PERSONAL TRAINER THAT'S NOT SO PERSONAL
Ahmee2034
Posts: 1,330 Member
OK, so, I hired a personal trainer. I'm about 60 pounds from my goal weight. I want to do this right this time! Anyway, I TOTALLY get the "kick my *kitten* Jillian Michaels" concept. I actually need that sometimes, we all do. But, my question is, my personal trainer seems to be intentionally trying to make it harder on me than it should be. I mean, I've checked with a few people, one of whom has actually run in the Boston Marathon and is a FREAK of a health nut, and she said that there is no way I should be hurting to the point of tears after over a week since my session. Then, I went to my last session, in pain and hardly able to move, hoping that she would help me with exercises that would help me work through the pain, stretching, yoga, etc. Anything to give me guidance. Well, she went off on me because I hadn't called her earlier to cancel my session, which I WASN'T there to cancel my session anyway, I was there to workout. She went into this tirade telling me that another person had cancelled their session for later that evening and that she doesn't understand my mindset that I would show up to workout hurting!!! People in the gym were staring at us! Then she says, "this is a professional relationship. I don't know WHAT is in your mind!" What should I do? I am still working out, running, etc. I'm STILL in pain OVER a week later...Where did I go wrong?
0
Replies
-
Find a new trainer.
To be fair, after my first sessions with my trainer, I was sore for a long time. But there is a difference between soreness and pain. I'd find a trainer who I felt I could communicate better. I'd definitely not stick with someone who yells at me.0 -
You pay money for someone to help you get to where you need to be; not belittle you or hurt you. If I were you, I would fire her and find someone with someone else. You do not want to go through everyday with her having it be like that. FInd someone else.0
-
Tell her politely but firmly hat you'd like to terminate said professional relationship and get a refund for any sessions paid in advance.
If she's less than forthcoming with the funds, continue to explain that, while you're aware that certain level of ache and discomfort is normal, you believe you may have sustained an injury under her guidance.
Be polite, respectful but be assertive. Then go get a trainer who suits you.0 -
Tell her politely but firmly hat you'd like to terminate said professional relationship and get a refund for any sessions paid in advance.
If she's less than forthcoming with the funds, continue to explain that, while you're aware that certain level of ache and discomfort is normal, you believe you may have sustained an injury under her guidance.
Be polite, respectful but be assertive. Then go get a trainer who suits you.
^^^ agree0 -
Nobody has any right to speak to you this way!!
Absolutely find a new trainer!0 -
Talk to the club manger and see if you can start over witha different trainer, without getting charged0
-
She is so fired.
On to the next.0 -
First, fire her. Second go to club manager. Muscle soreness is fine for a few days. If you are in this much pain you may have hurt yourself. Did you see a doctor? Be your own advocate here and tell the trainer to go pound sand. She sucks.0
-
punch her in the throat and find another trainer.0
-
Tell her to beat it... Trainers are there to help you and motivate you , not hurt you. They should push you to do a little more then you want but not to the point where it hurts a week later.0
-
LOL @JXNSMMA.... oh man I was thinking the same thing!0
-
Shes right it is a professional relationship and if she is unable to treat you with respect and dignity (i.e belittling you in a gym full of people) then you should definitely find a new trainer. She sounds like a nut. Maybe speak with the gym manager about your situation and see if they can match you up with someone who is more understanding and less of an a-hole.0
-
punch her in the throat and find another trainer.
:laugh:0 -
punch her in the throat and find another trainer.
ahahahah this made me giggle i agree hahha xx0 -
I think after biggest loser, there is often confusion on what is acceptable behavior between the trainer and trainee and the lines often get blurry. Obviously you are not motivated by her behavior so I would terminate this relationship but in the future, I would recommend discussing acceptable limits with your new trainer - just so everyone is on the same page. Regarding your pain, is it simply muscle soreness or is it more? You need to gauge if you should visit the Dr. - don't hesitate if you think you should. Things could get worse.0
-
punch her in the throat and find another trainer.
I 2nd this0 -
punch her in the throat and find another trainer.
^^^^^ this is my favorite answer
I work out with a trainer. I get sore and sometimes will hurt for a few days, but (1) never to the point where I'm in tears and (2) if I am that sore he adjusts my workout accordingly.0 -
Find another trainer!0
-
Get another trainer. She should be for you not against you. And it should be about holistic wellness not just to kick your *kitten* in the gym. Sounds bad. I'm let her go.0
-
Find a new trainer.
Amen. Agree with her and say, "You're right...this IS a professional relationship," continue with..."Sadly, YOU are not".0 -
I am sorry to hear you had to go through that OP. Find another trainer, one that wants to help you and is professional rather than one that is trying to be like one of the trainers on The Biggest Loser programmes.
Secondly, soreness and lactic acid buildup is one thing, but if part of you really is in pain and it is a sharp sort of pain, get that sorted, you may have hurt yourself.0 -
You pay money for someone to help you get to where you need to be; not belittle you or hurt you. If I were you, I would fire her and find someone with someone else. You do not want to go through everyday with her having it be like that. FInd someone else.
Agreed! You are paying for her to HELP you, not yell at you and make you feel stupid. Good for you for showing up to your workout even though you're sore, that shows dedication! She should have nutured that drive and seen it as a teaching opportunity for healing techniques.0 -
First, fire her. Second go to club manager. Muscle soreness is fine for a few days. If you are in this much pain you may have hurt yourself. Did you see a doctor? Be your own advocate here and tell the trainer to go pound sand. She sucks.0
-
Clearly she has lost the "professional" part in your professional relationship.
She obviously has some issues in her life that she's taking out on you. And probably
others, since they are cancelling sessions.
Find someone else. You deserve to have someone push you to be your best; not BULLY you.
That's what she's doing.0 -
Yep - it is a professional relationship, you WILL be sore after a really good workout with a trainer but it's perfectly clear that your personalities are not working well together. If the work was too much for you, she needed to be able to listen to your concerns and work with you on making it right. Find a new trainer.0
-
Sorry that you're dealing with this trainer... My response would be, yes, it IS a professional relationship - maybe you should start acting more professional. Although you were not in the wrong to show up without canceling (where's the logic in that anyways?), but she should have never demeaned you like that...esp in front of others.
I agree with other commenters - find a new trainer! Good luck and don't let her put you down. Don't let anyone in life put you down.
About the soreness, there may be no shame in taking it easy for another week. Is your whole body sore? Can you work out other problem areas that aren't affected right now? Just remember, you will rip your muscles, but they need time to heal too.
Good luck!0 -
She's correct, it's a professional relationship. You are not satisfied with the job performance that you're paying for, so she should be fired.0
-
I've always been a slow to recover person (a good leg workout can have me sore and walking funny for a week). So, don't get too wrapped up in that. The trainer should have been open to listen to your concerns and help you assess whether you need to lower the intensity of sessions or mix in more active rest between sessions. I've found that eating more spinach, kale and berries and taking multivitamins helps reduce my recovery time.
Since you're not her only client, I would have a talk to with the club management. Tell them you don't think the PT you have is a good match and you'd like their help finding another one. This allows the club management to get in the middle and they should support you in getting transitioned to a new trainer (and getting back any prepaid sessions).0 -
I have been lifting for 47 years. I never found it necessary to get an attitude on anyone I taught how to lift weights. Find a PT with better communication skills.
To quote a trainer I had on an 8 Man Crew team, "If I wanted to get yelled at again, I would call my parents for free."0 -
Fire that hooker!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions