Holding Advanced Classes.

Leslie Guerin • January 28, 2026

A Thoughtful Approach to Barre, Mat Pilates, and Reformer Progression in the Modern Studio

When I started teaching barre in 1999 in New York City, the rules were clear—and they were strict.

You didn’t decide what level you belonged in.
You didn’t “try” an advanced class just to see how it felt.
Everyone started in beginner. No exceptions.

Progression happened through observation and permission. A teacher had to know your body, your movement patterns, your consistency, and your understanding of the work before you were invited forward.

That structure wasn’t about hierarchy or exclusivity. It was about responsibility—to the client, to the teacher, and to the integrity of the method.

Today, studios look very different. Technology has changed everything about how we schedule, market, and consume classes. But the underlying question remains the same:

How do we responsibly hold advanced classes—especially in barre, mat Pilates, and reformer Pilates—without losing safety, clarity, or long-term growth?

A Studio World That No Longer Exists—and What It Taught Us

Back then, there were no internet sign-ups.
If you wanted to take class, you called the studio—or you booked your next class before leaving the one you were in.

Two of the rooms allowed 16 people.
The advanced classes were always held in the smallest room—12 spots only.

Classes were commonly sold out at $30 per class. Cash or check only. No credit cards.

And if you came to class for the first time and mentioned you were pregnant—no matter how early—you were told no. You could only take class pregnant if you had already been training there long before your pregnancy began.

That wasn’t about fear or control. It was about clarity and consistency.

The levels were simple:

  • Beginner
  • Mixed
  • Advanced

There were very few advanced classes on the schedule. That wasn’t an oversight—it was intentional.

What “Advanced” Actually Meant

Advanced classes were not simply harder versions of beginner work.

They moved faster, yes—but more importantly, they required independence.

You were expected to:

  • know the setup without explanation
  • recognize cues quickly
  • transition efficiently
  • self-correct without constant feedback

Advanced classes assumed a shared language. The teacher didn’t slow down to explain fundamentals—not because they didn’t care, but because those fundamentals were a prerequisite.

This philosophy applies just as strongly today to:

  • advanced barre
  • advanced mat Pilates
  • advanced reformer Pilates

Advanced doesn’t mean more choreography.
It means more responsibility.

What Changed—and What Was Lost

Modern studios operate in a very different ecosystem.

Online booking, unlimited memberships, drop-ins, and packed schedules have reshaped expectations. Teachers are often encouraged—explicitly or implicitly—to make every class accessible to everyone.

Accessibility matters. But when everything is accessible all the time, something important disappears:

Standards.

Progression becomes self-selected.
Levels blur.
Advanced becomes shorthand for “hard” instead of “skilled.”

And when that happens, advanced classes stop serving their true purpose.

Why Advanced Classes Still Matter

Advanced classes are not a luxury. They are not a reward for loyalty. And they are not an ego boost.

They serve a vital role in a healthy studio ecosystem.

Advanced classes:

  • retain long-term clients
  • challenge experienced movers appropriately
  • give teachers space to teach with depth
  • create a clear pathway for progression
  • protect the integrity of the work

Without them, everything flattens. There’s no ceiling to grow toward—and when there’s no ceiling, motivation and mastery fade.

Starting with Barre: Holding the Line

Barre is often where standards soften first.

Barre feels approachable. It looks accessible. And because it’s widely perceived as “safe,” studios often assume advanced barre just means adding weights, speed, or burn.

But advanced barre is not beginner barre with more intensity.

Advanced barre requires:

  • refined alignment
  • deep muscular endurance
  • efficient transitions
  • fast neuromuscular response
  • the ability to maintain form under fatigue

If a client still relies heavily on watching others, needs constant setup reminders, or loses organization as the class progresses, they are not being challenged—they are being overwhelmed.

Advanced classes are not meant to accommodate confusion. They are meant to build on clarity.

The Same Principles Apply to Pilates—Mat and Reformer

Advanced Mat Pilates

Advanced mat Pilates assumes:

  • spinal articulation without momentum
  • organized breath under load
  • strength through full ranges of motion
  • control in flexion, extension, rotation, and lateral work

Without a strong foundation, advanced mat work becomes compensatory. The body finds ways around the work instead of through it.

Advanced Reformer Pilates

Reformer Pilates adds complexity through:

  • spring tension
  • moving platforms
  • load management
  • quicker transitions

Advanced reformer classes require clients to understand not just what they’re doing, but why. Spring choices, setup precision, and movement efficiency are non-negotiable.

Advanced reformer work is only safe and effective when the client is choosing—not guessing.

How We Advance Classes at BarSculpt

At BarSculpt, progression is not about status. It’s about readiness.

Clients are encouraged to spend real time in beginner and intermediate classes—not as a waiting room for “better,” but as a place to learn, refine, and integrate.

Advancing means a client can:

  • set themselves up accurately with minimal cueing
  • transition smoothly without rushing
  • self-correct when something feels off
  • maintain quality as fatigue increases
  • understand the intention behind the movement

Advanced classes assume independence. They move more quickly, layer complexity earlier, and rely on a shared vocabulary.

That doesn’t make them superior.
It makes them specific.

Why We Keep Advanced Classes Minimal on the Schedule

One of the most intentional choices we make at BarSculpt is keeping advanced classes limited.

This is not about scarcity.
It’s about perspective.

