Understanding Tall and Round Back in Pilates

teaser

You do not need to tuck your tailbone in order to strengthen your core!

In fact, Joseph Pilates placed a strong value on understanding and connecting to a TALL back in standing exercises to help one understand proper posture.  Having awareness of a TALL back posture is essential before going into any movement and especially into a round back(tucking) posture.

 *in fact, it was quite common for Joe Pilates to have his clients “stand” for their whole lesson.   He would encourage them to focus on their posture.  When their posture was ‘good enough,’ Joe would invite them to progress with the apparatus and other exercises.

Whenever you are standing, you want to connect to a TALL back posture.   A tall back is when you –

  1. Respect the natural curves of your back. Lordotic curve in lumbar and cervical spine and kyphotic curve in thoracic spine.
  2. Connect to a neutral pelvis(aka – not tucked) When you pubic bone is level to your hip bones on the sagittal plane.
  3. You stack your body! Where the center of your skull lines up to the center of your ribs, lines up to the center of your pelvis, lines up to the center of your knees and finally ankles. 

    Posture is an action and never just ‘sits’. Meaning that, you need to be attentive and present to sustain a tall back posture:). Its takes steady presence, effort and sometimes some softening to find and maintain a well balanced posture.  For me personally, I have a very flat back. Knowing this, I focus on lifting my low back in and up and also try to create more width and expansion in my mid thoracic spine by using my breath.

    *Most people (I observe) have super tight hip flexors (maybe from too much sitting or too much exercising and not enough stretching).  Tight hip flexors will push their thigh bones forward in their hip sockets.  If this is you, you’ll need to soften your knees, to draw the top of your shins forward to help you draw the top of your thighs back!  Another common issue is rib flaring in the front body.  To help with your ribs you need to consider expanding and breathing  more into the back of your rib cage and use your exhales to connect the front ribs in and down toward the pelvis to expand the back ribs back and up.

    What are you working on in your posture?

    If you practice Yoga, you can think of Tadasana/mountain pose as your TALL back posture!   This posture is not just ‘standing there’… On the contrary, Mountain pose in yoga is a demanding, dynamic standing posture. Although you may look still on the outside you are working hard on the inside to oragnize your body as you integrate every part of your body from your feet pushing into the earth to ground, all the way up to the crown of your head.  You should feel strong and stable like a mountain, yet also light and lifted like a puffy cloud.  In other words, no one would be able to come by and push you down because you are strongly rooted, buoyant and resilient connected bottom to top, top to bottom, and side to side!

    Are you attentive when you stand still?

    So why then do we tuck the tail bone…

    In round back positions and rolling position we need to tuck the tail to help us with articulating our back bone by bone.  Think of  rolling-over, rolling like a ball, open leg rocker, seal on the mat or stomach massage round back, elephant, and kneeling knee stretch with a round back position on the reformer.

    There are some exercises that transition in and out of round back such as the roll-up on the mat and the short spine on the reformer.  When lying flat on the mat you should aim at having a neutral pelvis and when you are up in your c-curve you should have a round back where you stay slightly behind your sit bones as you roll -up.  This is a subtle yet powerful awareness to build as you progress in your practice!

    When we are rounding our back and our tail bone is tucked we also want to be sure our whole spine is in a c-curve so our spine is in harmony and not performing 2 separate opposing actions!  Therefore, our chin should be at our chest and our gaze at our abdominals/ribs pulling and sternum pulling back and up to expand and broaden the upper spine to the lower spine.  If you practice yoga, you should think Cat back not Cow back!

    *I find many, including myself, have a difficult time rounding without collapsing.  It is essential to keep your inner lift!

    Although there are more spinal shapes (twist/side bend), the tall and round back are the 2 spinal shapes we use in the sagittal plane.

