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Scoliosis & Movement: Rethinking Alignment, Strength, and Flexibility

Most conversations about scoliosis still revolve around straightening, stabilizing, or “correcting” the spine. But for many people, what’s actually needed is a more spacious way of thinking about alignment and strength—one that honors how the body naturally organizes itself around a curved spine. Movement becomes less about chasing symmetry and more about learning how your spine can feel supported, responsive, and comfortable.

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This is where Scolio-Pilates® comes in. It’s not traditional Pilates with a few tweaks; it’s a scoliosis-specific framework that helps you understand your curve pattern, organize your body with clearer intention, and move in ways that reduce effort instead of increasing it. We use Scolio-Wedges and props, breath, and targeted corrections not to “fix” anything, but to give your body a clearer map—one that makes everyday movement feel more doable.


Current research on scoliosis and movement echoes this shift. Studies consistently show that people with scoliosis do better when they’re encouraged to move—not cautiously, but confidently and regularly. Benefits often show up in decreased pain, improved function, easier breathing, and a stronger sense of body trust. The key isn’t perfection; it’s consistent, individualized practice that builds awareness and adaptability.


In Scolio-Pilates® sessions, we explore what that looks like in real time. Sometimes stability comes from learning how to yield—letting the body find support before it asks for strength. Sometimes flexibility shows up when we stop trying to stretch or force our curves and start respecting them. And sometimes “alignment” is less a position we're trying to attain and more a sensation of ease that lets the whole body participate.


Living well with scoliosis doesn’t require forcing your body into someone else’s idea of straightness. It asks for movement that feels intelligent, curious, and genuinely supportive. When we work thoughtfully with the amazing spine you already have, we can discover options for comfort and confidence that you may not have realized were possible.


And in that process, you start to uncover where movement really lives in your body—not in perfection, but in possibility.

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Hi,
I'm Jeanine

"I'm an educator, a healer, a greyhound-lover, a bit of a wanderer (I did meet my husband in China, after all), and a lifelong student of movement. I also live with chronic illness, which means my relationship with movement isn’t about chasing perfection—it’s about curiosity, adaptation, and finding what actually feels good in my body. Some days, that’s a full Pilates session; other days, it’s just remembering to breathe. Through it all, I’ve learned that movement isn’t about fixing—it’s about listening, exploring, and making space for what’s possible. And that’s exactly what I hope to share with you here."

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