When advanced classes dominate a schedule, they send the message—often unintentionally—that progression is linear and permanent. That once you arrive, you should stay there.

That’s not how bodies work.
And it’s not how learning works.

By keeping advanced classes minimal, we remind even our most experienced clients of something essential:

Advanced does not mean done.

Once Advanced Does Not Mean Always Advanced

This belief applies across barre, mat Pilates, and reformer Pilates.

Just because a client can take an advanced class does not mean they should only take advanced classes.

Bodies change.
Stress changes.
Injuries happen.
Life interferes.

Returning to beginner and intermediate classes allows clients to:

  • revisit fundamentals with more sophistication
  • uncover habits that advanced choreography can hide
  • move without pressure or performance
  • integrate new information more fully

Some of the most skilled movers choose beginner or intermediate classes regularly—not because they need less, but because they understand more.

That is not regression.
That is mastery.

Advanced Classes Are a Tool—Not a Destination

At BarSculpt, advanced classes are one part of a larger ecosystem.

They exist to:

  • challenge coordination and endurance
  • offer complexity and pace
  • give teachers room to teach with depth

But they are balanced by beginner and intermediate classes that support:

  • processing
  • nervous system regulation
  • recalibration
  • longevity

We encourage clients to move between levels—not climb and stay.

Because the strongest practice is not the hardest one.
It’s the most responsive one.

Permission Is Guidance, Not Gatekeeping

Requiring teacher permission or clear prerequisites is not elitist. It’s educational.

Permission:

  • removes guesswork
  • creates clear goals
  • builds trust
  • supports clients emotionally as well as physically

It also protects teachers from having to dilute advanced classes and protects clients from feeling pressured to perform beyond their readiness.

What This Philosophy Protects

This approach protects:

  • client safety and longevity
  • teacher clarity and confidence
  • advanced classes from being watered down
  • beginner classes from being dismissed

It creates a culture where curiosity is valued over performance—and where learning is continuous, not hierarchical.

The True Marker of an Advanced Mover

An advanced mover is not the person who always chooses the hardest option.

It’s the person who understands why they’re choosing what they’re choosing.

They can slow down.
They can modify.
They can return to fundamentals without ego.
They know that quality often improves when difficulty decreases.

That is the mindset we cultivate at BarSculpt.

Because movement is not about arriving somewhere and staying there.

It’s about continuing to learn, refine, and adapt—over and over again.

And that is what makes a practice not just advanced, but intelligent.


By Leslie Guerin February 2, 2026
Stability Is Not Stillness — It’s Organized Effort “Hold still.” If you’ve ever taken one of my classes, you’ve heard me say it. And if you’ve ever felt it, you know it isn’t about freezing. Most of the time when a teacher says “hold still,” it’s because something else is happening. Maybe bouncing, gripping, bracing, or compensating of some kind. Something is moving that shouldn’t be. But “hold still” does not mean “be still.” Those two cues might sound similar, but in Pilates they mean very different things. Be Still vs Hold Still Be still is a pause. It’s a full stop. It’s often used so you can feel one specific thing: “Be still… feel your ribs.” “Be still… notice your pelvis.” “Be still… now breathe.” It’s about attention. Hold still is something else entirely. Hold still means: Stay organized Stay lifted Stay connected Stay breathing You are not passive. You are not collapsed. You are actively maintaining shape while something else moves. It is one of the most advanced skills in Pilates. Why Teachers Say “Hold Still” We say it when we see: The pelvis shifting The ribs popping The shoulders helping Momentum sneaking in The body is trying to get the job done by recruiting the wrong helpers. So “hold still” is really a request for clean movement : Let only the part that is supposed to move… move. Everything else must work just as hard, just not by changing position. Side-Lying Leg Lifts: The Perfect Example Let’s take one of the most deceptively simple exercises in mat Pilates: Side-lying leg lifts. On the surface, it looks like this: You lie on your side You lift the top leg You lower it But what is really happening is far more complex. This exercise is designed to balance one side of the body on the other . The top leg moves. The rest of the body holds still. Not rigid. Not collapsed. Not gripping. Holding. What “Hold Still” Actually Means Here While the top leg lifts and lowers: The bottom side of the body is working. The bottom rib cage is lifted off the mat, creating space The waist is long, not sagging The spine is stacked, not rolled back The top hand in front of the body is not there to lean on, it is there to quiet the rocking forward and backward. The pelvis stays level. No tipping. No hiking. No rolling. Everything that is not the leg is holding still... but nothing is relaxed. This Is Why Breathing Matters If you stop breathing, you are not holding still. You are bracing. Holding still means you can: Maintain the shape Keep the effort And still let the breath move That’s where the deep stabilizers do their job: The abdominals The muscles along the spine The lateral hip The inner thighs The breath becomes the test: Can you stay organized even while something else is moving? That’s real control. Why This Cue Changes Everything “Hold still” teaches the nervous system something incredibly important: You don’t create strength by moving more. You create strength by controlling what doesn’t move . That’s how: Hips become more stable Backs become more supported Movement becomes quieter and more powerful It’s also how injuries are prevented, especially in people who are flexible, mobile, or used to muscling through. So Next Time You Hear It… When I say “hold still,” I’m not asking you to freeze. I’m asking you to: Stay lifted Stay connected Stay breathing Stay honest Let the right thing move. Let everything else do its job. That’s Pilates.
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