Exercise Breakdown
16 exercises in Workout 6
Warm-up2 exercises1m 14s
“Shifting your weight from right to left, pushing the hips as far as you can manage without dropping the hips too low.”
Strength5 exercises4m 29s
“Never dropping all the way down, just coming halfway with the hips until they hover.”
“Squeezing the shoulder blades together with each exhale.”
“Really pushing through that right heel, squeezing through your right hamstring.”
“Spine super still.”
Flexibility2 exercises1m 38s
“Squeeze your glute muscles, open up the chest, stick the belly out as you press your pelvis forward.”
“Hugging belly up into spine to cat.”
Balance1 exercise1m 20s
“Small pulse, ten, nine, eight...”
Cool-down1 exercise1m
“Sink the hips all the way down... keeping room for your belly.”
pilates4 exercises3m 12s
“Long reaches, just shifting that weight all the way forward, starting to feel your core move.”
“Ideally, we want long diagonal lines.”
“Toe pointed, keeping shoulders stacked.”
“Exhale, pull that left toe forward. As you inhale, flex the foot, pull it back.”
breathing1 exercise30s
“Inhale, fill belly, ribs, lungs, diaphragm. Exhale, pull belly back in.”
Muscles Targeted
Primary
Secondary
Equipment & Modifications
Equipment Needed
- mat
Don't Have Equipment?
You can substitute with:
Available Modifications
- The more you lift your chest up, the less intense.
- Tuck your back toe under on the mat if losing balance.
- Keep hips up high to protect the waist/belly
- Regular knee push-up for more intensity
- Make your way down to the forearms if flexing the back too much
- Keep thighs on either side of torso to support the belly
Coaching Highlights from Jessica Casalegno
“Shifting your weight from right to left, pushing the hips as far as you can manage without dropping the hips too low — I tell every new client the same thing: if you can't feel the muscle working, slow down until you can. Speed is not the goal.”
Form
“If you find that you are flexing your back as you kick, you can also make your way all the way down to the forearms. This is non-negotiable — I've seen the injury that happens when you skip this step, and it's not worth the two extra reps.”
Safety
“The bigger your belly is, the less you'll be able to drop your chest down. Nobody gets a medal for collapsing halfway through. Pick the version where your form stays clean for the full set.”
Modification
“A focused, experienced coach who balances challenge with accessibility, always offering modifications and form cues.”
Form
Health Benefits
Pregnant women in any trimester and new moms rebuilding from the inside out. Jessica Casalegno designed this 20-minute prenatal Pilates session for the specific demands of pregnancy and postpartum recovery: pelvic floor strength, deep core connection, hip mobility, and breath control. If you're dealing with diastasis recti, urinary leaking, or that disconnected feeling between your brain and your abs — this is where the rebuild starts. Safe, progressive, and evidence-based. Your body is doing extraordinary things. This workout supports that work.
pelvic floor weakness
90% relevantNeuromuscular re-education of pelvic floor muscles; Improved intra-abdominal pressure management; Enhanced body awareness and proprioception; Strengthening of synergistic core and hip muscles; Stress reduction to support pelvic floor function
maternal mortality risk
90% relevantpelvic floor integrity and function; cardiovascular health and endurance (low impact); stress reduction and parasympathetic activation; improved circulation and reduced edema; muscle strength and endurance for labor and postpartum recovery; body awareness and proprioception; postural support for pregnancy and childcare demands
urinary incontinence
90% relevantStrengthening pelvic floor muscles (Kegels, reverse Kegels); Improving core stability and intra-abdominal pressure management; Enhancing body awareness and neuromuscular control; Increasing muscle tone in supporting structures (glutes, adductors); Reducing impact on the pelvic floor
pregnancy trauma
90% relevantparasympathetic activation; pelvic floor rehabilitation; core stability; stress reduction; body awareness; trauma-informed movement; gentle strength building
postpartum rage
90% relevantparasympathetic nervous system activation; stress reduction; mind-body connection; pelvic floor rehabilitation; cortisol regulation; emotional regulation
Relevant For
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Workouts & Topics
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Helpful For These Concerns
About the Trainer
Jessica Casalegno
For Moms Trainer
From: Mama Moves: Prenatal Pilates










