Nelson Mail

Death of the old-school PT

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past 30 years have seen the role adapt to suit the market.

Initially PTs focused on helping people lose weight and look good or improve strength, power and endurance.

Tools of the trade were circuits, weights and cardio. Soon after, helping people to improve their quality of movement was added in as ‘‘functional fitness’’ came into the spotlight.

Now, the role of the PT is evolving once more. We now know health is more than what we look like, and we need more than someone to just take us through a weekly sweat session.

The new generation of PT is ready to step into a broader role, becoming a lifestyle manager or health coach and advising on more than just exercise.

Instead of advocating for a onesize-fits-all idea of health and fitness and pushing everyone towards perfection, a health coach meets you where you’re at, and collaborat­es to make changes that fit your life, that you can sustain, to make you better than before.

They consider things like food choices, eating behaviour, self-care and self-management. PTs are now supplement­ing exercise science background­s with qualificat­ions in nutrition, behavioura­l change and coaching techniques.

We all have an idea of what a healthy diet looks like, even if details differ.

However, most would agree the basics centre on staying away from processed foods, getting lots of vegetables, some fruit, choosing good quality meat and good fats. Somehow there’s a massive gap between knowing this and implementi­ng it.

A health coach can help navigate through food choices, assist in examining eating behaviours and the reasons behind them and help develop strategies to make better choices. Food sensitivit­ies and the interplay between food choices, hormones, mood and energy are more commonly discussed and more PTs have access food sensitivit­y testing protocols.

Just like we all sort of know what we should eat, we all sort of know what we need to do to look after ourselves but fall down in the implementa­tion. Not getting enough sleep, working too much and not prioritisi­ng what’s important impacts on our health and more often we’re seeing symptoms of adrenal fatigue. Excessive, high intensity or high volume exercise in these circumstan­ces can hinder rather than help.

A health coach can help bring perspectiv­e to your lifestyle, advise on appropriat­e exercise and meet you where you are at as opposed to pushing for an inflexible ideal. The focus is on implementi­ng new behaviours in a sustainabl­e way to make you better than before.

If you’re seeing a PT who disapprove­s week in, week out as you confess your ‘‘bad’’ behaviour then puts you through a punishing routine to ‘‘make up’’ for those nights out, imperfect food choices and skipped workouts because you’re busy, exhausted or stressed, rest assured this type of PT will be gone soon and more holistic health coaches and lifestyle managers will be there to take their place. Raewyn Ng is a movement and health coach at Mybod Health and Fitness, mybod.co.nz.

 ?? PHOTO: 123RF ?? Does your fitness trainer punish you for your unhealthy sins?
PHOTO: 123RF Does your fitness trainer punish you for your unhealthy sins?

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