Obese People Are Not Lazy!

stock vector : fat men on couch watching tv with dog

I came across this yesterday and I love her take on things Obese People Are Not Lazy.  In particular, I love this paragraph SOOO much and I agree with the sentiment 100%

“…Trainers, competitors, fitness enthusiasts–YOU have the know-how. Don’t hoard it! Give it away! And it may not be as simple as giving someone a diet to follow. You might have to actually ASK THEM how they feel, what struggles they are having, and take responsibility for their results. My mentor Alwyn Cosgrove talks about this often – he puts it on the backs of the trainers to get their clients results. It’s convenient to simply say that our client is noncompliant and doesn’t want it badly enough – it easily takes the onus off us. But, why do we get to be off the hook? They are paying US to help them be more compliant and learn to want it. So let’s take on the challenge….”stock photo : threat to a dieter who was caught cheating

As trainers, so often the view is that it must be the client’s fault, they must be cheating, they lack commitment or focus, they don’t want it enough and speaking as both a trainer AND a client “…They are paying US to help them be more compliant and learn to want it…” is exactly right. As a PT client, when everything is going well its great but when I am having a bad week and failing at everything I need someone to understand why, to ask me how I really feel, to want to help, to give me a nudge back on track and be there until I am.  Demanding? Absolutely, but I am investing my time, my money and my trust why wouldn’t I expect 100% service?

stock photo : man fitness personal trainer in sport club

In my opinion the best thing a PT can do to help his or her clients is to be a client themselves at some point in their career – there is nothing like being the other side of the fence to make sure you empathise with your clients, you appreciate why they think that some exercises are undignified or that they look silly, you understand why trainers need to get explanations and instructions right and you understand about motivation.  There is something about changing the power dynamics that really changes the way you relate to clients – from my own experience as a client I make sure that when I train other people I always ask them how they are, find out what is going in their lives, understand their stresses and try to offer some advice.

But back to the original concept of this post!  One of the key things we should all do whether we are trainers, clients, gym members, stock photo : road in forestfriends, colleagues, partners, neighbours whatever is to stop passing  judgement on everyone we meet based on how they look, whether they are overweight, fat, thin, old, young, it doesn’t matter.  None of us can know how or what their lives are like until, as the old saying goes, we walk a mile in their shoes so, lets all try and being a little less judgemental and a lot more supportive!

 

Lightbulb moment

Had a bit of a lightbulb moment last night, a revelation!stock vector : Cartoon lightbulb having an idea. Vector illustration with simple gradients, Lightbulb and background shape on separate layers for easy editing.

Have been having a bit of a struggle getting back on track with training, the gym etc and I suddenly realised why! I think the whole fitness, personal training thing is a bit like falling in love….

….at the beginning you are full of expectation, hope, excitement, passion. Everything is fun, you cant wait to get to the gym or see your trainer again, you are seeing results, it’s all new. Then as time goes on the results slow down, the exercise gets easier and then harder, you fall out with your trainer or you just get comfortable with each other and there you go its 18 months down the line and you are deciding “is this what I really want” or “where do you think this is going”!

stock vector : Broken Heart, Divorce / Break UpLike I said just like falling in love and don’t they say that 18 months is usually the end of the honeymoon period?! So that’s it I guess, the honeymoon is over and its time to knuckle down to real life or get a divorce!! That explains why it all feels like wading through treacle, why KP irritates me so much sometimes (sorry hun I’m just not in love with you anymore!!!!), why I keep noticing all the things at the gym I would change – its like my rose-coloured glasses just fell off!

So, time to get on with real life where health and fitness is a long-lasting and fulfilling part of my life but in a different way to the last year or so; something that fulfils my goals, needs, expectations without compromising all the things that have made the last 15 months or so special.

Reality and Clarity!

stock photo : happiness conceptWell, apart from feeling like I am living inside a Richard Bandler-induced happiness bubble this week, its been strange but good to get back to some kind or normality!

Back to training but with a new plan and a new focus, back to a clean and lean diet and back to the day job!  I do feel invigorated and have a new focus on the business though, have had a load of good ideas that I need to start investigating and developing so would hope to launch some new products later this year, which is really exciting!

stock vector : Sexy housewife's silhouette making spring cleaning

Having had a week off from the day job I have loads of stuff to catch up on but to be honest, I could do with another week off to catch up on housework, family and business planning and development! Thinking about it all, I have had a really intense few months but I cannot believe how much I have achieved and how much  I have squeezed into my life – I think the difficulty will be settling back into a routine and finding day-to-day challenges that excite and drive me as much as the academic ones have the last few months.

stock photo : The words Great Job surrounded by a burst of colorful stars, communicating good praise for a project accomplished and successful goal attained

One moment of extreme clarity though is  that I absolutely LOVE being a Personal Trainer – I love seeing the changes in people as their confidence grows and their fitness levels improve, its great to see the changes and know that you are helping them to get to their goals. I get such a kick out of stepping things up a notch and watching the scared face turn into an exhilarated one as they realise that they CAN do it – it really is a fantastic feeling and I know that if I can develop my NLP skills its something I can really tap into; the thought that I could help people achieve even a fraction of the stuff we learnt last week is just mind-blowing!

stock photo : Oyster shell opening up to reveal a globe, representing opportunity etc. "the world is your oyster". 3d abstract illustration.

