
No 1 The Hundred
- Julie Smith
- Aug 13
- 2 min read
The Pilates Hundred: A Subtle Torture Disguised as Fitness
The Pilates Hundred is an exercise that asks one simple question: how much suffering can your core endure before your dignity quits?
Step 1: Lie Down and Pretend You’re Relaxing
You start on your back, legs lifted in a way that seems anatomically improbable. Arms hover off the floor as though gravity is optional. You might feel poised, elegant even, if elegance were measured in discomfort.
Step 2: Pump Your Arms Like a Mad Scientist
“Pump your arms!” says the instructor, cheerfully. You comply, because you signed up for Pilates, not a fight with physics. Halfway through, you realize your arms are now formally employees of the pain department.
Step 3: Breathe Strategically
Inhale for five counts. Exhale for five counts. Repeat. Simple instructions. Terrible implementation. Your lungs have apparently never met “core engagement” and are filing a formal complaint.
Step 4: Count to One Hundred (Or Cry Trying)
The number “one hundred” sounds innocuous until you attempt it while simultaneously maintaining leg elevation, arm pumps, and a shred of composure. Counting becomes a philosophical exercise: why are numbers cruel? Is 37 the new 100?
Step 5: Collapse and Pretend Victory
After 100 pumps, you lie on the mat, gasping like a fish removed from water, secretly plotting revenge against anyone who calls this a “gentle workout.” And yet, you know you’ll return, because humans are inexplicably drawn to things that make them miserable in precisely the right way.
Conclusion: The Subtle Sadism of Pilates
The Pilates Hundred is not merely an exercise. It is a quiet reminder that your body has limits, your instructor has a sense of humor, and your self-respect is negotiable. Surviving it is less about fitness and more about stoicism, endurance, and the ability to lie convincingly on a mat while imagining your life elsewhere.

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