The Star Malaysia

How to find a good personal trainer

A trainer needs to understand a client’s goals and devise the safest and most effective method of reaching those goals.

- By JAMES FELL

THERE is a scene in the Arnold Schwarzene­gger movie The Running Man in which “Captain Freedom’s Workout” comes on TV, and Jesse Ventura yells, “Are you ready for pain? Are you ready for suffering?”

If your trainer behaves like that, start running – away.

According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are over 250,000 fitness trainers and instructor­s in the US. That’s a lot to choose from.

Some of their clients have horror stories; others refer to personal trainers as lifesavers. First, some horror. “I have club feet, and my trainer tried to get me to do things that were impossible for me,” said Sara Ross, 34, a small-business owner in Lawrencevi­lle, New Jersey. She’d had surgery as a child to synthetica­lly lengthen her Achilles tendons and was looking to improve her body’s functional­ity and flexibilit­y.

But the trainer at a country club gym wasn’t a good listener.

“I told her my ankles didn’t have the flexibilit­y to do a full squat,” she said. The trainer pushed her to do it anyway, with added weight.

Ross heard a pop in her Achilles. The trainer asserted it was all in her head. Ross stormed out of the session, never to return. She had trouble walking for weeks.

“Training is something you do for someone, not to someone; You’re looking for a facilitato­r, not a dictator,” said Florida-based trainer Nick Tumminello, who was named the 2016 Personal Trainer of the Year by the US National Strength and Conditioni­ng Associatio­n (NSCA).

He warns people away from “push through the pain”-type trainers.

His descriptio­n of a good trainer? “They make it about you. Good listener. Someone who asks you questions about what you want rather than say what they want to inflict on you.”

A trainer needs to understand a client’s goals and devise the safest and most effective method of reaching those goals, he said.

Beware of the hard sell. Monica Weber, a 39-year-old midwife in Ontario, Canada, said it happened to her twice.

She’d had a membership at the GoodLife Fitness chain since 2002, doing basic workouts on her own. In 2010, she inquired about hiring a trainer.

The introducto­ry sessions, she said, “were all a big sales pitch. He made me feel like I had a lot of problems he needed to fix. It would take a year and a half and cost US$10,000 (RM40,000).”

She balked at the cost and said no thanks.

Three years later, she tried another GoodLife trainer. “She gave me an even harder sell,” Weber said. Again, it was US$10,000 (RM40,000) to “fix” her.

GoodLife Fitness personal training divisional manager Kelly Musovic said the average personal training package costs US$4,000 (RM16,000) and a single session can be had for US$39 (RM160).

“If they say no to a particular option, we would advise them of other options,” said Musovic, who was dismayed to hear about Weber’s story. “We don’t want anyone to feel harassed.”

Weber insisted both trainers made her feel as though it was the US$10,000 (RM40,000) route or nothing. She ended up leaving the gym.

Marie Rousseau, 39, is a retail worker in Bryce Canyon, Utah. She recalled a trainer who was pushing her toward a smaller dress size. At the time, the 5-foot, 4-inch tall Rousseau weighed 93 pounds (42kg) and was recovering from an eating disorder that had almost killed her.

Her goal was to gain muscle and strength and go up a few dress sizes, but the trainer told her she should drop to a size 6.

Said Rousseau: “He insisted I had some fat to lose” – a dangerous thing to say to someone who’s battled an eating disorder.

Even though the trainer knew about her condition, he “pushed no carb”. Rousseau said. “I told him right off the bat that nutrition coaching was unnecessar­y because I was under the care of a registered dietitian.”

The trainer also pushed supplement­s – ones he wanted to sell her. Rousseau bailed after three sessions.

Richard Cotton, who is national director of certificat­ion for the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), said his organisati­on “does not support any supplement sales within the client-trainer relationsh­ip”.

He added that trainers should refer to a registered dietitian when it comes to clients’ meal planning.

The horror stories make personal training seem like the Wild West. But Cotton said it’s not as wild as it used to be.

“There has been self-policing to improve standards and develop best practices,” he said.

Most trainers have some form of certificat­ion – ACSM and NSCA are two well-respected groups – but that doesn’t guarantee quality.

Both Tumminello and Cotton recommende­d seeking out a trainer with relevant experience. Seniors, for example, should look for someone who understand­s how to work with older adults. Cotton is a big fan of word-ofmouth referrals.

That’s how Ross finally landed a good trainer: from her cousin’s recommenda­tion. Her new trainer had the relevant physical therapy experience.

“He adapted the exercise to my ability,” she said.

Tumminello warned against any trainer who insists exercises be done a certain way, saying it shows a lack of understand­ing of variations in human movement.

“He told me I didn’t need to do squats,” said Ross, who’s been with her current trainer for three years. “He’s so knowledgea­ble and nice to work with.”

Rousseau found a better trainer too. “He would push me just enough where I would gain confidence,” she said. “He was more about good form. Working out is more about feeling good now.”

And that’s the ultimate goal of working with a trainer: to feel good. – Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service

Training is something you do for someone, not to someone; You’re looking for a facilitato­r, not a dictator. nick Tumminello, personal trainer

 ??  ?? It can be hard finding a personal trainer who’s a good fit with you. — TnS
It can be hard finding a personal trainer who’s a good fit with you. — TnS

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