Had my gym induction today...
Cornwallis68
Posts: 16 Member
... and came out feeling horrible :-(.
It's taken me forever to pluck up the courage to join, and I was actually shaking when I got there. The instructors were really helpful and polite, but I guess I had expected something a little gentler (I've never done anything like this before, and am quite overweight and unfit). The induction was 1 hour, and I suppose I was expecting to be shown how to use everything and given some guidance on levels etc. But I found it really really hard - I was sweating loads, and after a while just wanted to stop and get out of there. The cardio stuff was fine - though harder than I would have predicted, but the strength stuff was almost impossible - I just couldn't move some of the weights he set at all, and was mortified as he had to lower them and lower them - and by the time we got to the 'body weight' exercises I was so tired and embarrassed at my incompetence that I just couldn't manage them.
I don't know if I can face going back. Would it be really pointless to just do the cardio stuff to start with and build up? Or to do half the strength exercises that were suggested? I feel like if I don't go back, that'll be it - I'll never manage it again. But we have a follow-up session booked for three weeks' time and I just know there is no way I am going to be able to do what was recommended.
Feeling very low. Can anyone advise me on the best course of action?
It's taken me forever to pluck up the courage to join, and I was actually shaking when I got there. The instructors were really helpful and polite, but I guess I had expected something a little gentler (I've never done anything like this before, and am quite overweight and unfit). The induction was 1 hour, and I suppose I was expecting to be shown how to use everything and given some guidance on levels etc. But I found it really really hard - I was sweating loads, and after a while just wanted to stop and get out of there. The cardio stuff was fine - though harder than I would have predicted, but the strength stuff was almost impossible - I just couldn't move some of the weights he set at all, and was mortified as he had to lower them and lower them - and by the time we got to the 'body weight' exercises I was so tired and embarrassed at my incompetence that I just couldn't manage them.
I don't know if I can face going back. Would it be really pointless to just do the cardio stuff to start with and build up? Or to do half the strength exercises that were suggested? I feel like if I don't go back, that'll be it - I'll never manage it again. But we have a follow-up session booked for three weeks' time and I just know there is no way I am going to be able to do what was recommended.
Feeling very low. Can anyone advise me on the best course of action?
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Replies
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Why are you already giving up?0
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You have to start somewhere. Do what you can manage and go from there. Don't give up and keep you head up.0
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Go at your own pace. You don't have to do what they have shown you. Go with the lowest weights and move up from there. Start with a few exercises and move up from there. I was like that when I first started a gym. Same with cardio, start slow and move your way up. I would give the gym another try.0
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Don't give up.0
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Just start really slow...you can absolutely do this!! Start with just some light walking, or a machine that you feel comfortable with. As for the weights, do what you can handle, but be sure to push yourself too--you wanna get your heart rate going!
For a newcomer, I can see how the gym would be intimidating but the more you go back and push yourself to do so, you will start to enjoy your time there more & more. Just give it some time & soon it will be a routine!0 -
Don't give up. You're not the only one who gets started and can't do what you think you SHOULD be able to do. Everyone overestimates themselves in the beginning. The induction is more of a way to gauge your fitness level than it is to make you feel bad. It's the trainers job. He sees it everyday. Now he knows where to start and you can start progressing!0
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you shouldn't feel low, you should feel proud!!! what you did today was scary and it took a lot of courage not only to show up, but to stay for the entire hour. when i first started my weight loss journey i was in such terrible shape that the most i could manage was 15 minutes of walking 2.5 mph on the treadmill, but i kept at it and now i can go for 60+ minutes on the elliptical. if all you can bring yourself to do right now is cardio then that's certainly better than nothing. but i think you're capable of quite a bit more than you think you are... don't sell yourself short! :happy:0
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I manage a gym and induct new members.
Our gym is different. We are smaller and more interactive with members which means we get to know them and get to help them more, rather than just put them through a general introduction. We assist with motivation and look at pairing people for training partners.
We have a lot of members with obesity issues, various health issues and in a lot of cases have families joining to support one member who needs others around them. We also have signed members with mild intellectual disabilities.
It's a shame that you seem to be at a gym with the "general" approach that many have. For most, the induction process works but obviously not in your case.
I would advise going back. You made the first step in joining and you obviously know you need to be there.
Forget what happened at the induction. You basically learnt how to use the machines in the process, so now you can go at your own pace!
Is there a time that is quieter at the gym? Perhaps phone and ask? Go in when it's quieter, take some motivating music on an ipod and slowly try the cardio equipment to get used to it. Keep an eye out in the gym for somebody who looks as timid as you feel, and perhaps smile at them - let them know that you now how they are feeling - you might find that over a short period of time you establish that they feel the same as you and they might be happy to "buddy up" with you for training.
