Art In Motion’s Flash Dance for City of San Ramon

Sept News FlashPublic Flash Dance Performance at Athan’s Down Park on Wed Oct 12th 5:30P

AIM will perform a Public Flash Dance Performance at City of San Ramon’s Public Art Dedicaton at Athan’s Down Park in San Ramon on Oct 12th 5:30P

 

All Art In Motion (AIM) students, family and friends are invited to participate or support dancers in a flash dance performance as part of a Public Art Dedication ceremony in San Ramon on Oct 12th. 

Find the assemble choreography with this link /or copy and paste to your browser  http://artinmotionryan.shutterfly.com/845 under videos “Flash Dance Choreography” for your veiwing to learn if you wish to participate.  Please come and support our dancers, public art and our community.

Engaging and Activating the Core Muscles

Engaging and Activating the Core Muscles

Engage your deeper abdominal muscles as you perform a “crunch,” or abdominal curl. The deeper muscles that stabilize the spine and, when activated, also support proper alignment.

Your abdominal muscles include several layers. Most  of these actually wrap around your sides to the back of your body, though often we think of our abdominals only as that “six-pack” area at the front of the body. Those washboard-looking muscles are the rectus abdominus and are only one of four very important muscle layers of the torso/abdomen 

Bunching

When you perform a crunch and see that upper layer (the rectus abdominis) bunching up or pushing out, it means that the inner most layers, particularly the transverse abdominis, are not being activated. You are working/strengthening muscles, however, you are not working/strengthening the ones that will help you most in your dancing. The inner abdominal, and other core muscles are most important for executing movement (any kind of movement) with ease.

Try thinking of your ‘core’ being like the hub of a bicycle wheel. It is in the center of the body with your arms and legs being like the spokes of the wheel. When the hub of the wheel strong, then the spokes that radiate from it will be strong and straight and the wheel will roll (move) well. If the hub of the wheel was weak or wiggly and kept moving – it would create wobbly and uncertain movement. Can you imagine how hard it would be to ride a bike if the wheels shifted and wiggled? Core strength gives support to your arms and legs (the spokes) so your movement is clean, efficient, and as effortless as possible..

  Strengthening

Increasing your core strength requires engaging the appropriate muscle groups in a regular (or habitual) way. You want to engage the core during all movement (not just during abdominal exercises). The action your teacher is really asking you to do when she says “flatten your stomach” in a crunch, is actually the same action she wants you to perform when she tells you to “lift up.”

Now, let’s talk about how to engage your core in a crunch and otherwise…

There are two important lengthening actions that engage the core support system. Often one or the other is overlooked, but both are necessary to create efficiency in movement. The first involves those inner layers of abdominal muscles, the other involves the muscles of the pelvic floor. Here are several methods of “finding it” for yourself — different ideas or thoughts work for different people.

Engaging the Pelvic Floor

Teachers sometimes find this an embarrassing topic but the muscles of the pelvic floor are extremely important in dance. Without going into much detail, let’s just try a few methods and images to help you discover how to engage them.

  • Imagine and try to activate the same muscles you would use to stop urination (yes, as in “peeing”) mid-flow. Say hello to your pelvic floor muscles!

The sits bones (or ischial tuberosities) point downward. To narrow the pelvis think of bringing those two “loops” at the bottom of the pelvis together.

If that’s too icky, try this: While standing with feet slightly apart, imagine and try to “narrow” the pelvis by bringing your sits bones (those two bones you feel against the floor when you sit up tall) closer together. You are not trying to squeeze your gluts (your “cheeks”) together. The sits bones hang down toward the floor.

  • Another way to find this action is to sit up, tall in a chair. Don’t arch your back. Again, narrow the area between your sits bones that is in contact with the chair. It may help to also place the palms of the hands together and press as you draw inward and upward through the base of the body. You will physically grow taller when you do this.

Activating Your Inner Abdominals

To activate your inner abdominal muscles, start just above the pubic bone and moving toward the sternum, pull the abdominal wall inward and upward toward the center column of the body (the spine). You can try this lying down with knees up (as in your crunch position) or from standing. You might even try it lying on your stomach just to feel the abdominals lift away from the floor. Do this without changing the position of the back or pelvis, however.