All in all I feel happier, more positive, more alive than at any other time in my life and I wish I had had a fraction of this knowledge years ago – just think where my life could be if I had implemented these techniques a few years back. I am definitely going to sign both the children up for the NLP courses and if they can harness their potential at their young ages the world really is their oyster!

When one size doesn’t fit all!

stock photo : Planning of a diet. A notebook c an inscription - the Diet, a measuring tape, an apple and penOver the last few months I have been reading voraciously (I love that word!) about diet, health and fitness and have begun to develop my own really strong opinions about the advice given to the general public, about what makes a good, healthy diet and about the shocking state of the foods we routinely feed our families, old and young.

Working with clients has made me think again about the advice I give out to people and how my own view on what is healthy colours what I tell clients, so it was interesting to read this article Why One-Size-Fits-All Diets Do Not Work » Metabolic Effect Blog. The whole concept of  ”one size fits all” is something I feel really strongly about especially in relation to health and fitness; one size fits all diet plans, one size fits all exercise plans or one size fits all resistance machines – they all assume everyone has the same range of movement, is the same size, has the same needs and the same goals and we all know that that simply isn’t true.

stock vector : stages of weight loss

I have felt for some time now that part of the reason people get so disheartened when they diet or decide to change their life is that their decision is usually based on something they read or something a friend or family member told them; they decide to try whatever plan is the next craze and then wonder why it didn’t work for them.  One size really doesn’t fit all and for me, that goes for Personal Training too.

Not all clients are the same, not all bodies react the same way so why do so many trainers persist in dishing out the same fitness plans, the same diet plans and even, worst of all, the same exercises to all clients? There has to be a better way to help our clients get fit, be healthy, eat well, lose weight and any of the million other goals they all have  - I read something earlier today about PTs thinking outside the box and I think now I have a little clear space in my life I need to work on what type of trainer I really want to be.  Do I want to be the same as every other PT, getting as many one on one clients a day as I can, taking the money, delivering an ok-ish service or do I want to offer more?  Better service, more bespoke, more results driven?

stock photo : benefits of setting goals presented on blackboard with color sticky notes and white chalk (give direction, energize, provide challenge, make your think outside the box)I think the answer is pretty obvious – how to do all of that is the tricky part!

 

Is Zumba the best or worst thing to happen to fitness?

Zumba – hmm, well the one thing we will all agree on is that is its absolutely EVERYWHERE! On every infomercial or shopping channel, being supported by celebs, in every gym, fitness centre and even, for goodness sake, in every local village hall!

But whilst I cannot fault the marketing, spin, promotional material etc that has made it ubiquitous (well for now at least!) is there any real fitness based foundation behind the scene?  Does it deliver anything special for the millions of people who go to classes each week?

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Is Personal Training too easy?

stock photo : Young fitness woman is exercising with barbell in gym to strengthen the muscles

I posted what seems like ages ago on what makes a good personal trainer and having spent time around trainee trainers its been interesting to see the standard and quality of those people trying to get into the business and the level of knowledge they bring with them.

In the UK the exam board certification is very different to that in, for example the States and whilst I am not saying either method is best, it seems they have a lot to learn from each other.  The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) Certified Person Trainer (CPT) is a very thorough course and covers anatomy, nutrition and exercise prescription in a great deal of detail – far more than the equivalent course in the UK.  The UK Register of Exercise Professionals (REPS), a Government based quango that attempts to regulate the fitness profession through voluntary membership (really?!) has, for some inexplicable reason, determined that such a course is only a Level 2 despite using the information provided by ACSM as part of their course material for Level 2 and 3!

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Are female trainers better or worse than men?

Ages ago I posted something entitled “Why women are better” and I have just come across an article by the same guy about female stock photo : young fitness woman Exercising With Personal Trainerpersonal trainers: “Why its harder for women personal Trainers”

Trying to leave aside my bias (I am female and a trainer!) I am curious about the idea of sexism in the role cos I sort of assumed that being a female in a largely male environment but with a large number of female clients, it would be to be advantage. I still maintain that there are large numbers of women who would prefer to train with a woman, someone who understands what she is going through and how she feels and someone who she can discuss her issues with, without feeling self conscious or embarrassed - I have been training with my trainer now for over a year and there are still things I don’t tell him but I know I would have shared with a woman, it’s just what we do!

Reading the article I find the idea that a man understands what a woman is going through (hello, seriously?) with weight loss etc but a woman cannot understand the concept of ‘bulking up’ to be sexist in the extreme – yes there are good guys out there – some of them are even trainers!- who are empathetic and learn from every client and never presume.  But, we all know these are a pretty rare phenomenon in any walk of life and if you add in the perceived macho culture of the gym and they are an endangered species! Why is it a male trainer can presume to understand a woman’s point of view but a woman cannot understand a man?  That bit just baffled me!

stock photo : group of women at the gym doing exercise on the xtrainer machinesWomen have a hard enough time of it in the gym as it is and unfortunately, quite often its our own fault.  we judge other women, pass comments, take bitchy glances and don’t hesitate to tell our girlfriends all about it.  We stick to the cardio never venturing out from the safety  of the treadmill or cross trainer too scared to cross the gym floor and pick up a weight.

Why?  What is so daunting about lifting a few dumbells?  Part of it I think is that men have claimed that area as their own and in any large shiny corporate gym the area is monopolised by men posing and outdoing each other trying to lift heavy, often with appalling form. I was at a new expensive London gym at the weekend and the weight area was full of pumped up guys whilst the  cardio suite was full of tiny gym bunnies, looking pink and fluffy.  How can we ever feel at home lifting weights when we continually perpetuate the myths that that is how girls look and whilst we still cling onto the belief that lifting weights will get you big – don’t we know enough to make sure our friends know what utter nonsense that is by now?

Women will always have a harder time as personal trainers until they respect themselves and offer a professional service that doesn’t involve flirting, showing off their boobs or basically using sex as a way to get more clients – and that is no different to every other industry. For years I worked in construction and was used to being on sites full of guys who werent used to having women around, let alone having a woman boss – I was good at my job, professional but I still wore a skirt and heels.  I wasnt just given respect I had to earn it and that is no different with fitness

If women want to be treated the same as men they have to stop playing at being trainers and stop with the ‘im doing this until I get a better job/career/finish college’ after all if I was a trainer male or female and was working full-time alongside someone like that I was be more than a little unhappy – why should I lose out on clients cos he/she wants to work for a few months?

However, there are so many gyms etc owned operated or managed by men who DO only see men as personal trainers and who fail to stock photo : black bunny and a weightcapitalise on the benefits of employing a female trainer – walk into any gym run by men or where there are only male PTs and you will see a list of things that could be changed but that completely escape most mens attention from the soap in the bathrooms to the smells, the music, the magazines, the macho attitude that pervades the whole environment.

Until women start coming out from the shadows and owning or operating their own gyms and,more importantly start shouting about proper fitness including lifting weights they will always be in the background and I for one, never liked it there!

Don’t be average!

stock photo : Book conceptWell I have been blogging for what seems like ages but in reality is only a few weeks but it is only now that I am beginning to think about what I want my blog to say about me.

When I started this, my intention was to document the good and the bad as part of my health and fitness journey, to include the challenges which trip me up (such as my wobble over the BFP) as well as the good days (like Wednesday) as well as to include some bits and pieces from respected contributors found as part of my on-going education (such as the stuff from Charles Poliquin). It is only now that I have stated to think I should be using my newly acquired skills to motivate, inform, educate and inspire – despite the pretentiousness of that statement it really is something I WANT to do.

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Running before I can walk

I am so keen to get this PT business started I am in danger of running before I can walk!

stock photo : Close up motion shot of person walking away in running shoesLike everything in my life, once I make a firm decision I (a) always stick to it and (b) want to get all my plans in place and do everything RIGHT NOW! The reality is it’s not that simple – I still work full-time I have to finish my studies and I have my NLP training course booked as well, but I can’t help thinking if I just did SOMETHING productive and proactive I would feel so much better about the sense of stagnation I have!

The question I am mulling over though is what now?  Do I try and get a part-time job doing anything in a gym to get some experience?  Do I try and shadow other PTs to see how they do it?  Do I keep reading, learning and planning but wait until after everything is sorted and then try and get my own clients?  I really don’t know what to do for the best.

I know I am being impatient – patience was never one of my virtues and time hasn’t changed that at all – I just feel that I want to be doing something that will help move this forward.

Its been a rough couple of weeks but there is a small kernel of steel in there somewhere that is refusing to give in so I think its time to channel my inner Paul McKenna and get some focus back in my life!

Onwards and upwards!

What makes a good Personal Trainer?

I have been toying with the idea of this blog for a couple of weeks nowstock photo : fitness woman personal trainer in sport club indoor and I think I am finally ready to commit something to print!

It seems to me – and I am speaking at the moment purely as a client – a personal trainer has to be so many things to so many people. We go to the gym on the first day all scared and intimidated, generally overweight and unfit and hope to find a trainer who wont laugh, judge and who will give us the tools and above all, the motivation to get going and to carry on going.

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