$50/hr and $38 per meal for a professional???

Okay, so I about fell over when I went to my new gym today!! I was a little curious about a personal trainer and found out for a pittance ($50 for a one hour session), I could take advantage of their service. OUCH! There is also a gal who, for $38 per day (one week min) can set me up with prepared meals based on my goals. If I wanted a month's training (3 days/week) AND meals (6 days/wk) it is a whopping $1700! I am in the wrong line of work!!

Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently? My goal is to gain a good deal of muscle, lose the fat and gain endurance in a reasonable amount of time. I'm 5'6 and about 170ish....if I were to guess, maybe 29-31% fat as I have let myself go for the past year, but there is still some muscle under that fluff!

Thanks and best wishes with YOUR journey!:happy:

Replies

  • ukaryote
    ukaryote Posts: 874 Member
    There are many excellent sites and DVDs on strength training. I prefer the web sites because I can read and learn much more. My goals are endurance for cycling and upper-body strength training. (I always have had below-average upper body strength.)

    From all the exercises available, I selected a suite that fit my goals and my abilities. I pay careful attention to the proper form for the exercises. youtube is great for this. Proper form keeps you from getting hurt. I expect any new exercise or machine to be especially difficult the first dozen times until all the muscles learn when they should work. I also start with very, very light weights to learn the movements, then increase weight until 3x10 reps is challenging.

    Stretching, yoga, high intensity interval cardio (HIT), and strength training are all included. I have not tried plyometrics. Stretching and yoga every day, cardio and strength on alternate days. Day I cycle for fun count as cardio, and I might take a day or two after for recovery.

    In a reasonable time? That depends an awful lot on your genetics and dedication.
  • Mr_Knight
    Mr_Knight Posts: 9,532 Member
    Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently? My goal is to gain a good deal of muscle, lose the fat and gain endurance in a reasonable amount of time.

    Some free advice for ya - get more realistic goals. And if you are starting out lifting, you don't need anything more complicated for the first 1-2 years than Strong Lifts or equivalent.

    Cheers.
  • Kevalicious99
    Kevalicious99 Posts: 1,131 Member
    Don't know where you are .. but my gym charges more than that for personal training.

    And that is for a junior personal trainer .. if you want someone that really knows their stuff .. be prepared to dish out more.
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently? My goal is to gain a good deal of muscle, lose the fat and gain endurance in a reasonable amount of time.

    Some free advice for ya - get more realistic goals. And if you are starting out lifting, you don't need anything more complicated for the first 1-2 years than Strong Lifts or equivalent.

    Cheers.

    No offense, but I asked for suggestions in line with my goals....and they are not unrealistic. Maybe I need to articulate myself a bit better. I am not a beginner, and "complicated" doesn't scare me, but spending a fortune does!
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    There are many excellent sites and DVDs on strength training. I prefer the web sites because I can read and learn much more. My goals are endurance for cycling and upper-body strength training. (I always have had below-average upper body strength.)

    From all the exercises available, I selected a suite that fit my goals and my abilities. I pay careful attention to the proper form for the exercises. youtube is great for this. Proper form keeps you from getting hurt. I expect any new exercise or machine to be especially difficult the first dozen times until all the muscles learn when they should work. I also start with very, very light weights to learn the movements, then increase weight until 3x10 reps is challenging.

    Stretching, yoga, high intensity interval cardio (HIT), and strength training are all included. I have not tried plyometrics. Stretching and yoga every day, cardio and strength on alternate days. Day I cycle for fun count as cardio, and I might take a day or two after for recovery.
    All wonderful ideas! Thank you very much!
    In a reasonable time? That depends an awful lot on your genetics and dedication.
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    There are many excellent sites and DVDs on strength training. I prefer the web sites because I can read and learn much more. My goals are endurance for cycling and upper-body strength training. (I always have had below-average upper body strength.)

