© After the Baby

Post partum, movement is so important for mental and physical support. As the body adjusts to life postpartum, sleepless nights and hormonal shifts can lead to aches, pains, and a tendency to resist physical activity in exchange for nesting. One of the best things for both baby and mother is to resume physical activity as soon a medical practitioner allows.
Movement may start with walking and light half hour workouts. These workouts are geared to help the body realign as the skeletal system adjusts and hormonal levels change. Focusing less on flexibility, postpartum workouts are geared towards initially establishing stability in the body. As the body allows, core strength and more cardiovascular movement are integrated.
By six months post partum, all the pieces come together –flexibility, strength, toning, and cardiovascular movement. Movement at studiolevity balances the postpartum body and mind with complete sensitivity to how every body is different.

New LEVITY Group Class

LEVITY, Newson December 4th, 20092 Comments

Pre registration required. Uses the PATENTED LEVITY BOARD. One hour involving oppositional movement. Continuous movement that becomes more cardiovascular with greater proficiency. Build core strength, lengthen and strengthen muscles, develop long lean muscle tone.

Mondays at 4:30 & Wednesdays at Noon

Contact Jessica for more information. Telephone: 503-449-6806 Electronical: Click here.

The Hamstring: Oft Ignored Buttress Of Balance And Wellbeing

Gyro, LEVITY, News, Pilates, The Bodyon December 4th, 20093 Comments

The hamstrings are located between the back of the knees and the buttocks on the backside of the legs. There are actually three separate muscles that comprise the hamstrings. These muscles are mainly responsible for flexing the knee and pulling the knee backwards, extending the hip joint so that the hips can pull the torso from a stooped position, and to support the pelvis on top of the femur bones. While there are many other functions of the hamstrings, students of Pilates are made aware of a combination of weak and tight hamstrings that prevent his or her ability to perform certain exercises. Many of these exercises are representative of daily activities such as sitting, driving, or bending over to pick up objects. Strengthening and stretching the hamstrings are an important focus in Pilates as strong and flexible hamstrings aid in achieving good posture, using the abdominals correctly, and in stretching and releasing tight lower back muscles.

Tight hamstrings are weak hamstrings. Tight hamstrings can cause the pelvis to tuck. The upper connection of the hamstrings becomes weaker as that connection becomes tighter, preventing its proper function in keeping the pelvis properly aligned. A tucked pelvis leads to a stooped or rounded upper body which can involve a misalignment of the spine as the trunk cannot be properly supported from below. Shoulders are unable to sit squarely over the hips and, as a result, abdominals cannot be properly engaged in daily activities let alone Pilates exercises.

Further more, a tucked pelvis will also cause the lower abdominals to be compressed and prevent their successful engagement. A body with weak, tight hamstrings will develop a compensation pattern that strengthens the quadriceps (on the front of the legs opposite of the hamstrings) ultimately creating a muscular imbalance in the legs. One of the most extreme symptoms of weak, tight hamstrings is compression in the lower spine, typically between L5 and S1 and sciatica. Aside from its connection in the L5 /S1 area, the sciatic nerve also intersects the middle hamstring muscle, Semitendinous.

Many of us have had the experience of attempting a Teaser on the long box, the Cadillac, mat or chair and feeling like: “I just can’t straighten my legs.” With every attempt to straighten the legs, one may experience the burning sensation of a stretch in the hamstrings, a pulling stretch in the lower back, or the inability to pull the upper body into an upright position atop the hips. Essentially what is happening is a tug-o-war between the hamstrings and lower back muscles, the pelvis being the fulcrum between the two forces. The answer: work on increasing the strength and flexibility of the hamstrings and work on strengthening the lower abdominals.

Exercises like Tree on the Short Box, Short Spine on the Reformer, Ballet Stretches on the Ladder Barrel or Cadillac, Going Up Front on the Chair, Leg Springs, and Push-Through on the Cadillac not only work on increasing the strength and flexibility of the hamstrings, but also focus on balancing the push-pull effect on the pelvis caused by the imbalances between the hamstrings and lower back. This push-pull effect can often be felt with the effort to square the shoulders on top of the hips. How could such a simple exercise be so challenging and cause such discomfort? Blame poor ergonomics and body patterning: hours spent in a car, sitting at a desk, or years of squeezing Gluteus muscles in an effort to make the butt smaller.

Even the most athletic can fall victim to an imbalance in the hamstrings as often the easiest way to go from point A to B is to use what is easily accessible. A runner will typically have strong Quadriceps and weak Hamstrings as pulling from the front side of the leg and not fully rolling through the foot with each stride will cause one to run with a tucked pelvis using mostly the front part of the foot and therefore the front part of the leg.

The shoulders will round forward as a result of the pelvis being tucked and the lower abdominals being compressed and weak. The most successful athletes will train to balance the musculature of the body, strengthen the abdominals, and pattern the body to perform with structural integrity.

The three dimensional movement of Gyrotonic can also aid in balancing the hamstrings. With large circular, diagonal and lateral movements, the legs are able to complete movements allowing the femur heads to fully express their full natural range within the hip sockets. A weighted cable pulley system allows for traction and resistance making for a perfect balance between stretch and strength. As the bones are tractioned from their sockets, the pelvis is decompressed and the hamstring can lengthen and engage, providing for a safe environment to expand the hamstring muscles to their full capacity. Gyrotonic can feel like you are literally scrubbing out the joints and creating space which provides relief from compression and an overall sense of muscular balance from front to back, side to side. read more

Anatomy of the Spine.

News, The Body, The Spineon October 22nd, 20091 Comment

The Spinal Column consists of 33 irregularly shaped bones called vertebrae but only 26 of these bones are moveable. Each segment of the spine has its own curve which is necessary for shock absorption and proper movement. Between each vertebrae in an intervertebral disc which is composed of fibrous cartilage with a gooey center that acts as a shock absorber and spacer allowing the body to move. As the body ages, these discs shrink and compress. Between ages 50-55, the average human shrinks in height between 0.5 and 2.0 cm. The spinal column also houses and protects the spinal cord, the body’s communication path way to the brain and is a direct connection to the body’s nervous system. The SPINE IS DIVIDED INTO 5 PARTS, each part serving a distinct purpose in the body. The first seven vertebrae are the CERVICAL VERTEBRAE beginning at the base of the skull. The cervical curve develops by 3-4 months of age as a baby learns head control. This curve is essential not only for posture, but also serves to maintain proper alignment for the spine as a whole. The cervical vertebrae are necessarily flexible to allow for freedom of movement of the head. C1 known as the ATLAS and C2 known as the Axis are shaped in design so that the head may nod yes and no.

The THORACIC SPINE is made up of 12 vertebrae that increase in size from top to bottom. The thoracic spine anchors the ribcage, helps with twisting, bending, side extension movements. The longest segment of the spine, the thoracic can often become stiff from long hours in front of a computer or when discontent exists above or below . In addition, with arm or shoulder injuries, the cervical and thoracic can very often react or become involved as a great deal of arm and shoulder function is dependent on the upper spine. There are 5 vertebrae in the LUMBAR SPINE and they serve the important function of supporting a lot of the body’s weight-especially when sitting for long periods of time. The lumbar curve does not develop until a child begins to walk THe lumbar spine is connected to many small and large muscles in the lower back. When compressed, the lumbar region can?sucomb to gravity and lead to pinched nerves, slipped or bulging discs and general stiffness. The most common lumbar injury is compression between L4and L5, sometimes S1.

This leads us to the SACRUM-a triangular bone just below the lumbar. The sacrum is 4 or 5 bones in a child that then becomes fused by age 26. The sacrum is the back wall of the bony pelvic structure and can actually move from within. Sacral issues can arise with tightness or compression in the pelvis and especially with tight or weak hamstrings Finally, the COCCYX or tailbone is at the bottom of the spinal column and consists of 3-5 bones that fuse together by adulthood. Many muscles of the lower half of the body connect to the tailbone. Together, the coccyx and sacral curve also known as the pelvic curve, allows humans to stand upright and maintain balance with the upper body.

The healthy spine should maintain 4 basic functions with ease. Back bending, forward bending, reaching side to side and twisting. These basic movements will aid not only the health of the spine but support the health of the whole body. By moving the spine daily and supporting its basic functions, you will condition your nervous system, organs, muskaskeletal system, and circulatory system. When not doing Pilates or Gyrotonic, add theses basic spinal movements to your daily routine, several times a day. By simply getting up from a desk or even before bed, give your body a friendly reminder by bending in all directions. You are helping to pattern the body with good habits to counter the effects of months or years of bad habits. Awareness is bliss.

Conditioning the Right Side of the Brain Makes Us Smarter.

News, The Body, The Brainon October 20th, 2009No Comments

The right hemisphere of the brain is largely responsible for creativity and movement while the Left hemisphere is very practical and logical. Our sense of self can be deBined intuitively by our spatial intelligence and how our physical movement and actions relate to and affect others. To live in good health and as a member of a community, everyone must take responsibility for his or her actions and this includes conscientious movement and body language.

Every culture has societal norms that predicate how we communicate with one another through movement. From the earliest recordings of human life, movement has been used in the forms of dance, religious rites, hunting and gathering, and the building of villages and cities. A greeting with a kiss can make an American blush while it is the norm in Europe. In today’s modern world, everything is a mouse click away and human interaction and movement has become limited to answering the phone, takeout, and email. Just within the past twenty years, human life has been “advanced” to objects of convenience.

How does this relate to Pilates and Gyrotonic? As dedicated practitioners and teachers of these movement practices, Jessica believes that with each session, we are delving deeper into the integral connection between mind and body‐the relationship between the right and left hemispheres of the brain. Beyond the effort to bring the mind into the body, Pilates and Gyrotonic both work to strengthen our Kiesthetic or Bodily intelligence and our Spatial intelligence. Beyond identifying the self as either logical or liguistic, as a professional or a spouse, each individual has unique expressions and qualities that help to deBine our personalities.

By freeing up the body and having a sense of the physical self in health and well being, each person has the potential to positively affect those around us. Positive healthy movement can manifest itself in posture, how we reach out to others, our physical capabilities to help one another in manual tasks, gestures and expressions in conversations, and the sense of self worth. We encourage you to look further into the power of the right hemisphere of the brain the power of movement.