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Pilates Booty: The ultimate summer workout

Urban Sports Club is the largest, most flexible and diverse sports offer in your city with over 50 types of sports and over 300 partner venues in Paris as well as over 2000 partner venues in 20+ cities across Germany.

Pilates Booty: The ultimate summer workout
Photo: luminastock/Depositphotos

*This content is an advertisement. It was not produced by The Local's journalists.

Visit your local yoga studio, go swimming, bouldering, have a gym session, take a dance class or make new friends in Urban Sports Club's team sport communities. All of this in one membership at a fixed cost that you can cancel at just one month's notice.

In the Urban Sport of the Week series, a member of the USC team tries a different sport to encourage members to do the same – because new sports lead to new hobbies and new friends.

This week, the intrepid sports explorers tried out Pilates Booty, the workout with the perfect balance between fitness and relaxation.

I was intrigued as soon as I saw the Pilates Booty class on the Bromance Paname schedule. The studio is conveniently located in the heart of Paris’ 11th area and was founded by two friends Audrey and Elise who make you feel instantly welcome. It is their mission to find the perfect balance between fitness and relaxation.  

Bromance Paname offers a flexible mix of barre, yoga and pilates classes. The space lends itself to relaxation, surrounding you with warm, relaxing colours and natural light streaming in from the glass roof. Adding to the cosy feeling is a coffee bar and seating area to chat and chill with other members, before or after your class.  

Sign up to Urban Sports Club today – get fit, discover new hobbies and make new friends.

Photo: Bromance Paname 

What is Pilates Booty?

We were welcomed in the ground floor room by Julie, who teaches this class several times a week. The space is comfortable because there’s no mirror, which is great because you can concentrate on how you feel, rather than how you look.

Our teacher asked us to face the front so she could correct our posture if necessary and said she would be acting as our mirror.

We each grabbed a 1kg dumbbell, an elastic band and a pilates ring to intensify the core workout and add resistance when exercising your arms and legs. Julie explained that the session would be divided into two parts. The first was designed to strengthen the muscles around our legs and the second was to work our abs.

Pilates Booty – Part One: Muscle building

We began by using the pilates band to add resistance in a mixture of hip opening and squat exercises.

The thighs began take the strain when the glutes had no more strength. As the session progressed, I began to feel the difference and knew that I’d worked my glutes to capacity.

We continued to add resistance to our legs, working on our glutes. Julie wasn’t letting us off the hook too easily though and told us to grab some weights to make the exercise more challenging.

Some of the exercises were unpleasant, to say the least, but the instructor was so positive and encouraging throughout the class that I stayed motivated even when I thought I couldn’t go on any longer. Her energizing playlist of Estelle, Kanye and Daft Punk definitely helped keep a smile on my face and stay in rhythm with the exercises.

Sign up to Urban Sports Club today – get fit, discover new hobbies and make new friends.

Pilates Booty – Part Two: Abs

It was now time for the second half of the class, focussing on our abs. We quickly discovered that coordinating our breath with our movements was vital.

Even as a pilates enthusiast, I found the core exercises extremely challenging. We finished the class with breathing and stretching exercises.

How did I feel after?

The centre of my body was on fire but I told myself it would be worth it. I felt like I’d had an excellent workout. My muscles were aching the next day. I’m confident that with a few more of these classes I’ll have a booty like Beyoncé.

The class is so popular that Bromance Paname have added classes on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, so there’s no excuse to slack off!

Sign up to Urban Sports Club today – get fit, discover new hobbies and make new friends.

Photo: Bromance Paname 

Don’t forget to bring…

Water and two towels, a small one for use during the class and a larger one for the shower. The studio provides yoga mats and other equipment you need for the class.

I encourage everyone to come by, try it out and see your hard work pay off once you hit the beach with your hard-earned beach body.

Urban Sports Club has many pilates partners in Paris and across Germany. Take a look at the site to see what’s on offer in your area.

Check out Bromance Paname’s website. For the latest news, classes and updates.

*This content is an advertisement. It was not produced by The Local's journalists.

For members

HEALTH

When can doctors in Denmark refuse to continue treating patients?

General Practitioners in Denmark have the right to break off a patient-doctor relationship in specific circumstances.

When can doctors in Denmark refuse to continue treating patients?

Although doctors in Denmark have the right to decide not to continue treating a patient – requiring them to find a new GP – the circumstances in which this can happen are limited, and must be approved by health authorities.

The frequency in which the circumstances arise is also low. A doctor decided to no longer receive a patient on 375 occasions in 2016, according to the medical professionals’ journal Ugeskrift for Læger. The following year, newspaper Jyllands-Posten reported the figure at 458.

There are two main categories of circumstances in which a doctor can choose to take this step. The first is in instances of violent or threatening behaviour from the patient towards the doctor. 

The second (and most common) is when the doctor considers the relationship to have deteriorated to the extent that confidence has broken down, according to Ugeskrift for Læger.

It should be noted that patients are not bound by any restrictions in this regard, and can decide to change their GP without having to give any justification.

A patient also has the right to appeal against a doctor’s decision to ask them to find a new GP. This is done by appealing to the local health authority, called a Region in the Danish health system.

In such cases, a board at the regional health authority will assess the claim and if it finds in favour of the patient may order the doctor to attempt to repair the relationship.

Doctors cannot end a relationship with a patient purely because a patient has made a complaint about them to health authorities. This is because patients should have the option of making complaints without fear of consequences for their future treatment. 

However, if this is accompanied by the conclusion on the doctor’s part that there is no longer confidence in them on the part of the patient, they can remove the patient from their list.

The right to no longer see patients in the circumstances detailed above is provided by doctors’ collective bargaining agreements, the working conditions agreed on between trade unions and employer confederations under the Danish labour market system.

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