    From all the exercises available, I selected a suite that fit my goals and my abilities. I pay careful attention to the proper form for the exercises. youtube is great for this. Proper form keeps you from getting hurt. I expect any new exercise or machine to be especially difficult the first dozen times until all the muscles learn when they should work. I also start with very, very light weights to learn the movements, then increase weight until 3x10 reps is challenging.

    Stretching, yoga, high intensity interval cardio (HIT), and strength training are all included. I have not tried plyometrics. Stretching and yoga every day, cardio and strength on alternate days. Day I cycle for fun count as cardio, and I might take a day or two after for recovery.
    All wonderful ideas! Thank you very much!
    In a reasonable time? That depends an awful lot on your genetics and dedication.

    Ugh, sorry, but having a time with the reply! Anyway, thank you very much for the great feedback!
  • randomtai
    randomtai Posts: 9,003 Member
    Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently? My goal is to gain a good deal of muscle, lose the fat and gain endurance in a reasonable amount of time.

    Some free advice for ya - get more realistic goals. And if you are starting out lifting, you don't need anything more complicated for the first 1-2 years than Strong Lifts or equivalent.

    Cheers.

    No offense, but I asked for suggestions in line with my goals....and they are not unrealistic. Maybe I need to articulate myself a bit better. I am not a beginner, and "complicated" doesn't scare me, but spending a fortune does!

    What was said still holds true.
  • callas444
    callas444 Posts: 261 Member
    I've found it very helpful to join a class. While it is not one on one, she customizes the difficulty level for each person in the class. "Here's how to do this move, here's how to make it harder, here's how you can make it easier if necessary." I love the classes so much that I can't imagine quitting, but if I did I would know lots of strength training, yoga, calisthenics, and cardio exercises that I could do at home on my own. Classes are much cheaper than one on one training.
  • ahoier
    ahoier Posts: 312 Member
    damnit lol, I hate bookmarks.....I always use them to "bookmark" cool sites I may need later, but I be darned I can't find the link now, in the bajllion bookmarks I got saved LOL.....

    Anyways, http://www.choosemyplate.gov/preschoolers/meal-and-snack-patterns-ideas.html does have some good ideas to start...though obviously could get boring in the long run ;)
  • Crash7676
    Crash7676 Posts: 41 Member
    bodybuilding.com has some good stuff
  • starryphoenix
    starryphoenix Posts: 381 Member
    I pay $35 dollars for a half an hour session with my personal trainer once a month. It isn't for everyone, but for me personally just that once a month visit is a huge help. My trainer gives me routines that challenge and strengthen me, I just do most of the work on my own. I am highly motivated and love working out, but other people might not have such an easy time as i do with seeing a trainer only once a month.
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    damnit lol, I hate bookmarks.....I always use them to "bookmark" cool sites I may need later, but I be darned I can't find the link now, in the bajllion bookmarks I got saved LOL.....

    Anyways, http://www.choosemyplate.gov/preschoolers/meal-and-snack-patterns-ideas.html does have some good ideas to start...though obviously could get boring in the long run ;)


    Thank you! I will check it out!
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    bodybuilding.com has some good stuff

    Yes! I was there this morning and may use the site more :-)
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    I pay $35 dollars for a half an hour session with my personal trainer once a month. It isn't for everyone, but for me personally just that once a month visit is a huge help. My trainer gives me routines that challenge and strengthen me, I just do most of the work on my own. I am highly motivated and love working out, but other people might not have such an easy time as i do with seeing a trainer only once a month.

    You know, that is a good way to look at it. I really do know the major points and just doing a few sessions for new ideas and fine tuning would be fine.
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    I've found it very helpful to join a class. While it is not one on one, she customizes the difficulty level for each person in the class. "Here's how to do this move, here's how to make it harder, here's how you can make it easier if necessary." I love the classes so much that I can't imagine quitting, but if I did I would know lots of strength training, yoga, calisthenics, and cardio exercises that I could do at home on my own. Classes are much cheaper than one on one training.

    Also an excellent idea! Thank you, I will see if this is an option :-)
  • WalkingAlong
    WalkingAlong Posts: 4,926 Member
    Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently?
    The library and book stores have many books on this.

