China Daily (Hong Kong)

Instructor­s retain profession­al stance despite COVID-19

- By YAN DONGJIE

On May 9, the yoga gym where Zhong Shiyu works sent a notice to its members telling them that it was suspending offline classes because of a rise in the number of COVID-19 cases in Beijing.

The last time the gym suspended services was in early 2020, when the epidemic first broke out. Then, classes were suspended for four months.

“COVID-19 has been fatal to gyms. “A friend who runs an online system that allows gym members to book classes said that about 70 percent of gyms have canceled the service, which means many of them have closed,” she said.

Zhong is happy to see that a fitness wave is sweeping the country. She is especially cheered that yoga, which is reputed to build a good physique and improve health, has become more popular.

There have even been media reports about people practicing yoga at temporary hospitals built for COVID-19 isolation, observatio­n and treatment.

“Public fitness is different from gym fitness, though, and most people are not prepared to pay for exercise,” said the yoga teacher, who has a diploma in psychology approved by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and has practiced the discipline for 15 years.

She said it’s great that people are increasing­ly realizing the importance of fitness and health, but she believes that profession­al instructio­n is essential.

“If you have the exercise habit and know-how, you can benefit a lot from following livestream­ers to work out, but if someone lacks knowledge or has joint problems or water on the knee, they might get injured,” she said.

While the Beijing OM Yoga Gym, where Zhong works as a spokeswoma­n, has survived the epidemic, it has been badly affected, with the average number of classes falling to about 500 per month from 800.

However, Zhong believes that such difficulti­es may improve the industry.

“Those who can survive must have core competitiv­eness, and they have to keep improving to adjust to market changes,” she said, adding that the most important element is profession­alism, while capital support and a determined team are also crucial for survival.

“We only hire yoga teachers who have college degrees, profession­al accreditat­ion and more than five years’ teaching experience. That’s an ‘exercise effect’ guarantee for gym members that wins trust,” Zhong said.

“Trust is the most valuable factor for a sustainabl­e fitness business.”

She is enthusiast­ic about practicing yoga and sharing her experience, and she believes that in the face of the epidemic, fitness industry players will have to improve their services and profession­al standards to become more competitiv­e, thus making the industry more prosperous.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Zhong Shiyu gives a yoga class to a student.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Zhong Shiyu gives a yoga class to a student.

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