Austin American-Statesman

Keeping fit with internet

Fit City

- Fitness trainer Margo Kamin (in upper right corner) says exercise via the Internet helps people who are constantly traveling or don’t like going to a gym for a workout. Mark MATSON / for AMERICAN-STATESMAN

the same as in-person training — $35 for half an hour or $65 for an hour. Kamin makes sure she can dial up and get a connection with a client before she charges for a session. After that, she says, it’s quick and easy.

“You just call me and I show up as if I was walking in the door,” Kamin says. “From my perspectiv­e, I’m giving just as good instructio­n, but for being tactile.”

Occasional­ly, technology glitches or frozen computer screens stall practices. Usually Kamin can just hang up and redial.

On a recent morning, Megan Sly, who lives in the small town of Oregon, Mo., sips a cup of cofiee as she waits for her morning FaceTime session with Kamin to begin. Another client, Sally King from Seattle, is calling in on Skype, too. Just this once, Kamin is going to lead a joint session for both of them.

From her ochre-walled home studio in Austin, outfftted with a treadmill, weights, a mini trampoline and a Bowflex machine, Kamin gets started with a quick warm-up and then a set of squats.

“Abs up, Megan, six more. Hands at your waist. Put your weight down into it,” she says, doing the exercises herself in front of her computer’s camera. “Sally, that’s good. Down and up, down and up. Three more!”

Kamin can see full-body video of both clients in their faraway homes — one on her iPad, the other on her computer monitor. A golden retriever wanders in front of King, slowly wagging its tail. King shoos him away and gets back to business, working her way through some planks, triceps lifts and lunges.

It’s a rainy day in Seattle, where King is having a bit of trouble with her Internet connection. After about 30 min- utes, she cuts her session short. Sly keeps sweating.

Kamin watches carefully. “Get some water if you need to,” she says. Then she points out the ffner points of a new move. “I’ll turn sideways so you can see,” she says, demonstrat­ing.

Sly searched online to ffnd someone who could train her virtually because she doesn’t have access to a gym or trainer. Now she “meets” with Kamin twice a week. “It cuts out the deterrent of having to go somewhere,” Sly says.

The arrangemen­t works well for local clients, too.

Nena Groskind, a 63year-old Austin writer, usually trains with Kamin in person, but when she traveled to Oregon for a family emergency, she used Skype. “It was a lifesaver. I was able to keep up a regular exercise routine even though I was very far away,” Groskind says.

She says it’s almost the same as working with Kamin in person. Almost. “If I do something wrong, she can’t reach through the screen and hit me on the head,” Groskind says.

Still, you can’t hide on Skype. “I would if I could, but she can see what I’m doing and not doing.”

Groskind once even resorted to consulting with Kamin through her iPhone. “I was in a small hotel room. I took my iPhone into the hallway and had this disembodie­d voice working me through an exercise routine,” she says.

Unlike pre-taped workout videos, Skype training is live, and the trainer can see what the client is doing. A tape can’t correct form or push someone to keep going when she wants to quit.

Austin client Megan Miller, 39, turned to Kamin two years ago, when she was a stay-athome mom. “If I couldn’t get a baby sitter or if my child was sick and I couldn’t leave the house, I was still able to get a workout in,” Miller says.

It works the other way, too. Kamin can train her clients remotely while she’s on the road herself. “When I’m gone, they still want to train with me,” she says.

Back in her home studio, Kamin wraps up

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