Brooke has a fully equipped Gratz apparatus studio in Asheville NC and works online around the world mentoring, training and connected with Pilates instructors of varied trainings and experience. In addition Brooke trains professional athletes online and in studio. She’s brought classical Pilates to the WNBA in a way that these professional female basketball players are gaining strength, flexibility, stamina on the court, resilience through long seasons and injuries, and truly elite performance.
Since 2003 Brooke has been teaching Classical Pilates and the Core Self teacher training now focuses on more customized mentoring for Pilates instructors, rather than training apprentices as she did for years at Clasique Acupuncture & Pilates studio. Teachers come to Brooke to feel stronger and inspired in their own practice, get curious and dive deeper as an instructor, and on the whole level up and grow through this movement practice that really becomes a way of living.
website : https://www.yourcoreself.com/
email : brooke@yourcoreself.com
So, my athletes follow my videos daily, and then we have live 1:1 online sessions. In these sessions, I can clearly see where the spine is tight or the hips are stuck, identify areas needing more range or rest, determine if the legs are rooted in the waist or gripping in the quads, and assess whether the lats are firing to find the upper ab connection or if they're just shouldering the movement and stuck in the traps – a common occurrence among strong athletes. I am constantly returning to assessing both range and strength. I consistently work with them on 'legs into waist' and 'arms into back' as integrated strength, emphasizing understanding their powerhouse.
I aim for them to find ease of movement in every plane, preventing injury always and in all ways. At this point, I work across many sports, but the truth is, every athlete needs to first understand what the powerhouse is, grasp the idea of integrated strength rather than isolating legs/arms/back, establish a mind-to-body connection to truly know where their body is in space, and learn to balance training hard and recovering harder. The range of Pilates makes all of this possible. Learning how to listen and avoid overtraining is key. Pilates serves as their best mindful active recovery, assisting them in-season and throughout life beyond sport. In fact, some prominent names in women's sports who recently retired are more active than ever, maintaining their classical Pilates practice with me through video and live sessions. Because now they know that this way of exercise is how they feel good in their whole body, just for daily living!
"I love it for athletes because so much translates to sport inviting strength in a greater range of motion, and greater range for strength. I have taught Wunda Chair classes for years and years..."
*Naomi Corti, member of New York City Ballet’s corps de ballet
*Naomi Corti, member of New York City Ballet’s corps de ballet
On the left: WNBA player Sylvia Fowles, Brooke Berghdahl
Las Vegas WNBA player Alysha Clark (Pilates client)
Las Vegas WNBA player Kelsey Plum (Pilates client)
Honestly, I don't pay any attention to mainstream fitness circles. Long, long ago, I ensured that my brands and studio spaces never promoted Pilates workouts for body image goals like weight loss, a beach body, or especially 'get your body back after babies'. I think mainstream fitness probably still does that with marketing messages. I understand marketing to pain relief; it is stunning how much pain people have and live with. And Pilates relieves people of so much pain in their entire bodies; we know this. I think the maybe less talked-about truth is the simple fact that Pilates helps us be our best selves. I really believe this.
Life is hard, the days are not always up and joyful, we have such little control of so much, and the amount of noise and stimulation coming at us is enough to ensure we're never in our centers. So to stay connected to a practice, on the mat or in the whole studio if you have it, is like a moving meditation—a mindfulness practice. It is that for me in so many ways, and I ensure I do that nearly every day. It's a place to feel things and work through feelings, to work hard on exercises or transitions but never actually arrive at perfect or complete, to talk to the springs and listen when they talk back, to feel really strong and playful and capable, and to feel really held and supported. From the familiarity of the Leg Springs to powerful fun Cadillac flipping tricks, to solid quiet Ladder Barrel stretches... I find myself in here, again and again, and I am so grateful.