Order in Classical Mat: 7 of 34
Original Source: Return to Life Through Contrology by Joseph Pilates
Primary Focus: Core strength, breath coordination, limb control
Estimated Reps: 6-12 full cycles
Joseph Pilates’ Intention
Joseph Pilates used The Double Leg Stretch to:
- Train simultaneous control of arms, legs, and core
- Deepen the connection to the Powerhouse while fully extending limbs
- Build stamina, precision, and seamless movement coordination
- Reinforce the principle that the center initiates and controls all motion
Joe said: “Stretch everything out, then draw it all back in, from your center.”
How to Perform: The Double Leg Stretch
Start Position:
- Lie on your back, knees hugged into chest
- Head, neck, and shoulders curled up
- Hands lightly on shins or ankles
- Elbows wide, tailbone heavy
Movement:
- Inhale: Extend both legs to 45° (or Pilates said 2″ off mat), and simultaneously reach arms overhead
- Exhale: Circle arms around and hug the knees back into center
- Keep shoulders lifted the entire time and spine stable
- Repeat 6–12x with rhythm and control
Advanced: Arms go fully overhead without arching back
Beginner: Keep arms in a wide circle slightly forward of ears
Breathing
- Inhale: Stretch long — arms and legs reach in opposite directions
- Exhale: Scoop and return — draw everything back to the midline
Cues to Keep You Centered
- “Lengthen out from your center — then draw back in like a spring.”
- “Reach arms and legs as if pulled by opposing forces.”
- “Keep the low belly scooped — don’t let it bulge.”
- “Exhale like you’re hugging your body back into alignment.”
- “Hold your shape — don’t let the shoulders or pelvis shift.”
Modifications
- Neck strain? Lower the head between reps or keep it down entirely
- Low back discomfort? Bring legs higher (60°–90°) to reduce load
- Shoulder tension? Keep arms slightly forward or don’t reach too far back
What You’re Training
- Deep transverse abdominis + lower rectus
- Hip and shoulder control
- Core integration through extension and retrieval
- Dynamic coordination under tension
- Fluidity of breath and movement
Reflection Prompt for Personal Progress
Did I initiate both the stretch and the return from my center? Was my breath fluid or forced? Did I feel length, or did I collapse through my midline?
#MoveWithMona
Additional Tips:
- Rest Entire body on mat or floor
- Legs close together, straight forward (knees locked)
- Toes (pointed) forward and downward
- Arms stretched straights forward besides body
- Inhale Slowly, Head Up, Chin to chest, Arms stretched straight foward and pressed firmly against thighs
- Heels raised about 2″ off mat or floor, palms inward
- Exhale slowly, Draw both legs upward and forward and with
- Locked writs hold them firmly in “doubled-up” position
- Pull legs towards you and press them firmly against chest