Personal trainers are there to help you. Whilst you might not be in a position financially to hire one, you can always ask advice on the floor on how to use equipment specifically for your needs.
Joining the gym when you are just starting is a massive step. I have had members in tears joining because they know they need to but they are just terrified so I completely appreciate how you feel.
Happy to talk to you and give advice if you need it - there are probably lots of tips I can help you with0 -
Most instructors give you the weights that are heavy so they can see where your failure point (where you are struggling to get a set). I had to do the same thing when I stated, but once the instructor knew where I was strength wise, he would work from that point on and increase your reps, or weight.
Also why are you giving up so soon??? You have got to start somewhere.... Remember "no pain, not gain" You won't do great if you give up after one day...0 -
Please go back! All I do in the gym is cardio and I am losing weight quite well. The machines at my gym tell me how many calories I have burnt as I exercise. You don't need to burn a lot at first- maybe just start with walking fast on the treadmill for 15 minutes and the next day do 20 mins- you will soon build yourself up to a level where you are burning some serious calories! As you become more confident in the gym go on to try other machines. The induction is the most horrible bit - it goes up from here!0
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I was 120 pounds over weight when I started working out. I just started walking n the treadmill ( 3.5 speed) with in a moth I was doing incline (Started at 6% and up it every 5-10 minutes by 1%) I would workout during the week 45 to 50 minutes and on the weekends at least an hour. I would also do long hikes with my friend for 2 hours on the weekend. It has been almost 7 months. I can now do some jogging and have lost almost 70 pounds. You do what you can everyday or you can take one day off a week but dont give up. If I can do it you can to. I am going to start doing weights soon but Cardio is what my doctor wanted me to start with. Don't give up, it hurts and is hard at first but it will get better,0
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You've joined so that's a great start.
If I were you I'd start by doing JUST cardio, maybe the cross trainer. Build your time up on this over the following weeks/months. The weight loss and cardio imrpovements over that time will hopefully make you more comfortable and capable of doing tougher exercises.
The important thing at the moment is to get into a routine of going to the gym, and seeing how you imporve (ie more minutes each time on the cross trainer).
Once you get going and make improvements you'll naturally push yourself harder and look for different exercises/target areas etc.
Get the weight off and your fitness up on whatever machine you feel comfortable on for now.0 -
You have been through the hardest and the worst part. I was a hiker for years, but never a gym person. I started last year at a local Y and found a class "Jump Start" also known as "Circuit Training" that was an excellent way to begin. The class mixed both cardio and weights, all exercises very easy to adapt to a range of abilities. Look for this. After success here I happily advanced to other more challenging classes. I was very surprised to learn that I liked the classes. I also spend a good amount of time on treadmills and such - I use and iPod and value the solitary experience.
It also sounds as if the gym you selected may not be well suited to your needs. Whoever was providing you with the induction should have chosen weights too light so that you feel a positive reinforcement/surprise. Very poor on their part. Look around the gym - is this a place that inspires you and a place where you feel comfortable? If not, explore other options. Your experience should not include tears.
If there are not appropriate classes, I would suggest that you limit yourself to cardio machines - bike, treadmill and elyptical for a while. What is the most important thing for you now is to become comfortable with the gym and exercise. Once you are, you wil likely to be eager to add weight training.
The best most effective exercise machine/routine is the one that you will do.
Go for it! It is better than the alternative.0 -
Please, please do not let yourself give up! I think almost all of us remember the first time we stepped into the gym, and remembered where we had to start, and what we felt like, but I absolutely promise you that you will see tremendous improvements as time goes on, so please do not be discouraged. I know a lot of people are embarrassed and shy about it as well, but to be completely honest, everyone in a professional gym is there for themselves- they aren't people watching, or even have a clue as to how much weight you are or aren't lifting. They are concentrating on their own workouts. When you go back (Yes, you WILL go back! ), focus strictly on yourself, and only what you have to do in THAT moment to achieve your workout goal for the day. You will amaze yourself as time goes on, I promise.0
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Absolutely don't give up! I'd barely been to the gym more than a handful of times in my life, and am still only barely competent at cardio and strength exercises, but I keep forcing myself back 3-4 times each week. When I first signed up, I had the option to do a free "fitness evaluation". At first I was super hesitant, but after signing up with MFP and really decided to change, I went for it. And I hated it. It was murderously hard - I had to literally lever myself in and out of chairs for the next 3 days or something, and hobble around. And then I signed up to have the guy who'd given me the evaluation be my personal trainer for a while! I only see him once a week, but it makes a huge difference in so many ways. It's made me realize that I almost NEVER push myself as hard as I can when I work out alone, and has given me a better way to judge what a really good, intense work out should be like. It's a way to keep myself committed - I can't just decide I don't feel like going to the gym that day, and knowing I'm supposed to see him makes me more inclined to go all the other days, so that I'll be more prepared and won't feel like such a complete flop when I DO see him. He's shown me a ton of things that, even when our sessions are over or I don't see him any longer, I know I'll be able to do, and incorporate into my own routine. Having seen him enough, he knows my body, and we've talked about what I want to achieve, and he's been great in showing me exactly how to reach those goals - some of the stuff I'd been doing before, for example, was totally extraneous in terms of getting the results I wanted! And I think most importantly, and to speak to your feeling very down about your induction, it's taught me what I'm truly capable of in a really basic way. Whether or not I'm able to complete a certain number of sets, at a certain weight, or whatever, I know that I can always TRY and that I can't really expect anything worse than being sore for a few days! It always feels like something scary could happen, and I'm still scared each week, but every time I'm reminded that nothing DOES happen, and I've come to realize that what I'm scared of more than the exercise is my doubt in myself and my ability to do things...and so the only way to change that is keep at it and KNOW I can do those things! That was a little ramble-y, so I don't know if it makes sense, but absolutely keep going - change may take a while, but slow and steady wins the race!0
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Congratulations on conquering your fears and making that first trip..that's a great success!
The bottom line is that if just doing cardio is going to get you back to the gym, then just do cardio. For real the most important thing is to get there and get moving. 90% of us are intimidated by our first visit to a gym, but if you keep going eventually you will feel like you own the place and you will learn that people of all shapes, sizes and fitness levels can be found there.
Here is why I do urge you to consider the strength training as well, and I promise I am speaking from personal experience. If you are to weak to lift anything above your body weight, this is making your all-day-every-day-normal life harder on you. It really won't take *too* much work or time for you to see an improvement, and it will carry over into so many little things and make your life a lot easier. Things like getting into and out of the car, carrying groceries, picking things up off the floor, etc etc, will no longer tax you. So that's just something to keep in mind.0 -
First of all CONGRATULATIONS!!! You took the biggest step...just walking in the front door.
You can totally manage the rest. Your trainer never should have started you with heavy weights in the first place.
You can get an awesome workout using the basic 2 lb. weights starting out. This will show you how to use them CORRECTLY and get you comfortable in the gym.
I joined my gym 1 year ago.It was my first time ever in a gym in my life (I'm 54yrs old). I MADE my husband come with me cause I couldn't walk in alone. One year later I feel awesome and look amazing and am now getting certified to be a fitness trainer.
YOU CAN TOTALLY DO THIS!0 -
There is a lot of good stuff in your post: you conquered your fear and finally worked up the nerve to go, you got in a great workout that is going to wake up muscles you never knew you had, you have a baseline now. The great part is that you can ONLY go up from here. You are going to get stronger, you are going to get fitter, you are going to develop more endurance. Imagine how you will feel a month from now when you put up a new post about how you increased your weights by 5/10 pounds and can lift more. Your scale will drop a few more pounds and your body will feel stronger. NEVER quit. NEVER NEVER NEVER. You have done the hardest part already: starting!!
Great job to you for "surviving" your first workout.0 -
Wow - I'm glad I posted, you have all really helped. Thank you for taking the time to reply.
A sort of supplementary question: with the strength stuff, is there a kind of lower limit below which it's pointless? In other words, if the instructor recommended I do two sets of 12 on each machine (I'm not sure of the terminology here, sorry), but I feel able to start with just one set of 6 (for example), is there any point in me doing that, or should I just do cardio until I get fit enough to do the full set?
Hope that makes sense - I guess what has been making me so low is feeling that I didn't even meet the instructor's baseline, like I was wasting his - and my - time. Logically I know that can't be the case, but it's how I felt.0 -
Go at your own pace. You don't have to do what they have shown you. Go with the lowest weights and move up from there. Start with a few exercises and move up from there. I was like that when I first started a gym. Same with cardio, start slow and move your way up. I would give the gym another try.
^^ this. My journey started with no exercise for 2 1/2 months (lost 21-23 pounds)...then I added some cardio for roughly the next 2 months (lost 16-18 more pounds). then I started to add resistance training...and finally HIIT. keep in mind that nutrition is 80% of the fat loss equation. so, when you venture into exercise, do something that you are likely to keep up with. over time, you will want to challenge yourself, but not so much in the beginning. just moving is a good start.0 -
Wow - I'm glad I posted, you have all really helped. Thank you for taking the time to reply.