    The round back is useful to teach us how to connect more deeply, to our whole spine.  As a reminder when strengthening our center it involves our whole spinal body as one part will affect the other part!  That is Pilates…everything is connected!  Be patient and use your breathing as your guide and tool to create more width and space where your body needs it. That said when we round our back, we want to try to pull in our front body and our side bodies to support  and expand our whole back side.  When transitioning back to a TALL back posture (as we do several times in our pilates workouts)we should try to keep that “connection and fullness” in our back, as we reconnect to our Tall back posture.

    How about the teaser?

    The teaser exercise is a strong and very challenging pilates exercise.  Although this exercise requires a whole lot of BALANCED core strength, it also is essential that you have a flexible spine and open hips!  There is a lot going on in this exercise, and it is not for everyone, especially if you have a boney tailbone…

    For me personally, i have a very stiff low back and rolling up and down is tricky for me.  If i move too fast, i will miss my whole lumber spine on the way up and down.  I have learned to slow down to feel more and take my time.  Using my exhale will also help me cinch my waist more to help me better articulate.

    This is just one scenario…There are many scenarios!!  Whatever your issue/issues are  – please remember it is not the destination of ‘sticking’ the posture or finding perfection – rather, it is the journey and process in how you work with your body with accepting what is first…there will always be another issue and always more work to do.  Listening and paying attention to what is and making honest adjustments to support ourselves is always the best way forward…

    Teaser. – Tall back or round back position?

    Its actually both!  There needs to be lift and length so when in your teaser position you are not dumping and collapsing in your lumbar and thoracic  spine.  That said there is a subtle c-curve.  Meaning you will be behind your sit bones with the low back slightly rounded to support a posterior tilt especially if you are going to articulate your spine.  

    Careful that you are not collapsing in your lumbar spine… For example, if you are rounding too much in your low back, most cases you will be to round in your upper back and therefore not able to find your lift and length in your tall back and be able to widen your collar bone and open your chest!  On the flip side, if you have too much extension and perhaps are positioned in front of your sits bones, most cases your  ribs/chest will be pushing forward too much and you will not be able to connect well to your subtle c-curve and your power house muscles.

    The bottom line is that there is always an element of TALL back.  It is essential that you find your tall back first, especially before you round.

    AND…

    Remember to be gentle and patient with yourself!  Pilates is not easy as most people think.  It’s sweaty hard work and always involves the WHOLE BODY. The practice of Pilates requires one to stay present and give a lot of effort!  This attentiveness and hard work will increase your strength and overall well being.  Any successful practice is generative:)

    We get good at what we practice, not what we know:)

    Check out my latest teaser tutorials on my YouTube channel!

    1 – Teaser strap trick!

    2 – Teaser on the reformer

    Forever young

    Screenshot

    Practicing postures that open your heart/chest space have so much value. From simply breathing better, to feeling more confident, and feeling young!

    Here are some things to consider when practicing heart opening postures…

    1 – Anchor yourself. Your feet grounded and tops of thigh bones back(think mini standing squat)

    2 – Lengthen your spine on ALL sides – back, sides, and front.

    3 – Feel your hands connect directly from your heart space. Open your palms brightly!

    4 – Let your head trust in your heart and follow, not lead.

    See this heart opening class in my Youtube channel –

    Brooke Oberg@brookemoberg

    Returning to my center

    Are you someone that lives on the edge and takes risks? Or are you someone that’s afraid and scared and holds back?  Maybe you do both!  I was.  I was either, all out, or, nothing at all…I would swing frequently between the 2 extremes.

    These are two ends of a continuum as Annie carpenter would say…and our life, our body,  and our practice is overflowing with continuums!

    I just completed Sama sadhana with Annie carpenter.  The intention was cultivating an even/balanced practice.    No extremes!  Something I am learning to appreciate more and more.  🙂

    I am grateful for Annie and for her smartFLOW method.   A method that is rooted in classical yoga, yet blends in functional anatomy and energetic awareness.  This method allows the student to embrace their own unique circumstances to find their ‘return to center’ as they cultivate clear, bright, and strong lines of energy, and returning to ones center over and over again..

