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AIBU?

to think I'm too old, fat & uncool for their gym?

37 replies

MariefromStMoritz · 25/04/2013 07:04

OK, so I have recently returned to work after having a baby. Things have been extremely tight financially for the past year, but things are improving now that I am back at work. As a treat, I decided to join the gym for one month in order to kickstart a new fitness regime. I am not sure if I will continue with the gym after this, or do my own thing at home. I had major surgery when my DD was born along with some time in ICU so I feel I need the support of a gym and professional instructors, at least to begin with.

There are 2 gyms in my town, both very close to work. One is Fitness First, and I went there to sign up and told the salesman that I wanted to pay monthly. He tried every devious way possible to extract a full year's membership from me so in the end I didn't join up.

So the other gym here is marketed as a 'boutique' gym Grin. It is all very stylish and when I went to have a look around, everyone was very friendly. There was no hard sales tactics and I immediately fell in love with the gym and wanted to join up. But it is expensive. Like, more than double that of Fitness First. I dithered a bit, but then my DH said that because I had had such a difficult time physically over the past year, he was happy for me to join.

So, I joined this gym. On Day One, I had an Induction. I explained that I did not know how to use the machines so needed to be shown. I also needed a Programme that I could follow. He didn?t do any machines with me, but did all floor work which he called a ?Fitness Test?. I asked him if these exercise would feature in my Programme, and he said they would. So Day 2, I turn up and find my Programme. It is basically a list of machines. No settings, no timings. I complained. The management emailed me immediately and were very apologetic and made me an appointment with another trainer. So, Day 3. Induction with new trainer. She also did lunges, etc with me but when I asked her about a Programme, she said she didn?t do them! So back to square one. I complained again and the Head Trainer said he couldn?t see me until next Tuesday, but in the meantime he would write me a Programme and leave it at Reception. So, Day 4, today. Pick up my Programme, do the cardio, get to the machines? I couldn?t get them to work. I was pulling and pushing and looking for an ?on? switch? nothing. I felt so stupid. There was nobody around to ask as the trainers were both with PT clients, so I showered and left.

I feel so upset because all I wanted was a written Programme that I could follow: what machines to use, which settings and for how long. And to be shown how to actually use the machines. Is that too much to ask?

As I was leaving I looked around at this beautiful, stylish place with all these beautiful, stylish people and it occurred to me: maybe they don?t actually want me there. I am old and fat (compared to their other clients) and I just don?t look the part. AIBU to think this?

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Walkacrossthesand · 26/04/2013 18:06

3 stone! Well done, McPie! Flowers Hope these responses have boosted your confidence, OP.

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McPie · 26/04/2013 08:13

My first ever class was Body Combat (I was crapping myself) and yes it was tough but there are different levels for everyone to follow.
If you can get to any of the Body classes then I would give them a try as they are a good introduction and all my instructors are wonderful.
I have went from that first class at the start of september to getting ready to do my 13th and 14th class this week, I am signed up for Tough Mudder in August and to top it all off I have lost 3 stone Grin.

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ilovepowerhoop · 25/04/2013 17:28

zumba is great but can depend on the instructor - I did zumba and powerhoop today and will do powerhoop tomorrow too - the same instructor takes both classes and she is a great motivator.

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Fillyjonk75 · 25/04/2013 17:23

Have you tried Zumba, OP? That's one where you can definitely work at your own level.

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Mitchy1nge · 25/04/2013 17:15

I LOVE my council run (although privatised I think) leisure centre so much more than the shiny Next Generation one I used to go to

you must have more than two gyms? Even our not very big town (20000 people) has about five

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ValenciaOrange · 25/04/2013 16:55

Do you have any council run gyms in your area. Here there is a gym in most leisure centres, and you can only use them once you have done an induction hour with a trainer from the centre. They show you how to use all the machines etc. If you want a personalized program they will work one out for you but that is on a separate session.

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Mitchy1nge · 25/04/2013 16:51

have never heard of anyone being too unfit for classes before Hmm obviously some classes are courses (Pilates?) and might be hard to join if you haven't done it before

your gym sounds really horrible, isn't there anything else at all?

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ilovepowerhoop · 25/04/2013 16:47

p.s. it took me months to work up the courage to do body attack and it really wasnt as bad as I imagined it to be - even then they do show lower impact alternative moves you can do. It is like super high impact aerobics with lots of jumping jacks (I do the lower impact version of them as I am fearful for my pelvic floor!)

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ilovepowerhoop · 25/04/2013 16:44

bullshit - you only improve your fitness by going to the classes and challenging yourself. There will be lower impact options and you start with them and work your way up to higher impact options. One of the first classes I went to was body pump (at the ripe old age of 35 and over 15 stones in weight!) - start with light weights, get the technique right and then start increasing the weights to challenge your body.

I also started going to an aerobics and legs bums and tums class and again go at the pace that suits you. Find out what classes there are and go along to one or more to see what they are like - you dont need their permission!

Dont let them dent your confidence and get exercising

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Walkacrossthesand · 25/04/2013 16:42

PS if your gym does Les Mills classes, avoid body combat & body attack initially - they are tough!! Body pump you can do with very light weights, and body balance is lovely - like t'ai chi/yoga/Pilates.

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Walkacrossthesand · 25/04/2013 16:38

Sounds fishy - as someone up thread said, the trainers are touting for business, the classes aren't usually boot-camp style and the trainers arent usually the class teachers so may have no idea what classes are about!! Have a look at the list, maybe arrange to be on the premises when a likely-looking one is starting & have a chat to the teacher...

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MariefromStMoritz · 25/04/2013 16:17

Yes, they have plenty of classes, but I was deemed not fit enough to do the classes by the first trainer Sad

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Walkacrossthesand · 25/04/2013 14:55

Does your gym have studio classes included in the membership? Body conditioning, legs bums & tums, step & tone... If so, I'd recommend going along to some - they are heaps friendlier than the gym, you get a chance to get to know regular classmates, and the 'moves' are similar to the floor work that the trainers will do with you. Keep at it - you'll develop your own routine and start to feel less self-conscious I'm sure. (I'm heavy & old btw Grin

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MariefromStMoritz · 25/04/2013 13:08

yabu to think its about you and how you look

they are just shite!!!

Ha ha! This made me laugh so loudly, everyone in my office is looking at me Grin

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fromparistoberlin · 25/04/2013 12:05

yabu to think its about you and how you look

they are just shite!!!

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niceguy2 · 25/04/2013 12:00

Gym's are crap. Full of people watchers. I also hate how sweaty the air gets and i find it hard to motivate myself. The treadmill bores me to tears and the weights are always monopolised by body builders.

I discovered BMF several years ago and it's got me fitter than I've ever been. People talk to you, you have a laugh. Many of the regulars will be coming to my wedding later this year. There's people from all walks and all shapes & sizes. The instructors push you and the team spirit motivate me far more than watching the TV on a treadmill. I also never have to sniff anyone's sweat since i'm outdoors. An hour doing that and I'm far more knackered than a couple of hours at the gym.

Couldn't recommend it enough if you are self conscious about the gym. I find they are soulless places.

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Fillyjonk75 · 25/04/2013 11:47

Going to the gym again has made a vast difference to me. But you have to decide what you want from a gym. And the one you're at doesn't sound very good at all. But what I would say is, while full inductions, chapter and verse on the equipment, fitness and fat tests and a full programme used to be par for the course in the inductions at gyms, they now try and sell you personal training to deliver this. However, if you really don't know what you are doing, I would recommend a few personal training sessions anyway.

I had a conversation with a mum yesterday that made me realise I got very different things from my gym than she got from hers. I just want decent equipment, for it not to be too busy, and a good range of classes at times I can attend. I pay £36 a month at the council gym. I go to the gym, work out for just over an hour and go home again.

She pays twice as much, goes to a posh gym, sits in the jacuzzi with her friends, has nice lunches in the cafe, using it more as a social/country club.

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LessMissAbs · 25/04/2013 11:41

Please, please stick with the gym, if only to dilute the number of annoying, middle aged men who strut about staring at us few women there! (especially the vile one in tight, shiny cycling shorts that revealed the entire structure of his private parts, who insisted on jiggling up and down on the mat next to me, unfortunately he had the face of an 80 year old). Honestly its not all like that though!

But...you have to be a bit self-motivated OP! Stop complaining and get doing. The weights machines are easy enough to work out yourself, or life free weights - google the technique on the internet, or simply ask another gym user or instructor - people aren't mind readers so if you don't ask, you don't do.

Much as personal trainers can be useful for people who've never trained before, IMHO they are an expensive waste of money. They can't give you self motivation, and it is perfectly possible for anyone to do gym work on their own. Stuff what other people think, just get on with it and do it!

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ilovepowerhoop · 25/04/2013 11:33

I go to the local council run gym and you can pay as you go or sign up for membership (I pay around £35 per month and can use the gym and swimming pool at that sports centre or at any others in the same local authority). The induction is included in the membership and they go through how to use the machines, what settings to use, etc. You can see one of the instructors to set up a programme for you too - also included in the membership price. I dont go to the gym much but to try to do 5-6 classes per week of body pump, zumba, powerhoop, etc. I find the classes more social.

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2rebecca · 25/04/2013 11:22

You shouldn't need a personal trainer with a good gym. I would phone up and tell them that you need someone to go through the machines with you asap as at the moment your money is wasted. I just go to the local council gym but the machines and how to work them was discussed. When I went to a private gym years ago on joining I was given a personal plan with how many reps on what settings etc but now I just start low and build up to what I'm comfortable with. If there are machines I'm unfamiliar with I either ask for help or watch someone else use the machine.
I would be refusing to leave until I had been shown how to work the machines. It shouldn't matter if the trainers are with PT clients, the gym should ensure it always has a spare trainer to deal with any problems. You have paid for a service and should be making them provide it. An induction of a gym should ensure you can work all the machines in the gym that you want to use.
Having said that with most machines you can press the buttons and get the hang of them fairly quickly, or watch other people.

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Cherriesarelovely · 25/04/2013 11:08

Sorry, one more thing. I trained with my PT outside most times with very little equipment and had a tiny amount of equipment at home, gym ball, a few weights, skipping rope.

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Cherriesarelovely · 25/04/2013 11:07

Just a thought, OP. If you are going to spend all that on a gym maybe you would do better with a personal trainer? I had one for nearly a year when I was training for a marathon and we are still friends and train as friends now. She was absolutely brilliant. A super healthy, vibrant, down to earth woman in her 50s, VAST amount of experience. It was such a positive experience and I still follow the programmes today when I can.

I would do a session with her once a week (usually) and she would set me the programme for the following week. I have never felt so all over fit and well.

Another suggestion is MUTU system which is a online training thing for mums after they have had babies. The woman who runs is is so lovely and positive, you get a programme to follow which includes videos and you can connect with other women who are following the programm online.

Might not appeal to you at all but just wanted to share the things that have worked well for me as someone interested in fitness who has never enjoyed gyms. Good luck, it sounds like you have had a very tough time of it in the last year or so.

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MariefromStMoritz · 25/04/2013 10:59

Ooh, Twattybollocks, you own a gym. Would it be really cheeky to ask what you would recommend I do to get the most out of this month? Thanks.

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pinkdelight · 25/04/2013 09:10

If you've lost a week due to their incompetence, demand an extra week free, or some other kind of discount. If you're paying a fortune, it's just not good enough. Or get your money back and try the manager at Fitness First again. Depends how much you've got to spend. Like someone above, I did a short period with a PT not at a gym and we never used machines, but it was way more effective in getting me back to fitness swiftly and safely. A lot of them do discounts if you book a block of five or 10 sessions.

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Twattybollocks · 25/04/2013 08:58

It's just a shit gym I'm afraid. Dh and I own a gym which is very much a spit and sawdust job, it's not sleek and shiny, but all the people who go there go to get fit/weight train and not to ponce round in Lycra lookin good. I suggest you look round for a small family run gym not a chain and when you go in look at what people are wearing. Cycling shorts trainers and a tee shirt are the norm in our gym for ladies, as many of our clients are 40+ and in any case they don't go to the gym to pose they go to train!
Also somewhere that does Single sessions would be a good bet so you don't end up signing up for somewhere that you don't feel comfortable with.

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