Long story short, my wife and I are both starting a new journey w/ fitness and food. We're seeing a dietician soon to get some help with the food part, but we've also been considering getting a personal trainer (either one for both of us or separate - either option is on the table).
Does anyone here have experience with one? What are some good questions to ask to make sure I get the "right" one? Any tips to set us up for success in this process? [Reply]
Originally Posted by Pablo:
It's true. If I see a dude working out in anything other than steel-toe boots, corduroy pants and a flannel then I know he chokes pipe.
My ex Andrew would workout in shorts before we hit the showers together [Reply]
One thing that made a difference me is to start focusing on the mind muscle connection, and use weight that I could have slow controlled form for. I still go close to failure, but I pay less attention to the weight and more to what it feels like. [Reply]
Originally Posted by SupDock:
One thing that made a difference me is to start focusing on the mind muscle connection, and use weight that I could have slow controlled form for. I still go close to failure, but I pay less attention to the weight and more to what it feels like.
So my dad is a runner. But the last 2 years he’s really worked on his strength he did go to a personal trainer for awhile ($225/month) but couldn’t justify the price.
He thought about buying a bunch of equipment but ended up getting Tonal. Can’t recommend it enough if you are a fitness person. Very little equipment, thousands of workouts for you to do on the screen as if you have a personal trainer there with you. Can create a profile for hundreds of people and it gives you very detailed physical analysis.
He loves it and so does my mom. There’s was 3k after tax and it’s $50/month for subscription. Yes it’s expensive but if you’re into fitness and not just sticking your foot in the water I highly recommend it.
Plus the cheapest personal trainer I’ve seen that isn’t terrible is $225/month. That’s $2,700/year. Might as well just get the Tonal if that’s your way of life [Reply]
Originally Posted by SuperChief:
Long story short, my wife and I are both starting a new journey w/ fitness and food. We're seeing a dietician soon to get some help with the food part, but we've also been considering getting a personal trainer (either one for both of us or separate - either option is on the table).
Does anyone here have experience with one? What are some good questions to ask to make sure I get the "right" one? Any tips to set us up for success in this process?
UPDATE
I found a guy that I liked. Due to my fitness level, we decided to ease into the whole process. I started in early June w/ 5 minutes on the treadmill (with a pretty steep incline and decent speed), along with 3 20-second planks, using a bench press instead of doing them on the ground, to start on my core. The trainer listened to my concerns about burnout and going too quick, so we both picked the "slow and steady wins the race" type of attack. I've been doing this twice a week since, slowly adding more and more before we begin a true weight training based plan.
Today I did 20 minutes on the treadmill, 5 of the planks, and 5 sets of 10 of bodyweight squats to a bench. Feeling great and already starting to see slow, steady improvement in my stamina. Best part of all - the trainer decided to not charge me for sessions during these first few months while I'm getting up to speed. [Reply]
I found a guy that I liked. Due to my fitness level, we decided to ease into the whole process. I started in early June w/ 5 minutes on the treadmill (with a pretty steep incline and decent speed), along with 3 20-second planks, using a bench press instead of doing them on the ground, to start on my core. The trainer listened to my concerns about burnout and going too quick, so we both picked the "slow and steady wins the race" type of attack. I've been doing this twice a week since, slowly adding more and more before we begin a true weight training based plan.
Today I did 20 minutes on the treadmill, 5 of the planks, and 5 sets of 10 of bodyweight squats to a bench. Feeling great and already starting to see slow, steady improvement in my stamina. Best part of all - the trainer decided to not charge me for sessions during these first few months while I'm getting up to speed.
I found a guy that I liked. Due to my fitness level, we decided to ease into the whole process. I started in early June w/ 5 minutes on the treadmill (with a pretty steep incline and decent speed), along with 3 20-second planks, using a bench press instead of doing them on the ground, to start on my core. The trainer listened to my concerns about burnout and going too quick, so we both picked the "slow and steady wins the race" type of attack. I've been doing this twice a week since, slowly adding more and more before we begin a true weight training based plan.
Today I did 20 minutes on the treadmill, 5 of the planks, and 5 sets of 10 of bodyweight squats to a bench. Feeling great and already starting to see slow, steady improvement in my stamina. Best part of all - the trainer decided to not charge me for sessions during these first few months while I'm getting up to speed.
Originally Posted by Eureka:
That's awesome and keep up the good work.
Has the old lady been following suit?
She's getting closer. She found a gym that she likes and starts soon. She was pretty overwhelmed with the dietician stuff and a recent health diagnosis, so we didn't wanna push too fast with so many changes. [Reply]
I had an online trainer. Worked well. He also prepared for me a daily meal plan and i am still following some of his guidances now. https://betterme.world/articles/200-...day-meal-plan/ that is one of them here. Protein is absolute must for all people who are doing a lot of exercises in order to stay healthy and fit. [Reply]