Episodios

  • Parkinson's & Neurological Rehabilitation Haseel Bhatt
    Apr 5 2026
    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane sits down with neurological physiotherapist and clinical researcher Haseel Bhatt for a powerful conversation about Parkinson's disease, neurological rehabilitation, and the critical role movement professionals can play in supporting people living with neurological conditions. Haseel is the founder of Neurology Rehab, a dedicated physiotherapy clinic focused on helping people living with Parkinson's and other movement disorders improve mobility, independence, and quality of life through evidence-informed rehabilitation. He is also an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Toronto, a published researcher, and a passionate educator helping clinicians translate neurological research into practical movement strategies. Together, Katie and Haseel explore what Parkinson's actually is, how it affects the brain and body, and why movement professionals — including Pilates teachers — play a far more important role in neurological care than many realize. The conversation also highlights a major shift in the Parkinson's field: where exercise was once considered optional, it is now widely recognized as one of the most powerful tools for maintaining function, mobility, and independence. This episode provides both clarity and practical insights for movement professionals working with neurological conditions. Because people living with Parkinson's are not fragile. They are capable of movement, adaptation, and progress — when supported with the right strategies. We Explore What Parkinson's disease actually is and how dopamine loss affects movementThe four cardinal symptoms of Parkinson's: tremor, rigidity, slowed movement, and postural instabilityWhy anxiety, fatigue, and other non-motor symptoms play a major role in the conditionThe phenomenon of freezing of gait — when the brain temporarily "loses" the ability to stepWhy simple visual cues like lines on the floor can help bypass faulty movement signals in the brainHow large-amplitude movement training can recalibrate movement patternsWhy exercise and physiotherapy are now considered essential treatmentsThe difference between symptom management and disease progressionWhy movement professionals must tailor exercise based on each individual's symptom pattern This Episode Is For Pilates teachers working with clients living with Parkinson'sMovement professionals curious about neurological rehabilitationStudio owners seeing more clients with complex health conditionsPhysiotherapists and trainers wanting to better understand Parkinson's movement patternsAnyone interested in the evolving relationship between exercise, neuroscience, and rehabilitation A Moment That Landed "If you've met one person with Parkinson's… you've met one person with Parkinson's." One of the most important themes in this episode is that Parkinson's is highly individual. Two people may share the same diagnosis — but their symptoms, progression, and daily challenges can look completely different. That's why Haseel emphasizes the importance of what he calls a "fingerprint assessment." Movement professionals must look beyond the diagnosis itself and instead understand: How symptoms present in that individualHow those symptoms affect daily lifeWhat movement strategies will best support function and independence The goal is not simply exercise. The goal is helping people live well with Parkinson's. Key Takeaway for Movement Professionals If you work with clients living with Parkinson's: Movement matters. But precision matters even more. Haseel outlines a framework for supporting clients with neurological conditions: Awareness – understanding how much someone is actually movingAssessment – identifying each person's unique symptom patternPrecision rehabilitation – targeting exercises to specific movement challengesEnvironment – creating supportive systems and routinesSelf-management – empowering the person to take an active role in their care For movement professionals, this means your role goes far beyond teaching exercises. You become part of a team helping someone maintain mobility, confidence, and independence. Connect with Haseel Bhatt Haseel Bhatt is a neurological physiotherapist, clinical researcher, and founder of Neurology Rehab, a clinic focused on improving access to specialized rehabilitation for people living with Parkinson's and other movement disorders. Through his clinical work, teaching, and educational programs, he helps clinicians and movement professionals translate neuroscience into practical rehabilitation strategies. 🌐 Website https://neurologyrehab.com 📸 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsphysiotherapy 📘 Facebook https://www.facebook.com/people/Neurology-Rehab/61566930015525/ About The Pilates Lounge The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, the podcast explores the deeper layers of Pilates — from neurological conditions and chronic ...