    Though I don't think you need a 'meal plan', just a calorie intake and macro goal, which this site here can help you with for free and without clicking elsewhere.

    Good luck!
  • iggyboo93
    iggyboo93 Posts: 524 Member
    I bought 6 ($300) sessions with a personal trainer at my gym - she was great and the workouts were tough as nails. She showed me the right form to do the exercises correctly. Paying extra for nutritional guidance would be difficult for me to do - especially when there is a plethora of information online about eating plans as the other posters have noted. But is the fee out of line? I don't believe so - you are paying a consultant for their professional opinion / advice.
  • Laura732
    Laura732 Posts: 244 Member
    Meal plans: cleaneating.com

    Any of the "Rules of Lifting" books, Tosca Reno's books for workouts. There are also tons of sites online that have 'workouts of the day' (they're not all crossfit). Daily Burn, Livestrong, youtube. All kinds of free stuff out there.
  • MKEgal
    MKEgal Posts: 3,250 Member
    Apologies... this has gotten a bit long.
    I was a little curious about a personal trainer and found out for a pittance ($50 for a one hour session), I could take advantage of their service.
    For someone with experience or more training & education (a degree in exercise science vs. simply certification as a personal trainer), esp. in a larger metro area, that's about right.
    Someone who's recently certified would probably charge less. (When I'm finally certified, I plan to start at $25/hr.)
    You really don't need someone there every time you work out.
    In fact, that should be the goal of every personal trainer - clients who progress on their own & don't need hand-holding.
    In any case, it would be worth hiring someone for a couple of hours to design a program for you, explain how to do it (safe lifting, good form, etc.), how to progress on your own, walk you through one workout, etc.

    Maybe get a tuneup every 3 months? (That will also keep you honest about going to the gym, since you know you'll be accountable to someone else.)

    Just be sure that s/he is clear up front about what you want: a plan laid out so that you can work on your own. And get an estimate of how long that will take. It may be an initial 2-hour session to be thoroughly evaluated.

    Here's where you can search for trainers in your area who are certified by the American College of Sports Medicine:
    http://members.acsm.org/source/custom/Online_locator/OnlineLocator.cfm
    There is also a gal who, for $38 per day (one week min) can set me up with prepared meals based on my goals
    If she's designing the meal plan, providing the food, and cooking it for you, that's a deal.
    But with a bit of research, you can do just fine on your own, for much less money.
    I'm 5'6 and about 170ish
    According to BMI (here's a chart: http://www.shapeup.org/bmi/bmi6.pdf )
    at 5'6" you should be between 115 - 150 lb. So you don't have far to go weight-wise.
    You should be aiming to lose 0.5 - 1 lb per week for now, and 0.25 - 0.5 as you near your goal.

    150 lb x 10 cal/lb = 1500 cal to eat per day to get to 150 lb.
    Once you get there, you'd need 2250 cal per day to maintain that weight. (See below.)
    As you get close to your goal, ease the calories up until you're not losing weight any more, but not gaining.

    http://www.health.harvard.edu/healthbeat/HB_web/calorie-counting-made-easy.htm
    multiply your current weight by 15 — that’s roughly the number of calories per pound of body weight needed to maintain your current weight if you are moderately active. Moderately active means getting at least 30 minutes of physical activity a day
    Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently? My goal is to gain a good deal of muscle, lose the fat and gain endurance in a reasonable amount of time.
    Meal plan:
    This calculator will tell you not only your BMI, but how many servings of various foods to eat to maintain that weight.
    If you enter your healthy goal weight from the BMI chart, this will help you plan your food intake.
    https://www.bcm.edu/research/centers/childrens-nutrition-research-center/healthyeatingcalculator/eatingCal.html

    Delicious recipes: http://www.tasteofhome.com/
    If you hover over 'recipes' in the bar menu, it will pop up another menu.
    On the top of the far right column are 'healthy recipes'.
    This site / magazine also has nutrition info for most of their recipes.

