Day 4 of 7 · Professional Pilates Trainer Certificate Course
The Reformer adds spring resistance, moving carriage feedback, straps, pulleys, and a footbar. This can support clients beautifully, but it also raises the responsibility level. You must understand setup, spring choices, transitions, and spotting before adding complexity.
Check the carriage, springs, stopper, straps, headrest, shoulder blocks, and footbar position before the client begins. Explain the moving carriage before the first repetition. Keep transitions slow until the client understands where their hands, feet, and spine need to be.
Begin with footwork variations, heel lowers, bridging, supine arm arcs in straps, feet-in-straps preparation, short spine preparation where appropriate, seated pulling straps preparation, and scooter variations. The goal is not to exhaust the client; the goal is to teach alignment under spring feedback.
More spring is not always harder. Heavy springs can support control in footwork but can overpower small clients in arm work. Light springs can be deeply challenging because the client must stabilize more. Choose springs based on the client, exercise goal, and safety.
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