A sort of supplementary question: with the strength stuff, is there a kind of lower limit below which it's pointless? In other words, if the instructor recommended I do two sets of 12 on each machine (I'm not sure of the terminology here, sorry), but I feel able to start with just one set of 6 (for example), is there any point in me doing that, or should I just do cardio until I get fit enough to do the full set?
Hope that makes sense - I guess what has been making me so low is feeling that I didn't even meet the instructor's baseline, like I was wasting his - and my - time. Logically I know that can't be the case, but it's how I felt.
everyone has a different baseline. its fine to start off with 1 set of 6 reps and progress from there when you are ready.0 -
Hey Cornwallis,
please DON'T feel intimidated. I can tell you one thing: Nobody in a gym cares about other peoples workouts. They're occupied with their own workouts, their own progress or the spots of their bodies they want to improve. (No matter how fit or toned or muscular somone is: they all have something they want to improve - that's basically why they're working out).
However, I can relate to your feelings. 3 years ago, I started to work out at a local gym. I wasn't overweight, but I was pretty flabby and unfit. I kept thinking that everybody else was watching my workout or care about the weights I was or wasn't lifting. I used to admire a female trainer at my gym who had a really nice body. Of course, she could run so much faster and lift so much heavier than I did. I felt bad about that.
I have been working out regularly since then and it really has done wonders for me. I lost 30 pounds and now I'm lean, fit and toned. My body actually looks like that other woman's body now and it feels great! And now I sometimes see new members at my gym, acting reluctantly around me the way I did in the beginning. They peek at my weights or my speed and compare it to their own. What a waste of time! I couldn't care less - I'm occupied with my own struggle. So I kill my legs with some serious sets of squats with an additional 30kg, and they just do a couple with their own bodyweight? Whatever. The point is: I'm pushing myself to MY limit - and they're pushing THEIRS! That's what workout is all about, no matter if you're just starting or if you've been working out for years.
So, please: Nobody in that gym is going to judge you (or even care about you). The only person who's going to care about your training - is you! Don't dissapoint yourself. You've made the most important step at all: You've started. Now just go ahead, push yourself, take one step after another. In the beginning you're going to see a really huge progress every week and you're going to see and feel the difference very fast! Sometimes you're going to hate your workout, but if you push yourself through it, you're going to be very proud of yourself, I guarantee! :-)0 -
Wow - I'm glad I posted, you have all really helped. Thank you for taking the time to reply.
A sort of supplementary question: with the strength stuff, is there a kind of lower limit below which it's pointless? In other words, if the instructor recommended I do two sets of 12 on each machine (I'm not sure of the terminology here, sorry), but I feel able to start with just one set of 6 (for example), is there any point in me doing that, or should I just do cardio until I get fit enough to do the full set?
Hope that makes sense - I guess what has been making me so low is feeling that I didn't even meet the instructor's baseline, like I was wasting his - and my - time. Logically I know that can't be the case, but it's how I felt.
Whatever you can handle - start with it and work your way up. There's no "lowest limit". Every single bit you do is better than not doing anything.
Also, I think the instructor didn't set a baseline he was expecting you to meet. He must have been sort of testing out what you could and what you couldn't handle, in order to work up from there. You didn't disappoint him, it was just some kind of test of your overall fitness.0 -
Does this gym have personal trainers? From what I experienced, they may have tried to get you to feel inadequate so you feel the need to get a personal trainer.
As far as getting started with strength training, work your way up. Try starting with 3 sets of 8 and if that is impossible lower the weight slightly. You don't want it to be easy but it still needs to be challenging. You are going to want to build a baseline and work your way up from there. Once you can do 3 sets of 8 then up the weight or reps or sets. Same with cardio, when I started at the gym, I could only last 5 minutes on the elliptical. I added a minute or two every week until I could do 30-45 minutes. You didn't get to where you are overnight and you aren't going to get to where you want to be overnight.
I hope this helps, I know the gym is intimidating but you have as much a right to be there as anyone else! You made a wonderful first step, now just put one foot in front of the other and keep pushing through!0 -
:flowerforyou:Wow - I'm glad I posted, you have all really helped. Thank you for taking the time to reply.
A sort of supplementary question: with the strength stuff, is there a kind of lower limit below which it's pointless? In other words, if the instructor recommended I do two sets of 12 on each machine (I'm not sure of the terminology here, sorry), but I feel able to start with just one set of 6 (for example), is there any point in me doing that, or should I just do cardio until I get fit enough to do the full set?
Hope that makes sense - I guess what has been making me so low is feeling that I didn't even meet the instructor's baseline, like I was wasting his - and my - time. Logically I know that can't be the case, but it's how I felt.
Every time you use your muscles, they will get stronger. There is nothing except sitting still that's not worth your time
Yes, you will improve more as you push yourself more, but a very important part of the process is learning what that healthy push feels like so that you can make yourself tired and sore without making yourself stressed or unhappy.
Also..you should really not be worrying about what this instructor thinks of you. Your gym dues are paying his salary..he is there to HELP you not judge you. Take whatever you can learn from him and chuck the rest out the window.
Everything that you do will help you and make you stronger. And hopefully will give you some boost in your confidence as well0 -
I know you might have felt overwhelmed and discouraged, but, trust me, you did just fine.
A large number of the people I have dealt with over my many years in this profession have been severely deconditioned--due to age, medical issues, lack of activity, or some combination of all three.
Here is the secret to "exercise training" --unless you have severe medical limitations, ANY body can become more fit. Our bodies have an almost miraculous ability to adapt to whatever they are asked to do on a regular basis.
There is NO STARTING POINT that is "too low" to be effective. The key is to find a level of activity that is A) more than what you are used to doing and something you can tolerate comfortably and without excessive strain. What the actual number is, is irrelevant.
If that means walking on a treadmill @ 1.5 mph for 5 min, or doing only 10lbs on a leg press, so be it. That's the starting point.
And you WILL improve.
It is quite common that I find that certain clients cannot do the minimum amount of weight on a particular machine. No problem--we just find another exercise.
I'm sorry you felt embarrassed by the lowering weight. Sometimes that happens--it's not necessarily the trainer's fault. With a new client, even after doing an assessment, you sometimes miss the mark when setting an initial workload.
Remember this: The "baseline" is not a fixed minimum. I am not sure how much time the instructor spent with you, but there ARE NO FIXED GUIDELINES--NO AMOUNT OF WEIGHT OR NUMBERS OF REPS AND SETS THAT ARE APPLICABLE TO EVERYONE. In other words there is NO WAY you could not "meet the instructor's baseline", because there is no such thing.
The only "baseline" is the level of work that you can comfortably tolerate--If you didn't "meet the baseline", it's because the "baseline" was wrong, period.
Do whatever it takes to gut it out and go back--and go back again. It shouldn't take more than a few sessions for you to start to feel more comfortable and confident--I know this will happen, so don't give up.0 -
Wow - I'm glad I posted, you have all really helped. Thank you for taking the time to reply.
A sort of supplementary question: with the strength stuff, is there a kind of lower limit below which it's pointless? In other words, if the instructor recommended I do two sets of 12 on each machine (I'm not sure of the terminology here, sorry), but I feel able to start with just one set of 6 (for example), is there any point in me doing that, or should I just do cardio until I get fit enough to do the full set?
Hope that makes sense - I guess what has been making me so low is feeling that I didn't even meet the instructor's baseline, like I was wasting his - and my - time. Logically I know that can't be the case, but it's how I felt.
Start with just 6 if that's all you can do. If you stick with it, you'll find yourself able to do more and more. Pretty soon you'll be able to do all of the reps he said without a problem. At that point, up the weights.
Don't worry about his time. That's what he's paid for. And it's definitely not a waste of your time, unless you don't stick with it. Remember, you can't compare yourself to anyone else. At least you are up doing something! As I heard someone say, "Even at your slowest pace you are still lapping the person sitting on the couch!" So true. All of us have had to start somewhere. I'm going to have to essentially start again because I'm having stomach issues and can't keep enough calories down to be able to exercise. When they fix whatever the problem is (doc thinks it's gallstones), I will have to hit the gym again and I will probably have lost some of my progress. But there's nothing to do but just start again and do what I can to get back to where I was.
YOU CAN DO THIS! Hang in there.0 -
I went back :-)
I was absolutely dreading it, but I went back. And it was OK.
I didn't manage anything like what the instructor suggested, but I *did* manage a whole lot more than I expected I would. And I know I will go back again.
Thanks.0 -
I know you already got a load of replies but I just wanted to say that you did the right thing going back. Don't feel bad not doing what the instrustor gave you, start at your own comfort level and then slowly push yourself that bit harder. You've taken the 1st most important step, keep it up.
You will be delighted when you can increase the weights. THe key is to ask yourself is really pushing my body? If it feels like it isn't, up the weights. Push yourself, one step at a time. GOod on ye for going back. Brave and courageous.0 -
Awesome, I'm so glad you went!0
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