    The more I practice, I understand more deeply how I practice on the mat is a reflection of my life off the mat.  ‘For how we do one thing is how we do everything’…another one of Annies’ sayings that I love. 

    As I mature and grow more and more into myself I’ve learned to just show up do my best, be more conscious of my edges on my continuum, let go of what i cannot control and connect to my ‘center’ in all the ways.

    AND if you are stuck in an extreme – maybe try to cultivate the opposite.

    Do you remember who you are at your core? What makes you, you? Can you stay connected to who you are in relationships and stay true to you?

    Where is your center when you move in and out of certain postures? Where is your center in the transitions? Can you maintain your sense of balance and center as you move in and out of postures?

    Pilates & salsa…rhythm & flow

    Learning something new is hard!  The idea is always fun, but it does take some work!  

    Pontus and I just started taking Salsa lessons together.  We have only had 3 lessons and understand that we have a ways to go…  In our learning we are counting aloud to synchronize with the music and each other and trying to perfect every step we take as we move!  The music doesn’t stop and that means we don’t either!  The instructor moves fast and we are doing our best to keep up.:)  With each lesson we gain more knowledge, awareness and have many shared laughs along the way!  

    I feel that learning salsa is similar to learning the Pilates.  In salsa, there are several basic salsa steps that are precise and meant to be executed within a certain rhythm.  In Pilates there are certain exercises to be done in order while maintaining a certain amount of rhythm and flow as well. Also, in salsa and Pilates transitions from one step and/or exercise to the next are just as important as the move/exercise itself! 

    One difference between Salsa and Pilates is the music.  Music is intrinsic to salsa dancing, it helps with everything!  In Pilates, although we do not have music to encourage us to stay at a  reasonable tempo, it is still important to maintain a fluid rhythm.  I feel that because there is no music in Pilates it is easier to stop, sometimes maybe for too long, in an effort to get the exercise/posture perfect!

    It is given that you need rhythm to dance salsa, but it is also very true for Pilates.  If you can master your transitions and flow you are more ‘advanced’ than someone who can perform the posture or exercise but does not understand how to flow in and out of it.  Learning the rhythm and experiencing smoother transitions takes practice.  That said, practice does not have to be perfect.  Practice is practice.  The practice is to pay attention as you move and  breathe.  To feel yourself and your surroundings (partner and music in salsa – apparatus in Pilates), all to make better connections with yourself and your surroundings.

    My hope for all of you taking lessons is first that you are enjoying yourself or at least feel better when you leave:). I also hope you are gaining knowledge and more awareness of the practice and yourself.  Last but not least, for those of you who have been practicing with me for a while, I hope you are discovering more rhythm and flow within the exercise and having fun while you work to find more connection in your body.  

    Love Brooke

    “You are only strong as you are flexible & flexible as you are strong”



    This is a quote from Darren Rhodes. I have witnessed his teaching from a far for 10+ years. I will be practicing with him for the first time in person this coming Spring 2026 at Joshua tree. I am so looking forward to finally meeting him in person.

    I learned of Darren from my early years studying and practicing Anusara Yoga. He was a senior teacher and very well regarded in the Anusara community. He “walked the walk” in every aspect of living the principles of Yoga. He has a dry sense of humor and he is a very talented Yoga teacher.

    In 2019, I encouraged Pontus to take Darren’s beginner yoga series on a platform called Glo as we were preparing to go to a yoga retreat in San Miguel for my 40th birthday wish back in 2019 with another one of my favorite Yoga teachers and friend, Desiree Rumbaugh.

    Darren’s quote sums up what I try to inspire in all that I teach. Strength is nothing without flexibility just how being flexible will not serve us if we do not have a strong boundaries to keep us safe from over stretching.

    What do you consider you need more of today – strength or flexibility?