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    1 h y 12 m
  • Fibromyalgia, Pain & the Nervous System with Rob Nash
    Mar 29 2026
    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane sits down with integrative exercise physiologist and chronic pain recovery coach Rob Nash for a deeply thoughtful conversation about fibromyalgia, chronic pain, and the misunderstood role the nervous system plays in persistent pain conditions. Rob brings over a decade of experience working with people living with chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, dysautonomia, and other complex chronic conditions. His approach sits at the intersection of movement therapy, neuroscience, and compassionate coaching — helping people rebuild capacity without triggering the flare-ups that so often derail recovery. Together, Katie and Rob explore the evolving science of pain, the limitations of purely biomedical models, and why people living with fibromyalgia are so often dismissed, misunderstood, or given advice that unintentionally makes things worse. This episode brings clarity to one of the most confusing topics in modern healthcare. Because fibromyalgia is not imagined. It is a nervous system condition that requires intelligence, patience, and respect for the body's protective mechanisms. We Explore: What fibromyalgia actually is — and why it's often misunderstood medicallyThe difference between fibromyalgia and localized chronic painHow trauma, prolonged stress, and nervous system overload can influence pain patternsThe role of nociceptors (danger receptors) and how the brain interprets pain signalsWhy pain isn't always a reflection of tissue damageThe concept of sensitisation — when the nervous system becomes overprotectiveWhy exercise can sometimes flare fibromyalgia symptomsThe "exercise trap" movement professionals must avoid with chronic pain clientsWhy starting with very low-load, low-repetition movement can be the most effective approach This Episode Is For: Pilates teachers working with clients experiencing fibromyalgia or chronic painMovement professionals wanting a more nervous-system informed approach to exerciseStudio owners designing safe environments for sensitive nervous systemsHealth professionals curious about integrative pain carePeople living with fibromyalgia who want to better understand their body A Moment That Landed: "Pain is ultimately about protection. The brain is trying to tell you something isn't safe — even if that signal isn't accurate anymore." One of the most powerful ideas in this conversation is that pain can become habitual. Not because someone is imagining it. But because the nervous system has learned to associate certain movements, situations, or environments with danger. Breaking that cycle requires patience, education, and new experiences of safety. Sometimes the first goal is not strength or fitness. Sometimes the goal is simply moving without triggering a flare-up. Key Takeaway for Movement Professionals If you work with clients living with fibromyalgia: Less is often more. Rob emphasises that the goal of movement is not always progression. Sometimes the success of a session is simply this: The person moved. They felt safe. And they did not flare up afterward. That alone can begin rebuilding trust between the body and the nervous system. Connect with Rob Nash Rob Nash is an Integrative Exercise Physiologist and Chronic Pain & Fatigue Recovery Coach with over 12 years' experience supporting people living with chronic pain, fatigue and dysautonomic conditions. His work combines education, pacing strategies, nervous system awareness, and individualized guidance to help people rebuild capacity without repeated crashes. 🌐 Website: https://healthrive.com.au 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/_healthrive Rob works entirely via telehealth and supports clients across Australia. Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse If this conversation sparked something for you — professionally or personally — explore The Pilates Muse, where Katie shares deeper reflections on movement, pain, teaching philosophy, and the evolution of Pilates as a therapeutic practice. ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication 🎥 Prefer to watch? Episodes of The Pilates Lounge Podcast are also available on YouTube. About The Pilates Lounge The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, the podcast explores the deeper layers of Pilates — from chronic pain and nervous system regulation to business leadership, teaching philosophy, and the evolving role of movement professionals in modern healthcare. Each episode supports Pilates educators to think deeper, teach smarter, and serve their communities with integrity.
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    1 h y 9 m
  • Living With Loukia - A story of Fibromyalgia
    Mar 22 2026

    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane sits down with the founder of Live Young Pilates for a grounded, intelligent conversation about what it really means to "live young."

    Not cosmetically.

    Not performatively.

    But structurally, neurologically, and philosophically.

    This episode explores longevity through the lens of Pilates — not as a trend, not as choreography, but as a lifelong practice that builds adaptability, resilience, and agency.

    Together, we unpack how intelligent movement supports strength across decades, why midlife is a recalibration rather than a decline, and how the industry often confuses intensity with effectiveness.

    This conversation is a reminder:

    Living young is about maintaining options in your body — not chasing exhaustion.

    We Explore:
    • What "living young" actually means beyond aesthetics or anti-ageing narratives
    • The difference between Pilates as exercise versus Pilates as practice
    • Why joint integrity, fascia health, breath, and proprioception determine how we age
    • The responsibility Pilates professionals carry when working with women 40+
    • How hormonal shifts change the way we should approach load and recovery
    • Why small-group and thoughtful programming create deeper embodiment
    • The nervous system's role in strength, coordination, and sustainable progress
    • Why chasing the burn is rarely the goal in intelligent Pilates
    • The long-game philosophy of building capacity without overwhelming the system
    This Episode Is For:
    • Pilates teachers who want to teach for longevity, not trends
    • Studio owners positioning Pilates beyond fitness culture
    • Women navigating perimenopause, menopause, and midlife transitions
    • Movement professionals refining their philosophy around load and adaptation
    • Anyone who wants strength without burnout
    A Moment That Landed:

    "Youthfulness isn't about how hard you train — it's about how well your body adapts."

    This episode reinforces an essential truth:

    Pilates done properly is not about performance. It's about preservation, progression, and intelligent self-awareness.

    Living young isn't about trying to look 25.

    It's about moving well at 55.

    And 65.

    And 85.

    For Pilates professionals, this conversation is an invitation to zoom out — to look beyond class formats and social media narratives and ask:

    Are we building bodies that will last?

    👉 Your Next Step:

    Take this into your teaching practice:

    ➡️ Audit how you program for women over 40

    ➡️ Reflect on whether your cues support autonomy or dependency

    ➡️ Consider how breath, pacing, and recovery are integrated — not just load

    ➡️ Revisit your philosophy: is your teaching built for decades, or just for today?

    Connect with Loukia

    To learn more about Loukia's work, philosophy, and offerings:

    🌐 https://www.liveyoungpilates.com

    This is a valuable resource for teachers and clients wanting a longevity-focused, intelligent approach to Pilates.

    Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse

    If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, longevity, and professional integrity:

    ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises

    ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication

    🎥 Prefer to watch?

    Episodes of The Pilates Lounge are also available on YouTube.

    This is where philosophy meets practice.

    About The Pilates Lounge

    The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.

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    50 m
  • Fibromyalgia - A recap with Katie Crane
    Mar 15 2026

    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane closes out her fibromyalgia series with a powerful reflective episode — weaving together the lived experiences, professional insights, and recurring themes that emerged across conversations with Pilates teachers, educators, and individuals living with or healing from fibromyalgia.

    This episode is not an interview, but an integration. Katie pulls apart what these stories collectively reveal about chronic pain, trauma, nervous system load, and the real role Pilates can play — not as a cure, but as intelligent, compassionate support.

    What emerges is a clear reminder: fibromyalgia is not random, not overnight, and not something to be "pushed through."

    We Explore:
    • The common threads shared by people living with or healing from fibromyalgia

    • How trauma, prolonged stress, and high-achieving personalities often precede chronic pain

    • Why fibromyalgia is deeply connected to the emotional and nervous system landscape

    • The relationship between chronic pain, fatigue, and depression

    • Why healing is never an overnight process — and why Pilates is not a "fix"

    • How movement supports regulation, grounding, and reconnection

    • The importance of unloading joints, reducing perceived threat, and avoiding excessive load

    • Why mat work, gentle movement, nature, and grounding can feel safer than equipment for some

    • The critical role of listening, pacing, sleep, rest, and self-prioritisation

    • Why Pilates teachers must be careful not to diagnose, label, or oversimplify client experiences

    This Episode Is For:
    • Pilates teachers working with clients who have fibromyalgia or chronic pain

    • Movement professionals wanting to teach with greater nuance and nervous system awareness

    • Teachers navigating load, fatigue, flare-ups, and client feedback

    • Practitioners ready to move beyond "harder is better" thinking

    • Anyone wanting a grounded, respectful perspective on self-healing and lived experience

    A Moment That Landed:

    "Fibromyalgia is the body yelling after years of whispers we didn't listen to."

    This episode reinforces an essential truth:

    People don't come to Pilates for exercises — they come for safety, understanding, and to be seen.

    Across every conversation in this series, those living with fibromyalgia shared similar learning curves:

    • learning to listen instead of push

    • learning to rest without guilt

    • learning to soften self-judgement

    • learning to put themselves first

    Not because it's trendy — but because their body demanded it.

    For Pilates professionals, this episode is a call to stay curious, avoid assumptions, and honour the privilege of holding space for deeply personal stories.

    👉 Your Next Step:

    Take this into your teaching practice:

    ➡️ Reflect on how your language, loading choices, and pacing influence nervous system safety
    ➡️ Notice where you may unintentionally reward pushing through fatigue
    ➡️ Ask better questions — and leave space for answers that don't fit neat boxes

    Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse

    If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, pain, and professional practice:

    ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises
    ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication

    🎥 Prefer to watch?

    This episode — and the full fibromyalgia series — is also available on YouTube:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGs4C3-8NIw2BQZ1QTHZetg

    This is where philosophy meets practice.

    About The Pilates Lounge

    The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.

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    20 m
  • Fibromyalgia - Giving Yourself Permission to Heal with Kristin Windsor
    Mar 8 2026

    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane speaks with Kristin Windsor, a somatic healing practitioner who shares her extraordinary lived experience of fibromyalgia, complex trauma, nervous system dysregulation, and full recovery after years of chronic pain, mental illness, and medical dismissal.

    Kristin brings depth, courage, and fierce honesty to this conversation — weaving together neuroscience, polyvagal theory, trauma recovery, and movement as a pathway back to safety, embodiment, and self-trust. Her story is not about bypassing pain, but about meeting the body with precision, patience, and radical responsibility.

    This episode is part of Katie's ongoing fibromyalgia series, created to help Pilates professionals expand beyond muscles and exercises — and truly understand the nervous system realities shaping chronic pain.

    We Explore:
    • How childhood trauma and nervous system dysregulation can lay the groundwork for fibromyalgia

    • Why chronic pain, depression, anxiety, and fatigue often coexist

    • The role of the dorsal vagal "shutdown" response in weakness, exhaustion, and pain

    • Why fibromyalgia cannot be resolved through willpower or mindset alone

    • How neuroscience, neuroplasticity, and daily rituals supported Kristin's healing

    • The importance of movement as reconnection — not performance or intensity

    • Gentle movement, Pilates, yoga, breath, and presence as tools for safety

    • Why healing requires consistency, not motivation

    • What it actually takes to rebuild trust with the body after trauma

    This Episode Is For:
    • Pilates teachers working with clients living with fibromyalgia or chronic pain

    • Movement professionals supporting trauma-informed, nervous-system-sensitive bodies

    • Teachers navigating pain, fatigue, mental health, and long-term recovery

    • Practitioners ready to integrate neuroscience, regulation, and compassion into practice

    A Moment That Landed:

    "I didn't heal by forcing my body to change. I healed by learning how to listen to it — and respond with consistency, safety, and respect."

    Fibromyalgia cannot be understood through muscles, joints, or exercise prescription alone.

    Kristin's story reminds us that chronic pain is often the voice of a nervous system shaped by years of survival — not weakness, laziness, or lack of effort.

    This conversation reinforces why Pilates teachers must expand their scope to include nervous system regulation, trauma awareness, pacing, oxygenation, and emotional safety.

    When movement is rushed, forced, or aesthetic-driven, we reinforce harm.
    When it is paced, relational, and intelligent, Pilates becomes a powerful ally in healing.

    👉 Your Next Step:

    If this episode resonated, consider this:

    ➡️ Reflect on one client whose pain or fatigue may be asking for safety, not progression
    ➡️ Reassess how your cueing, pacing, and expectations support regulation
    ➡️ Ask deeper questions — not to fix, but to understand

    Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse

    If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, pain, and professional practice:

    ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises
    ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication

    🎥 Prefer to watch?

    This episode is also available on YouTube — experience the full conversation in a different way:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGs4C3-8NIw2BQZ1QTHZetg

    This is where philosophy meets practice.

    About The Pilates Lounge

    The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.

    Más Menos
    55 m
  • Fibromyalgia - Living with Fibro on the Mat
    Mar 1 2026

    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane speaks with Lourdes, a Pilates teacher living with fibromyalgia, sharing her lived experience of chronic pain, fatigue, depression, and the long, often confusing road to understanding her body.

    Speaking from El Salvador, Lourdes brings honesty, humility, and deep compassion to this conversation — weaving together motherhood, injury, nervous system awareness, and the power of Pilates as a practice of reconnection rather than performance.

    This episode is part of Katie's ongoing fibromyalgia series, created to help Pilates professionals better understand the realities of this condition — so we can teach with more intelligence, empathy, and respect.

    We Explore:
    • What fibromyalgia can feel like before diagnosis — and why it's often mistaken for depression or "just ageing"

    • The overlap between chronic pain, fatigue, and emotional health

    • Why pain often comes first — and depression follows

    • Living, parenting, and teaching Pilates while managing fibromyalgia

    • Why reconnection, not intensity, is the foundation of sustainable movement

    • How mat work, breath, and props support safety and self-trust

    • Why listening to the body matters more than loading it

    • The role of self-love, gentleness, and pacing in long-term health

    This Episode Is For:
    • Pilates teachers working with clients living with fibromyalgia or chronic pain

    • Movement professionals supporting fatigue-prone, nervous-system-sensitive bodies

    • Teachers navigating pain, injury, motherhood, and long-term practice

    • Practitioners ready to prioritise awareness, regulation, and connection over intensity

    A Moment That Landed:

    "When we're in pain, we disconnect. My first goal is always to reconnect — through breath, awareness, and listening."

    Fibromyalgia cannot be understood through muscles, joints, or exercise prescription alone.

    Lourdes' story reminds us that pain, fatigue, and depression are not failures of motivation or discipline — they are signals from a nervous system under load.

    This conversation reinforces why Pilates teachers must expand their lens to include nervous system regulation, emotional safety, fatigue management, and lived experience.

    When movement is rushed or driven by aesthetics, we reinforce harm.
    When it's paced, intelligent, and compassionate, Pilates becomes a lifelong ally.

    👉 Your Next Step:

    If this episode resonated, consider this:

    ➡️ Reflect on one client whose pain or fatigue may be asking for listening, not progression
    ➡️ Review how your session pacing, language, and expectations support safety
    ➡️ Ask better questions — not to fix, but to understand

    Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse

    If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, pain, and professional practice:

    ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises
    ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication

    🎥 Prefer to watch?

    This episode is also available on YouTube — experience the full conversation in a different way:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGs4C3-8NIw2BQZ1QTHZetg

    This is where philosophy meets practice.

    About The Pilates Lounge

    The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.

    Más Menos
    41 m
  • Fibromyalgia - Teaching with Carla Mullins
    Feb 15 2026

    On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane speaks with Carla Mullins, founder of Body Organics Education and a leading voice in working with complex conditions in movement practice.

    Carla brings both clinical insight and lived understanding to a deeply honest conversation about fibromyalgia — a condition marked by chronic pain, fatigue, nervous system sensitivity, and years of medical dismissal.

