Great Dallas Personal Trainer

October 15, 2009 by  

I’m a busy lady, but my Dallas personal trainer showed me that finding the time for getting fit is possible. I needed to get in fit, but every time I made up my mind that it was the right time, something would come up, forcing me to push my own well-being aside. Then I found out about about Lady Trainers To Go and thought it was worth a shot trying them out. I had girl friends that used them with great success and was eager to give them a try.

The main selling point for me was that the trainers are all female and they come teach you how to work out at your home or office. Who wouldn’t find convenient work outs appealing? I met with a personal trainer in Dallas and started getting fit immediatly. It was so simple and easy—I told my personal trainer what I needed and she told me how she’d get me the results. I was highly impressed at her level of expertise. I’ve met with a fitness trainer before at the local gym, and I almost never felt like their focus was on me, there were way too many distractions.

With my in-home trainer, I always get the all of the attention and focus I need in a zero distraction setting. More importantly, it’s in the comfort of my own home, this makes me feel truly at ease; especially since my fitness trainer  is a woman too. My personal trainer provides me a wide variety of exercises so I never get tired of exercising. My trainer also taught me ways to set aside time for working out. I was also able to learn about healthy eating from their nutritionist. Believe it, it is easy to fit working out into a busy daily routine. Sure it takes the right frame of mind, but a personal trainer Dallas like mine can help make it simpler.

Comments

5 Responses to “Great Dallas Personal Trainer”

  1. strough szto on June 3rd, 2010 12:40 am

    I had no idea that working out with a Dallas personal trainer could change my life so much. I knew that I was out of shape and I knew something had to be done. Unfortunately, I was at a loss as of where to start. I heard about Lady Trainers To Go and decided that maybe [...]

  2. komasteltr mahra on June 3rd, 2010 2:57 pm

    Personal Trainer in Dallas, Texas | Marcus Flemmings: Dallas Fitness TrainerFitness To UI specialize in full body…

  3. Fat Person on July 8th, 2010 11:47 am

    I won't dare look at a sample tray because of wonderful people like Nawanda. Why? I don't want to deal with those LOOKS. Those “You don't need to touch that, you fat, nasty slob!” type looks. It's not worth it to me.

    Now, I've seen two overweight women ask for a plastic plate at a McDonalds to store a piece of birthday cake one was holding in her BARE hand so they could make some Super Sized orders. (Yes, really.) It's shocking, unhealthy and you wish you could slap them for passing out the impression that all overweight people must go home and GORGE on lard for fun. Trust me, not all of us do.

    I'm an ovo-vegetarian who eats local, organic and almost never has sugar. I've got a license in the same education personal trainers go through too, so I know the mechanics and process of fitness. I also jog regularly and do weight training, but I'm still overweight, despite years of calorie tracking and balanced diets. Go figure.

    Often, people are overweight because they're depressed or feel hated by society. They give up caring, and the problem gets worse. Sometimes, “We Fat People” try and convince ourselves it might be all in our head; that people don't immediately judge us as worthless oinkers at the drop of a hat. Oh wait. Oops. YOU do.

    Thanks. Thanks for that, Nawanda. Way to make your fellow human beings feel like they deserve to be alive. You have a heart of gold in there, don't you? …Do you kick puppies, too?

    Whereas the author there makes a very valid point that I wasn't offended by, your comment I think really missed the mark on what the author was saying. I doubt the author is “bugged” by fat people, just on the basis of them being fat. If I may continue my conjecture, I assume they are bothered by a lack of self control and selfish, overly indulgent behavior.

    My 6'8″, 160 pound husband just almost entirely packed down a box of truffles by himself before crawling into bed, just now. (In case you can't picture what I meant by his size and weight, what I mean is he looks like a damn scarecrow.) This man pounds down a two liter bottle of soda in one sitting and sops it up with dozen doughnuts. It turns my stomach. One could write a rant about him managing to eat an entire tin of cookies out of the grocery sacks before getting home- but, Nawanda, I ask you: Is my piggy, food obsessed, SKINNY husband allowed to go outdoors in NawandaLand?

    Did you ever think how much it hurts to have someone like you treat us like we're not equally deserving as people, just because of what we look like, Nawanda? Do you even care?

    I doubt this will effect you at all, but I've said my piece.

    —The Overweight Health Nut

  4. Jen on September 7th, 2010 9:25 pm

    My husband would be considered quite overweight according to his BMI but it's only because of the sheer amount of muscle he has on in his body. He's one of the fittest guys I know and doesn't have a bit of fat anywhere! BMI is quite outdated and inaccurate, I agree, but what would you use instead? Other than a full-on appointment with a personal-trainer, I'm curious if there are any other measures out there? I think they should give a base percentage and then offer extra incentive to those who would do something like meet with a personal trainer…that way it's at the employees discretion…

  5. Amanda on October 2nd, 2010 2:11 am

    Just because you've been riding since you were 5 doesn't mean you're invincible. You're obviously not old enough to drive so you're still a small kid.

    What if you were there alone and something happened? How do you think he would feel?

    Also he's old. Old people are just….old.

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!