    Weight training:
    No matter which you're doing, you need to know the maximum amount you can lift, called the one-repetition maximum or 1RM.
    For building muscle, you want to do 1 or 2 sets of 8-12 repetitions of a weight that's 70-85% of your 1RM.
    For building endurance, do 1 or 2 sets of 15-20 repetitions of a weight that's 50-65% of your 1RM.

    Either way, start low on both weight & reps and work up.
    You should just be able to do the last 2-3 reps.
    When it gets easy to do the maximum # of reps, add 5 pounds and go back to the minimum # of reps.

    (From the American College of Sports Medicine's book "Resources for the Personal Trainer, 4th edition".)

    Here on MFP, to get calorie credit for weightlifting go under cardio & search for "Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)". It's not much of a credit, but it's better than nothing (which is what you get if you enter the work under "strength training"), & it's easier than trying to find every exercise.

    If you're planning to build muscle, make sure your protein macro is set toward the high end of what's considered healthy.
    http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/extra-protein-is-a-decent-dietary-choice-but-dont-overdo-it-201305016145
    The Institute of Medicine recommends 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight. For someone who weighs 150 pounds, that means 54 grams of protein per day.
    Another guideline is to make sure at least 15% of your daily calories come from protein.
    1500 cal x 0.15 = 225 cal from protein
    225 cal / 4 cal/g = 57 g protein

    Here's a PDF of the recommended daily intake (RDI's) for macronutrients.
    http://www.iom.edu/Global/News Announcements/~/media/C5CD2DD7840544979A549EC47E56A02B.ashx
    SOURCE: Dietary Reference Intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate. Fiber, Fat, Fatty Acids, Cholesterol, Protein, and Amino Acids (2002/2005).

    For an adult female, they say:
    protein 46 g / no less than 10% and no more than 35% of calories
    carbs 130g / 45-65%
    fat 20-35%
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    I bought 6 ($300) sessions with a personal trainer at my gym - she was great and the workouts were tough as nails. She showed me the right form to do the exercises correctly. Paying extra for nutritional guidance would be difficult for me to do - especially when there is a plethora of information online about eating plans as the other posters have noted. But is the fee out of line? I don't believe so - you are paying a consultant for their professional opinion / advice.

    Yes, I believe you are right. Maybe I was thinking along the lines that I needed guidance 3-4 days per week for a month or so to do things correctly and had to catch my breath! I have a good foundational knowledge of food and exercise to build on and that will be the plan. Mahalo!
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    Meal plans: cleaneating.com

    Any of the "Rules of Lifting" books, Tosca Reno's books for workouts. There are also tons of sites online that have 'workouts of the day' (they're not all crossfit). Daily Burn, Livestrong, youtube. All kinds of free stuff out there.

    Nice, I have bookmarked Clean Eating, thanks!
  • 808Kine
    808Kine Posts: 60 Member
    Apologies... this has gotten a bit long.
    I was a little curious about a personal trainer and found out for a pittance ($50 for a one hour session), I could take advantage of their service.
    For someone with experience or more training & education (a degree in exercise science vs. simply certification as a personal trainer), esp. in a larger metro area, that's about right.
    Someone who's recently certified would probably charge less. (When I'm finally certified, I plan to start at $25/hr.)
    You really don't need someone there every time you work out.
    In fact, that should be the goal of every personal trainer - clients who progress on their own & don't need hand-holding.
    In any case, it would be worth hiring someone for a couple of hours to design a program for you, explain how to do it (safe lifting, good form, etc.), how to progress on your own, walk you through one workout, etc.

    Maybe get a tuneup every 3 months? (That will also keep you honest about going to the gym, since you know you'll be accountable to someone else.)

    Just be sure that s/he is clear up front about what you want: a plan laid out so that you can work on your own. And get an estimate of how long that will take. It may be an initial 2-hour session to be thoroughly evaluated.