    No time to hesitate…

    tis the season to rush around. I hope you spend some time on yourself and invest in your health! If you have a chair, and I am sure you do, you can give yourself a full body workout. I personally love using a chair, especially on the days when all i feel like doing is sitting down in one and relaxing. However, I know that relaxing after I move, even for a little bit, will make my ability to relax so much better. It’s easy to let time pass by and get hung up on everything else but you, but don’t wait too long to take care of you:).

    I will be offering a chair – functional fitness/yoga class in my home studio December 4th, 2025! Please reach out for more information.

    NEW CLASS – FUNCTIONAL FITNESS

    Dear friends,

    The following are my class opportunities for the month of September!

    On a trial basis I moving Pilates mat class to noon on Fridays and Yoga to 9am on Thursdays.

    Pilates mat class – Fridays at noon

    September 5,12,19,26

    Yoga – Thursdays at 9am

    September 11, 25

    I am also excited to offer a new class format on Wednesdays at 12pm.  

    I am naming my new class – FUNctional fitness. You can expect to align your body and mind, strengthen your muscles and fortify your bones, and also mobilize and release shoulders, hips, and necks:).  Optional use of some weights and resistance bands.  See more in description below…

    FUNctional fitness –  Wednesdays at noon

    September 10,17,24

    What to expect with FUNCTIONAL FITNESS

    deep breaths standing with postural awareness. (5 min) Understand how to ‘stack our bodies” to find optimal alignment and connect to the relationship between our lungs/diaphragm and our pelvic floor.

    -warm up (15/20 min)

    -3 FUNctional exercises executed in sets of 10 done 3 times

    these exercises will include movement that highlight 

    -hip hinge

    -squats

    -lunges

    -twists

    -move through sun salutations to integrate (you will learn surya A & surya B)(10/15 min)

    -core/mobility work (10/15 min)

    -3/4 various core exercises done in sets intermixed with 3/4 mobility exercises done in sets to to release after we strengthen.

    example – 

    Core – forearm planks

    mobility -cat/cows

    or

    Core – side planks

    mobility – mermaid or gate(side body stretch)

    or

    Supine abdominal bracing with legs at table top

    mobility – supple flowing bridges

    -closing (5-10 min)

    3/4 deep stretches to release hips/shoulders/neck

    Please do not hesitate to reach out if you have questions.

    Please email me back to sign up.

    Happy September

    Rate Increase for Pilates private and Duet sessions

    Dear friends,

    I am writing to inform you that I will be increasing my Pilates private and duet rates, effective October 2025.

    My new rates are still better than all the Pilates studios I know on the West Coast.  Besides I hope you are learning from the best.  I truly believe that.

    If you are just getting to know me – I have been teaching Pilates for over 20 years and have learned from the best of the best including Jay Grimes, a Pilates elder who learned from Joe Pilates himself.  I am also unique as I have an extensive background in Yoga, both SmartFLOW and Anusara and I am also a certified personal trainer.  And most important, I do practice what I preach:) and continue to also be the student which I feel is very important if you want to continue to teach.

    I honor my teaching responsibility which is to honor the students’ body in front of me!  I hope you feel  cared for, and that you are getting the results that you desire. 

    Of course I do not want this to ‘stretch your wallet’ so much that you can no longer practice with me so please reach out to me personally to discuss if needed. 

    The biggest increase in my fees will be the duet rates.  Right now I am charging $45/55min and I am increasing this to $60/55min.  My private rate will be increasing to $90/55minute.  Zoom classes will be the same $80/55min.

    I will not be increasing my group Pilates mat class nor my group Yoga class rate at this time.  I also would like you to consider these classes if you have not already.  They are a wonderful way to practice what we do in the private classes and also encourage more body awareness to enhance your optimal body alignment.

    Here are some other things I  considered when making my decision:

    1 – I have recently invested in new equipment including a new reformer, new contrology/gratz foldable mats as well as flooring.

