09-25-2008, 07:23 AM
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#16 (permalink)
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that's me on the left
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 893
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan Fanelli
This client that was not happy, felt that my programs were not intense enough. There seems to be another notion out there, that more is better, and you have to be exhausted after a workout to get results. I was told by a manager to "destroy her during her workout". I have a problem with this, because it goes against my philosophy in every way, and if she gets injured, its going to come down on me. Im not a drill sargeant, im a personal trainer.
I think what it comes down to IMO, is that I am the professional, and the client is coming to me because im supposed to know what im doing. Theres a difference sometimes between what the client wants, and what they need. I can understand that they are paying me and they feel I should do what they want, but in some cases like the one mentioned this might not happen. I would rather not train a client that doesn't trust me, and thinks they know what is right for them. But I agree that lack of communication is probably the reason im in this situation, and i'll adress the problem.
Thanks again.
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A couple of the posts in this earlier thread apply to your situation: Best for the client or what the client wants..
__________________
"Time and patience are the 2 elements that most people don't include in their plans."
-Alan Aragon
"The scale simply tells you how much the earth loves you on a particular day."
-Ogedei (Keith)
my log: The Big Stretch
graphs & data: daily weight & occasional BP
. (more graphs run down right hand side,
. latest weight at bottom of page)
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