The Cueing Cheat Sheet · Free

You know the repertoire.
You just don’t have the words.

Stop freezing mid-class. Get the 10 most commonly butchered cues in Pilates, translated into precise, imagery-driven alternatives you can use tomorrow morning.

Free PDF · Instant download

Detail of a hand guiding movement on the reformer
The cue, made visible
The Gap

The industry taught you movement. It never taught you the language that commands it.

You are standing at the front of the room. The client’s shoulders are hiked all the way up. You know exactly what is wrong mechanically.

But when you open your mouth, your mind goes blank. You hear yourself say “pull your shoulders down” for the fourth time today. The client tries to comply. The movement does not change. The tension just shifts somewhere else.

When cues become too long, too technical, or too vague, clients get overwhelmed. You start narrating the exercise instead of teaching it. You fall back on the same favorite ten exercises you know by heart, because you are terrified of cueing something new.

This is the gap. You love Pilates. The problem is not your anatomy knowledge. The problem is how you translate movement into words.

What You Get

The Translation Engine

Not a list of random exercises. A diagnostic tool. We took 10 of the most ineffective cues in the industry and rebuilt each one through a strict, repeatable formula.

01

What You See

The fault as it shows up in the client’s body, named precisely.

02

The Common Cue

The phrase you are reaching for now — and why it keeps failing.

03

The Translation

The precise, imagery-driven replacement that actually changes the movement.

04

Why It Works

The biomechanical logic underneath the new language, so it is yours to keep.

Jamming their chins into their chests? You’re forgetting the gaze. We fix that.

Flailing in the straps? You’re cueing control instead of resistance. We fix that too.

You will walk away with ten immediate replacements for the cues you are saying right now. No memorization required. And then there is Cue #10 — not a phrase, but a complete reversal of how you think about commanding a room. Once you see it, you cannot unsee it.

The Standard

94%
Practical Exam
90%
Written Exam

Sana scored 94% on the STOTT PILATES practical exam and 90% on the written. She interviewed just before the exam and was hired at Toronto’s newest premium studio the moment she finished it. When she teaches, the room moves as one organism — new bodies, mixed levels, first encounters. The unison is not familiarity. It is the cues landing.

Your next class does not have to sound like your last one.

Download the free Cueing Cheat Sheet and take ten new translations into your very next session.

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