    2 – i have and continue to invest in my continued education.  Right now I currently studying with Annie carpenter with SmartFLOW yoga and I also continue bi-weekly lessons with a collegue of mine, Nicole Martin who is in San Diego at Ritual Pilates.

    3 – Seattle is an expensive place to live. I have a daughter in college and 2 more still  at home.

    optimal physical alignment inspires inner body health, function, & flow

    Dear friends,

    I have recently attended a weekend Yoga workshop with Annie Carpenter in Seattle at Mother Yoga in the international district.  The workshop attracted many local teachers and I am always so inspired when teachers continue to show up and keep learning. I am grateful that Annie Carpenter continues to do the work herself and shares the knowledge she’s attained over her many years of teaching.  She is constantly learning and growing in her own practice.  She has had to overcome her unique challenges in her own body and generously shares her experience which encourages her students to grow in themselves and give that back to their students.

    Annie teaches her students how to find neutral pelvis, using the 3 planes of movement (Sagittal, coronal, transverse).  It is a simple and effective  way to learn and establish neutral pelvis, which is, in my opinion, so important to practice for whole body health and function.  Of course once you establish this awareness of neutral pelvis and what it is and is not – it takes attention and practice to sustain it as one unravels possibly unconscious poor habits and holding patterns.  

    This is the practice!  Paying attention to our posture to enhance our inner connections, circulation, and function in our day-to-day activities.  Our bones and structures directly affect our muscles, fascia and inner organs inside to function and work properly! 

    I believe pelvic placement and awareness is everything as it is the center of our body and affects our whole system. Our pelvis not only connects to our upper body through our spine, but it also connects to our lower body through our femur bones.  The pelvis also has 2 sides – a right pelvic half and a left pelvic half and that is significant!!   

    I made a short video/practice on my YouTube channel if you are interested understanding neutral pelvis where I use the 3 planes of movement.  I have also started incorporating this in my Thursday mat classes:)

    If you are reading this, you may already know that it is Annie’s focus on the pelvis that drew me to her and her teachings.  Annie emphasizes how our femur bones drive pelvic placement, so when we work through the 3 planes of movement to balance and neutralize our pelvis, it is essential that our feet and our legs are integrating into our hip sockets though out our movements too .

    As you can imagine, if we are not paying attention, the pelvis, could take many shapes and forms! It could be a combination of either tucked, arched, hiked up on one side and/or rotated too much in one direction. If you are suffering pain or discomfort in your lower back and/or hips, a misaligned, unbalanced pelvis could be to blame.

    To clarify, the pelvis is going to move when we move as it is part of the spine and the legs, so its normal for the pelvis to move in and out of a neutral posture. For example, every time we walk we move in and out of tuck/tilt, hike up and down, and we rotate side to side. However, problems arise when the pelvis gets stuck in an unbalanced position and cannot unstick.

    When the pelvis is imbalanced, it can directly affect the health and well-being of our pelvic floor. The following are some interesting facts on our pelvic floor to better understand why our physical alignment is so crucial.

    1 – the pelvic floor is the base and the foundation of our core.

    Its a group of muscles that sit at the very bottom of our pelvis, like a sling or hammock.  It supports everything above it – bladder, bowel, hips and spine.

    2 – the pelvic floor has openings.

    For example – Women – 3 

    • urethra
    • Vagina
    • Rectum

    These muscles need to open and close at the right times to keep everything moving and working smoothly.

    3 – the pelvic floor muscles should lift and lower with our breathing which is why taking deep breaths is soooo very important.

    It’s a dynamic!  Think of an elevator.  When you breath in the elevator goes down and when you breath out the elevator goes up!  A healthy pelvic floor should be able to move easility depending what your body is doing!  BREATHE

    4 – your pelvic floor is 70% fascia and 30% muscle. 