Some like to think of this as bringing the belly button toward the spine. Others prefer to imagine that you are scooping out the abdominals like ice cream. Others like the image of lacing up the abdominals (my personal favorite because it reminds me that internal obliques (sides of the body) are being activated inward and upward as well).

 

The Crunch Engaging The Core Muscles

  1. While lying on your back with your knees up, try to keep your spine neutral, meaning that it is neither pressed into the floor or arched in a swayed back. There will likely be a small space between the small of your back and the floor.
  2. Keep this alignment as you engage the pelvic floor and activate the inner abdominals. This may feel like work all on its own until these deeper core muscles strengthen and you get used to using them.
  3. From here, curl the upper body away from the floor. The idea behind a crunch is that you are adding resistance to an already activated core by lifting your shoulders. So, only lift the shoulders as much as you can without loosing everything else.
  4. If you are keeping your core activated during the crunch, you will no longer see the “bunch!”

 By MRyan 2011

Art In Motion Students Now Merging into the NYC and LA Performing Arts Scenes

More news to report regarding past students of Miss Margie merging into the professional performing arts community in NYC and LA. 

Brianna Stankus has now been accepted to the LaGuardia high school of music and performing arts at Lincoln Center in NYC.  Brianna studied with Miss Margie exclusively from the age of 6-11 y.o in Ballet, Jazz, and Tap via group and private lessons at age 12 she was accepted into ABT and now LaGuardia HS, Alvin Ailey and Gelsey Kirkland Academy! Her parents always supported her passion and we all are so very proud of her! Way to Go Brianna and family!!

 

 

 

Graham Harper who studied with Art In Motion last year and was directed under Miss Margie, Keith Cosby and Craig Heiting in Aida, a St Joan of Arc’s musical theater production was seen by a director during the performances and given an opportunity to explore work in San Francisco and Hollywood.  Graham recently was accepted into the High School of performing arts in LA this year and relocated to study and work in LA. 

It is always a pleasure to teach and work with these very talented young people.   If you believe, work hard, never give up, you will surely succeed!!!!!

Art In Motion Provides Pilates in Dublin, Ca: How It Effects Dance/Sports Performance

pilates

Pilates matwork

Art In Motion provides lessons in Pilates Matwork with certified experienced instructor.

  Pilates exercises have been proven effective to enhance dance and sports performance. Specifically, Pilates is known to be beneficial for dancers, golfers, cyclists, equestrians, long and short-distance runners, competitive swimmers as well as competitive divers, baseball, football and basketball players.

Benefits of Pilates include muscle balance, core strengthening and stability, improved focus and concentration, injury prevention, reduced stress and improved stamina (breathing) and relief from back pain. 

Pilates sessions are best with a lower student to teacher ratio.  It allows exchanges between the student and instructor which can be more efficient in targeting areas of imbalance hence quickening the improvement and dance/sport performance by restoring balance to the body from repetitive movement.  Art In Motion provides small group and private or semi private lessons in Pilates.

Past Student News: Cara McKeown- Intern at Tom Hanks new Movie Company – past dance student

Cara was an excellent student with alot of talent and unfortunately great loss and misfortune in her life early on but she held on to dance to help her gain her sense of well being – she recently contacted me via facebook and left the best message a coach/teacher could ever get.  She is an intern at Tom Hanks movie company in Santa Monica after graduating from Emerson College with a major in film.   She wrote “I really want to thank you for being one of the greatest, most inspiring teachers I ever had. Now that I am older, I can truly appreciate everything you taught me, some of which I didn’t understand back when I was seventeen… Often times when I’m faced with a problem or challenging situation, I’ll use what you taught me to get through it. Because you taught us so much more than just dance techniques, and that’s what makes you stand out above all of my other teachers. You taught us perseverance, how to work hard, and the importance of believing you can truly achieve something if you set your mind to it. Seriously, you are an amazing teacher.
I’d LOVE to hear about all you are doing! Let’s do some catch-up e-mails!
Sure do miss you!”

- Cara

What she didn’t mention was that it was she who was so extraordinary  -  that it was in her all the time!!!!!