There are some good discussions going on here. I'm just going to comment on some things people have said
Then, there are trainers that look the part and to be honest just CRAP in term of training skill. Half the time, they are admiring themselves in the mirror while the trainee is working out.
So true.
Intresting topic.. I judge fairly easily but when it comes to a PT I need them to have a good knowldge, but something that I need from a PT is a good personality. Make jokes and make the work out just a little easier. I had one PT who was an intense very large man who made me alot stronger but I wanted to cry everytime I got home haha. Now I have a PT who is just as knowldgable but gives me support and is more of a friend. I come home feeling great now
Yeah that's so true. My PT is a friend and sometimes, it's not a good idea to train friends, but she is more of my mum's friend, but she is fantastic. I feel that I can tell her ANYTHING and she never puts me down, always focuses on my positives, we can laugh, she pushes me at the right times, doesn't push me when she knows I'm at breaking point physically, I always feel good when I leave our sessions. She'll ask where i'm at before every session.
I judge trainers based on the people they have trained. I'd rather train with some old oly coach with medals under his belt than with some guy who's been lifting since he was 12 and got his certs from a 2 hour online course.
Yeah, i've done my certificate III in fitness, and some of the guys that were there, have obviously been pushed by their parents or whatever to do it, because they just have NO EMPATHY. They are your typical footballers and really, the only clients they will be training are footballers. I could never see them being sympathetic to overweight people, they would laugh and make jokes about one of the older ladies that was there, and snigger at people who couldn't do the exercises. It's a disgrace.
b/c I believe the way you present yourself is your biggest advertisement.
Exactly
Apparently she was always really heavy as a child, so her current weight is actually a big improvement for her. As so many have said, you don't know what people do outside of the time you see them... you also don't know where they're coming from originally. But I have to say, her classes have given me some pretty fabulous abs and thighs, so she does know what she's doing! =)
I always try and remember this when I see overweight people. You don't where they have been before this and where they will be later on, or the context.
I'd like to give some insight into this. I plan to do exercise and sport science at Uni, but my UAI wasn't very good, so I have to do a diploma of sport to get into uni first. And this diploma involves my cert III and IV in fitness, so I can be a PT if I want, it was never really my plan, but if I decide to I can. Now, I have to admit I am a little overweight, and I am not the fittest person out there, but I do LOVE sport and exercise.
I will NOT become a personal trainer until I have lost weight and become fitter, and done all the things I plan to teach people. My answer to this thread is yes, I do judge trainers by their looks, not entirely, but to an extent, yes. There is no way I could teach people to do things when i had not done them myself. Sure I can reel off everything I learn in my course, but if I can't lose weight myself, how the hell can I tell other people to do it? There's no way I could do that. I would want to be able to show my clients how to do it, with technique and everything. Think about it, how weird would it be if you were like training with a PT and you were outdoing them in everything? Like if you were running or something? Too weird.
I know it's different when the looks are deceiving and they are stronger than they appear, that's different. And I know trainers who are older and have a wealth of experience but don't look like they've done it, it's just ageing. So I would definantly check out people they had trained first and find out their qualifications and everything.