    Fascia is a stretchy connective tissue that connects our whole body like a web.  It relies on the muscles to give it support, as it cannot contact on its own!  When the muscles are not doing its job and the pelvis is out of alignment for whatever reason, the fascia can over stretch and as consequence can be weakened.  When the fascia is overstretched it can make matters worse as the pelvic floor muscles try to work harder..it can be a vicious cycle. When this cycle continues, the pelvic floor becomes hypertonic and unable to relax as it is working overtime to compensate for the stretched out fascia. This tightness overtime leads to weakness as our pelvic floor never gets a chance to relax! This can lead to damage and several pelvic floor issues – muscle spasms, leaking, straining, inability to empty, prolapse.  

    I first hand understand this dynamic as I have experienced many of these consequences. Although I did not welcome any of them, they have made me a better teacher and someone that understands the importance of body alignment, especially the value in neutral pelvis!

    I love you

    Dear friends,

    As we welcome November, I would like to offer my thanks to all of you who continue to support and practice with me at Le Bureau.  I count my blessings often that I am able to do what I do and also have the opportunity to teach from my home.  

    It was not always this way.  I started teaching Pilates in 2006 after completing a 600 hour +comprehensive classical Pilates training through Power Pilates, New York.  Before this I taught school for 2 years after attaining my masters in teaching, at Seattle University..  I thought I was going to be a Kindergarten teacher as I chose to do my student teaching in a Kindergarten classroom at Our Lady of Lake catholic school, in Seattle, Washington.  Well, that did not last long.  

    I married my husband, Pontus in 2003 and we moved to Iowa to begin his/our journey as he started Medical school.  Although I started teaching as a substitute teacher in Iowa, I was drawn to movement and longed to teach exercise classes.  On the side of teaching school,  I become certified in personal training and acquired several other certifications to teach –  about any class you can think of! 

    The practices of Yoga was my first fitness crush I discovered.  There was a vibrant Yoga community in Des moines, Iowa and it became my ‘family’ away from home.  I left Yoga classes feeling both energized but also calm.  That said, the first 2 years in Iowa, I immersed myself in all things Anusara Yoga, a Hatha based practice that blends ‘heart’ themes.

    In 2005, we moved to Ohio for a year for Pontus’s first year of medical rotations and I made the decision there not to renew my teaching license but instead to solely devote my time to learning about the body through many various fitness modalities.  I worked as a personal trainer, taught fitness classes, including yoga, and also worked as a french tutor, and at a restaurant in the evenings.  It’s amazing what you can do without Kids!  It was here in Ohio, where I began my journey in Pilates.  Out of curiosity to learn more and understand what Pilates was all about I enrolled myself in a weekend mat training through a Power Pilates studio in Sylvania, Ohio.  After that weekend, I was hooked.  Pilates made sense to me right away as I could grasp how it would benefit my body.   I signed up for the comprehensive training not long after that.   I had to let go of some of my classes I was teaching as well as the restaurant job to commit myself to the long training hours, but I enjoyed every second and I am so happy I chose this path.

    After we left Ohio in 2006, we moved back to Iowa for a year, then moved to Redondo beach, CA for a year, and then to Salt lake city, Utah for 3 years before moving back to Seattle in 2012. I taught Pilates at ALL of these stops along the way.  I also started the Pilates program at an Equinox in Manhattan Beach, CA in 2008 and also the Pilates program at Seattle Athletic Club(Northgate) in 2013.    I have had made some amazing friends doing what I love to do over the years…

    Fast forward to March 2016, I opened Le bureau Pilates in my home living room and I have been teaching from ‘home’ ever since.  In October 2023, I started teaching group Pilates mat and Yoga classes and this has been a wonderful addition.  The classes are a way  to connect socially, physically and I love  how it is becoming a small community.   Thank you for trusting in me and being part of the Le Bureau community.  

    Please check out and enjoy my most resent Youtube tutorials and classes!