    Here's where you can search for trainers in your area who are certified by the American College of Sports Medicine:
    http://members.acsm.org/source/custom/Online_locator/OnlineLocator.cfm
    There is also a gal who, for $38 per day (one week min) can set me up with prepared meals based on my goals
    If she's designing the meal plan, providing the food, and cooking it for you, that's a deal.
    But with a bit of research, you can do just fine on your own, for much less money.
    I'm 5'6 and about 170ish
    According to BMI (here's a chart: http://www.shapeup.org/bmi/bmi6.pdf )
    at 5'6" you should be between 115 - 150 lb. So you don't have far to go weight-wise.
    You should be aiming to lose 0.5 - 1 lb per week for now, and 0.25 - 0.5 as you near your goal.

    150 lb x 10 cal/lb = 1500 cal to eat per day to get to 150 lb.
    Once you get there, you'd need 2250 cal per day to maintain that weight. (See below.)
    As you get close to your goal, ease the calories up until you're not losing weight any more, but not gaining.

    http://www.health.harvard.edu/healthbeat/HB_web/calorie-counting-made-easy.htm
    multiply your current weight by 15 — that’s roughly the number of calories per pound of body weight needed to maintain your current weight if you are moderately active. Moderately active means getting at least 30 minutes of physical activity a day
    Anyone have any suggestions about the best way to figure out a meal plan and doable strength training program independently? My goal is to gain a good deal of muscle, lose the fat and gain endurance in a reasonable amount of time.
    Meal plan:
    This calculator will tell you not only your BMI, but how many servings of various foods to eat to maintain that weight.
    If you enter your healthy goal weight from the BMI chart, this will help you plan your food intake.
    https://www.bcm.edu/research/centers/childrens-nutrition-research-center/healthyeatingcalculator/eatingCal.html

    Delicious recipes: http://www.tasteofhome.com/
    If you hover over 'recipes' in the bar menu, it will pop up another menu.
    On the top of the far right column are 'healthy recipes'.
    This site / magazine also has nutrition info for most of their recipes.

    Weight training:
    No matter which you're doing, you need to know the maximum amount you can lift, called the one-repetition maximum or 1RM.
    For building muscle, you want to do 1 or 2 sets of 8-12 repetitions of a weight that's 70-85% of your 1RM.
    For building endurance, do 1 or 2 sets of 15-20 repetitions of a weight that's 50-65% of your 1RM.

    Either way, start low on both weight & reps and work up.
    You should just be able to do the last 2-3 reps.
    When it gets easy to do the maximum # of reps, add 5 pounds and go back to the minimum # of reps.

    (From the American College of Sports Medicine's book "Resources for the Personal Trainer, 4th edition".)

    Here on MFP, to get calorie credit for weightlifting go under cardio & search for "Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)". It's not much of a credit, but it's better than nothing (which is what you get if you enter the work under "strength training"), & it's easier than trying to find every exercise.

    If you're planning to build muscle, make sure your protein macro is set toward the high end of what's considered healthy.
    http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/extra-protein-is-a-decent-dietary-choice-but-dont-overdo-it-201305016145
    The Institute of Medicine recommends 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight. For someone who weighs 150 pounds, that means 54 grams of protein per day.
    Another guideline is to make sure at least 15% of your daily calories come from protein.
    1500 cal x 0.15 = 225 cal from protein
    225 cal / 4 cal/g = 57 g protein

    Here's a PDF of the recommended daily intake (RDI's) for macronutrients.
    http://www.iom.edu/Global/News Announcements/~/media/C5CD2DD7840544979A549EC47E56A02B.ashx
    SOURCE: Dietary Reference Intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate. Fiber, Fat, Fatty Acids, Cholesterol, Protein, and Amino Acids (2002/2005).

    For an adult female, they say:
    protein 46 g / no less than 10% and no more than 35% of calories
    carbs 130g / 45-65%
    fat 20-35%


    No apologies, please :-) This really took some time and effort for you to reply and I thank you very much. I have copied the information and will visit the resources you have provided.....and if you are this thorough with your clients, the $50/hr will be well worth it!!! :happy: