How breathwork can improve your strength and mobility!

Leslie Guerin • April 14, 2025

It is more than Inhale & Exhale!

Introduction: Breathing Is the Beginning

Breath is often taken for granted. It is automatic, ever-present, and so foundational that we often forget its power. In movement practices like Pilates, Barre, and even traditional strength training, breath is the unsung hero. Your life begins with your first breath and ends with your last—a bold statement, yes, but one that reminds us of the sheer importance of this biological rhythm. While some fitness classes may not dedicate lengthy segments to breathwork, it's always there: shaping, informing, and supporting every motion. And when done intentionally, breathwork becomes an engine for strength, mobility, and even internal organ health.

Let’s explore how breath can become your secret weapon.



1. Breathwork as a Tool for Strength

Let’s start with the basics. When you breathe deeply and intentionally, your diaphragm and core muscles work in tandem. In Pilates, we emphasize 360 breathing—breathing that draws air deep into the lungs, expanding the ribcage laterally and into the back body. This type of breathing recruits the transverse abdominis, pelvic floor, and obliques—the core of your core.

Engaging these muscles with breath builds inner strength, creating a more stable foundation for outer strength. For instance, in Barre classes, when you exhale during exertion (e.g., a lift, pulse, or plank), you access more power. Breath provides rhythm, which improves coordination, and breath drives engagement, which improves muscle recruitment.

Over time, practicing breath-coordinated movement helps:

  • Improve posture and spinal alignment
  • Prevent injury by supporting the low back
  • Enhance muscle activation and endurance



2. Breath and Mobility: Creating Space from the Inside Out

Breath isn’t just for strength; it’s a vehicle for mobility. Think of a deep breath as internal stretching. With each inhale, your ribcage expands, your spine subtly lifts, and space is created between joints and tissues. With each exhale, you have the chance to settle, deepen, and elongate.

Deep breathing enhances mobility by:

  • Relaxing overactive muscles
  • Improving circulation to tight tissues
  • Encouraging the nervous system to shift from “fight or flight” to “rest and digest”
  • Facilitating deeper stretching and safer range of motion

In practical terms, a student who breathes deeply during a seated forward fold will experience more release in the hamstrings and hips than someone holding their breath and muscling through. In spinal rotations, breath can act as a lever to help the thoracic spine rotate more smoothly.

Intentional breathing helps us soften into movement. It brings a sense of flow, grace, and release.



3. The Diaphragm-Liver Connection: Why Breathwork Supports Organ Health

Here’s where science and holistic wisdom intersect beautifully. The diaphragm, your primary breathing muscle, sits just above the liver. With each deep breath, especially when you use diaphragmatic breathing, your liver is gently massaged.

This rhythmic compression and decompression has real health benefits:

  • It supports liver detoxification and lymphatic drainage
  • It stimulates circulation through the portal vein
  • It helps reduce stagnation, which can happen when we’re sedentary or shallow-breathing

In Eastern medicine and somatic practices, the liver is associated with anger, frustration, and energy flow. Supporting the liver with breath can be both a physical and emotional release. The gentle massage of breath may not be as flashy as a detox juice cleanse, but it’s a sustainable, daily ritual that helps the body process and heal.

The best part? You don’t need to lie down in meditation or chant to experience these benefits. Simply incorporating deep, diaphragmatic breaths into your Pilates mat practice, your morning stretch, or your walk around the block can make a meaningful difference.



4. My First Lesson in Diaphragmatic Breathing

When I was younger, I took singing lessons with a teacher who had a beautifully simple way of teaching us how to breathe from the diaphragm. She’d lay us down on the floor and place a giant book—a phone book, encyclopedia, or dictionary—on our bellies. Our job? Breathe in deeply enough to lift the book, then control the exhale slowly enough to let it gently fall.

At the time, it felt like a quirky exercise, but it planted the seed of breath awareness early on. It was my first tactile experience of diaphragmatic breathing, and I’ve never forgotten it. That moment taught me how breath could be physical, visible, and powerful—something that continues to influence my movement and teaching today.



5. Breath as the Teacher: Awareness, Control, and Healing

Your breath is your first feedback tool. If you’re holding your breath during a challenging movement, it’s a sign to check in: Are you over-recruiting certain muscles? Are you moving too fast? Are you pushing through pain?