    We Explore:
    • What fibromyalgia actually is — and why diagnosis is often delayed for years

    • Medical gaslighting and the emotional cost of not being believed

    • Primary vs secondary fibromyalgia and common comorbidities

    • Why fatigue is not "just tiredness" — and why it must guide programming

    • How nervous system dysregulation drives pain, flare-ups, and overwhelm

    • Why listening is one of the most powerful tools a Pilates teacher has

    This Episode Is For:
    • Pilates teachers working with fibromyalgia or chronic pain clients

    • Movement professionals supporting fatigue-prone, nervous-system-sensitive bodies

    • Teachers navigating pain, pacing, and long-term client relationships

    • Practitioners ready to move beyond load, reps, and repertoire

    A Moment That Landed:

    "Let's not worry about the why. Let's ask how this impacts your life — and what helps you function better."

    Fibromyalgia cannot be understood through muscles, joints, or pathology alone.
    This conversation reinforces why Pilates teachers must expand their lens to include fatigue management, nervous system regulation, safety, trust, and lived experience.

    When movement is rushed, over-prescribed, or poorly paced, we risk reinforcing fear and deconditioning. When it's intelligent, collaborative, and respectful, Pilates becomes a long-term ally — not another failed intervention.

    👉 Your Next Step:

    If this episode resonated, consider this:

    ➡️ Reflect on one client whose fatigue or pain may be asking for pacing, not progressions
    ➡️ Review how session length, environment, and sensory load show up in your studio
    ➡️ Ask better questions — not to fix, but to understand

    Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse

    If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, pain, and professional practice:

    ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises
    ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication

    🎥 Prefer to watch?
    This episode is also available on YouTube — experience the full conversation in a different way:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGs4C3-8NIw2BQZ1QTHZetg

    This is where philosophy meets practice.

    About The Pilates Lounge

    The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 11 m
  • Fibromyalgia - Self Healing through Breath Reanne Murray
    Feb 1 2026

    On The Pilates Lounge, Katie Crane speaks with Reanne Murray, a mother, breathwork practitioner, and woman living with fibromyalgia.

    Reanne shares her lived experience of chronic pain, invisible illness, and the long road to diagnosis — and how trauma, emotional suppression, and nervous system dysregulation shaped her symptoms.

    We Explore:
    • What it's like to live with pain long before receiving a diagnosis
    • Why fibromyalgia is often misunderstood — even by healthcare professionals
    • How trauma, stress, and emotional suppression can manifest as physical pain
    • The role of the nervous system in chronic pain and flare-ups
    • Why pain can be information, not something to fear or fight
    • How self-care, boundaries, and self-responsibility changed everything
    This episode is for:
    • Pilates teachers working with clients who have fibromyalgia or chronic pain
    • Movement professionals supporting nervous-system-sensitive bodies
    • Anyone living with an invisible illness who feels unseen or unheard
    • Teachers ready to move beyond purely structural explanations of pain
    A Moment That Landed:

    "Pain is always telling you a story. It's there as a protection mechanism."

    Fibromyalgia — and chronic pain more broadly — cannot be understood through muscles, joints, or pathology alone. This conversation reinforces why Pilates teachers must expand their lens to include trauma, stress load, belief systems, and nervous system regulation.

    When we only treat the body mechanically, we miss the deeper drivers of pain. This episode challenges practitioners to listen more closely, cue more intelligently, and create environments where clients feel safe enough to heal — not just move.

    👉 Your Next Step:

    If this episode resonated, your next step is simple:

    ➡️ Listen again with curiosity, not urgency.

    ➡️ Reflect on one client whose pain may be asking for something deeper.

    ➡️ Consider how safety, pacing, and nervous system support show up in your sessions.

    Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse

    If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, pain, and professional practice:

    ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication

    🎥 Prefer to watch? This episode is also available on YouTube, where you can experience the full conversation in a different way.

    This is where philosophy meets practice.

    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGs4C3-8NIw2BQZ1QTHZetg

    About The Pilates Lounge

    The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.

    Más Menos
    52 m