I danced from the age of six until I was twenty-two. Contemporary, some ballet, a lot of things that probably looked better in my head than they did in reality. Then life happened — a job, a move, another move, a relationship, a mortgage — and I stopped. Not dramatically. Just gradually, the way you stop doing most things you love when you're busy becoming an adult.
I'm thirty-eight now. And six months ago, I screwed a ballet barre to my bedroom wall. It is, without question, one of the best decisions I've made in years.
Why I Decided I Needed One
It started with a physio appointment. I'd been having lower back pain for about a year — the kind that's not dramatic enough to stop you doing things but persistent enough to make everything slightly worse. My physio asked about my exercise habits. I listed them. She was politely unimpressed. She suggested I look into barre-based exercises: low impact, good for core stability, excellent for the kind of postural issues that come from sitting at a desk for eight hours a day.
I looked into barre classes. The nearest studio was forty minutes away and the classes were at times that didn't work with my schedule. I looked into online classes. They were fine, but doing barre exercises while holding onto the back of a dining chair felt undignified in a way I couldn't get past.
So I started looking at home barres. And once I started, I couldn't stop.
Why the BeneLabel Specifically
I looked at freestanding barres first. They're cheaper and don't require drilling into walls, which felt appealing. But every review I read said the same thing: they wobble. When you're doing anything with real weight or momentum behind it, a freestanding barre that shifts underfoot is worse than useless — it's a liability. I wanted something solid.
The BeneLabel 170cm Wall Mounted Ballet Barre kept coming up in the searches I was doing. Adjustable height, beech wood rail, proper metal bracket system, 170cm of usable length. At £123.84 it wasn't an impulse buy, but it wasn't unreasonable either for something that was going to be a permanent fixture. I ordered it from ALTOE and it arrived within the week.
The Installation
I'll be honest: I am not a natural DIYer. I own a drill but I approach it with the wariness of someone who has made expensive mistakes before. The installation instructions for the BeneLabel barre are clear and well-illustrated, and the fixings are solid. I found the studs in my wall, marked the positions, drilled the holes, and had the whole thing up in about an hour and a half. That includes the twenty minutes I spent second-guessing myself before I committed to the first hole.
Once it was up, I grabbed it and pulled. It didn't move. I pulled harder. Still nothing. That's exactly what you want from something you're going to be leaning your full bodyweight against.
What Using It Has Been Like
The first time I stood at the barre and did a plié, I felt something I hadn't felt in sixteen years. Not nostalgia exactly — something more physical than that. A kind of muscle memory that I'd assumed was gone. My body remembered things my brain had forgotten.
I started with twenty minutes a day, three times a week, following along with online classes. Within a month, my lower back pain had reduced significantly. Within two months, it was essentially gone. My physio, at my next appointment, asked what I'd changed. When I told her, she looked genuinely pleased rather than surprised, which I found both validating and slightly annoying.
I now do forty-five minutes most mornings before work. I've started incorporating some of the contemporary movement I used to do. I'm not the dancer I was at twenty-two — I'm slower, less flexible, more aware of my knees — but I'm moving again, properly, in a way that feels like mine. That matters more than I expected it to.
How It Changed Things
The back pain is the obvious answer. But the less obvious answer is that having the barre there — fixed to the wall, permanent, impossible to ignore — changed my relationship with exercise entirely. There's no friction. I don't have to get in a car, find parking, change in a studio, make small talk. I wake up, I walk to the barre, I move. That's it.
I've also started sleeping better, which I didn't expect. And I'm less irritable, which my partner noticed before I did and mentioned with a diplomacy I appreciated.
For £123.84, the BeneLabel barre gave me back something I'd written off as belonging to a younger version of myself. It turns out it was just waiting for the right infrastructure.
Get the BeneLabel 170cm Wall Mounted Ballet Barre here: BeneLabel 170cm Wall Mounted Ballet Barre – Adjustable Wooden Dance Bar
Browse more from our collections:
→ Latest Products
→ Sporting Goods
→ Athletics
→ Dancing
→ Ballet Barres
0 commenti