Breath reveals our unconscious patterns. For many people, shallow chest breathing is a default mode—a result of stress, poor posture, or trauma. Teaching clients (and ourselves) to breathe more fully is not just a fitness goal but a health intervention.

Tools to retrain breath:

  • Try a breath-focused warm-up in Pilates: lying supine with knees bent, hands on the ribs, practicing lateral expansion.
  • Cue breath in every major movement: Inhale to prepare, exhale to engage.
  • Use tactile props: A small ball or yoga block between the thighs while curling up can help connect breath with deep core engagement.

As teachers and movers, we can use breath to:

  • Cue better alignment
  • Slow down rushed or sloppy movement
  • Offer clients a moment of rest or reset
  • Empower people to connect with their own bodies in deeper ways



6. A Final, Controversial Thought: The Marker of Life

It might sound dramatic, but it’s true: Your life begins with a breath and ends with one. In between, how many breaths do you take without noticing?

Even in classes where breath isn’t the focal point, it’s still the undercurrent. It dictates the tempo, shapes the energy of the room, and defines your ability to be present. When you start to work with your breath rather than around it, everything changes. You gain clarity, connection, and a sense of power from within.

Whether you’re cueing dozens of clients in a Barre class, guiding one-on-one Pilates sessions, or simply showing up on your mat, breath is your anchor. It is not just the thing that keeps you alive. It’s the thing that can make you feel more alive.



Conclusion: Breathe to Move, Move to Breathe

So the next time you're teaching or training, remember this: Breath is not an afterthought. It is a primary driver of strength, mobility, and vitality. It supports your liver. It engages your core. It creates calm. It fuels presence.

Integrating breathwork into your practice isn't about adding complexity. It's about uncovering what's already there. A quiet, steady rhythm that supports your best movement, your deepest healing, and your most grounded self.

So inhale with intention. Exhale with power. And keep moving—one breath at a time.

Listen to Breathwork described here

By Leslie Guerin February 22, 2026
There is a common misunderstanding about Pilates that has grown louder over the years: that it is meant to be gentle, slow, soft and easy. A “nice” workout. But that was never the intention. Pilates was not created to be performative. It was created to be effective. Effectiveness in movement does not come from looking impressive. It comes from precision. Somewhere along the way, the visual of Pilates became louder than the method itself. Long limbs moving with beautiful choreography and endless repetitions. Classes that look like Pilates. But looking like Pilates, being called Pilates and being Pilates are not the same thing. And most people, including many teachers, skip the part that actually makes it work. Pilates Was Never Meant to Be Performative Joseph Pilates did not design a system that rewarded momentum. He designed a system that required attention. Not attention to how something looks, though that is how you can tell if the exercises is executed properly. The attention should ideally be to how something is done. Modern fitness culture thrives on performance. Movement is filmed, shared, and packaged visually. The more dynamic it looks, the more engaging it appears. The more repetitions, the more it seems productive. This is where Barre and Pilates differ. This is where those lines have blurred and I quietly hope Pilates can resists this fad. A well-taught Pilates class may look almost uneventful from the outside. To someone expecting entertainment, it can seem understated. To the nervous system, it is deeply demanding. Because Pilates was never designed to entertain the eye. It was designed to reorganize the body. It is art, but not for arts sake. Precision Requires Attention Precision creates actual change. When movement becomes rushed, the body defaults to habit. Stronger muscles take over. Momentum replaces control. Alignment becomes approximate instead of intentional. Slowing down in Pilates is not about being gentle. It is about being accurate. It allows the brain to register position, and control. It gives the body time to respond instead of react. Precision is not passive. It is neurologically active. Holding a half curl with the neck long, ribs quiet, and breath organized requires far more attention than swinging through ten repetitions with momentum. Performing a leg circle without pelvic movement demands significantly more control than making the circle bigger or faster. The difficulty in Pilates is rarely about load. It is about coordination. Coordination should not be rushed for the sake of getting in more repetitions. Many Classes Look Like Pilates, But Aren’t Being Taught to Bodies This is where the disconnect becomes most visible. Exercises are demonstrated, copied and followed. Social media has taken the see and steal culture to new lengths! This leads to the body in front of the teacher is not being taught properly. Clients are becoming carbon copies of braod movements seen online and just simply being asked to replicate. There is a difference between cueing choreography and teaching movement. When classes focus primarily on what the exercise should look like, participants often compensate without realizing it. The neck grips during abdominal work. The hip flexors dominate leg movements. The lower back absorbs what the abdominals were meant to support. From the outside, everything appears correct. From the inside, the wrong muscles are doing the work. I know this to be true, because I have definitely performed Pilates.. and on an off day... I am sure I will unfortunately do this again. This has allowed me to really see though, that Pilates teaching requires observation. It requires adjusting range of motion, tempo, setup, and intention based on the individual body, not the idealized version of the exercise. Because the goal of Pilates is not uniform movement. It is intelligent movement. Real Pilates Feels Quieter, and More Demanding Neurologically One of the most surprising experiences for clients transitioning from performative classes to precise Pilates is how “quiet” it feels. There is less rushing and far less choreography for the sake of variety. Yet, thes classes often feels more challenging. Not because it is harder in the traditional fitness sense. But because it requires sustained mental engagement. You cannot mentally check out during precise Pilates. You are asked to notice: Where your ribs are How your pelvis is responding Whether your neck is assisting unnecessarily If your breath is supporting or disrupting the movement Which muscles are initiating versus compensating This level of awareness increases the neurological demand significantly. The brain is actively mapping movement rather than passively repeating it. That is why Pilates can feel deceptively demanding even when the exercises appear small or controlled. It is not about exhaustion. It is about organization. Gentle Is Often a Misinterpretation of Control When Pilates is described as gentle, it is usually because it lacks impact, heavy loading, or aggressive pacing. But low impact does not equal low intensity. Holding alignment under control. Moving without compensation and maintaining precision through fatigue. These are not gentle skills. They are refined skills. In fact, when Pilates is taught with true precision, many clients realize they have been overworking the wrong areas for years. Their hip flexors tire quickly. Their neck becomes aware. Their deep abdominals fatigue in ways they never noticed before. Not because the workout is harsher. But because it is finally specific. Specificity feels different than intensity. Why Precision Gets Skipped Skipping precision is rarely intentional. It is often the result of: Large class sizes Fast-paced programming Overemphasis on choreography Teacher insecurity around slowing things down The pressure to make classes feel “worth it” through visible effort Precision requires time. It requires observation. It requires confidence in subtlety. And subtle teaching can feel risky in a culture that equates visible sweat with value. But when precision is skipped, the method gradually becomes diluted. Exercises become shapes instead of tools. Cueing becomes generalized instead of specific. And the neurological depth of Pilates is replaced with surface-level movement. Teaching Pilates to Bodies, Not to Exercises One of the most important shifts a teacher can make is moving from teaching exercises to teaching bodies. An exercise is not the goal. It is the vehicle. Two people performing the same movement may need entirely different cueing, range, and pacing to achieve the intended outcome. Precision means recognizing that and adjusting in real time. It means allowing fewer repetitions with better execution. It means refining setup before adding progression. It means valuing stillness as much as movement. And perhaps most importantly, it means being willing to make the class feel quieter in order to make it more effective. Because when the body is truly learning, it does not need constant spectacle. It needs clarity. The Quiet Demanding Nature of True Pilates Clients who experience precise Pilates often describe it the same way: “It felt small, but I was working so hard.” “I had to concentrate the whole time.” “It was harder than it looked.” This is not accidental. When the nervous system is fully engaged, even controlled movements require significant effort. The demand shifts from gross muscular output to refined neuromuscular coordination. That is the part most people skip. And it is also the part that creates lasting change. Not bigger movements. Better ones. A Method That Rewards Thoughtfulness Pilates does not reward rushing. It does not reward performance. It does not reward spectacle. It rewards attention. It rewards consistency. It rewards intelligent progression. It rewards teachers who are willing to observe rather than simply lead. And in a fitness landscape that increasingly prioritizes how movement looks on camera, this quiet precision becomes even more valuable. Because bodies do not improve through performance. They improve through accurate, repeated, intentional movement. Reclaiming Precision in Modern Pilates Reclaiming precision does not mean making Pilates rigid or overly clinical. It means returning to its original intelligence. It means: Teaching fewer exercises more effectively Slowing down when needed Cueing for sensation, not just shape Observing compensation patterns Prioritizing neurological engagement over visual intensity When this happens, Pilates stops feeling “gentle” in the dismissive sense and starts feeling deeply effective. Subtle. Focused. Demanding in the way that truly organized movement always is. And that is where the real method lives. Not in performance. Not in speed. Not in how impressive it appears. But in the precision that most people overlook. Pilates doesn’t need to be harder.
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