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Yeah, I’m in a chair, but you look worse for wear than I do: Part 1

The following is a guest post by Jim Smith. If you’re interested in doing a guest post please refer to the contribution page.

The biggest thing that motivates me is when people tell me that I can’t get fit. I’m disabled and have been since birth. Being told that I couldn’t become fit or will end up dying prematurely is one of the worst things anybody can do.

Fitness comes from the heart, quite literally. A fit heart is required to run a body, and if the body is over what the heart can handle, then your heart is strong, but not fit. The other thing, is that a healthy body, requires a healthy mindset, and being told “you can’t” or worse of all, saying “I can’t” are the two worst openings of a sentence any human has to endure, and I struggle with this daily.

Denial

Up until 7 months ago, I was in denial about being disabled. I could walk good distances and blocked out the pain. I could hit the gym 5-6 times a week, and still do at the minimum. That changed when I started to use 5 flights of stairs, 2-3 times a day to get home. I was getting compression pains in my back, and my breathing was getting poor. I knew my back was causing it. My cardio has always been good but I suddenly remembered that my lungs aren’t in the proper spot and therefore, my breathing suffers.

how to become a personal trainer disabled

What were the reasons I was in denial about classing myself as disabled?

Easy answer, the way society views the disabled. It has this ingrained, and albeit very unfortunate, social stigma to it. There are however many active disabled people. The category I am in has an extra level of social stigmatism.

You’re disabled, why are you trying to stay fit?“, or worse of all, “Hey, stop it, you’re making the rest of us look bad“. You honestly can’t win, or can you?

How I’m Winning

I’m winning by moving and increasing my strength. When my muscles strengthen, my body begins to repair itself a little more. When it repairs itself a little more, I become less dependant on pain medication. When I am less dependant on pain medication, my mind becomes free from the cloud of depression or chemical addiction. I started to see that things weren’t as black and white as I previously thought. I became more social and met new people. Most of all I found a place to train where there are other disabled people.

It was this part for me, that was a change on my view big time. I had remembered meeting tonnes of chair bound people in my time, but it was very rare that they had that glint in their eye, the glint that says:

Yeah, I’m in a chair, but you look worse for wear than I do

I have met some very interesting people in my life, but it was doing this course to get my level 2 that opened my eyes. Three chaps in chairs, 2 of them were arm powered, the other was motorized.

Seeing a 27 year old man, with muscular dystrophy, doing bicep curls with 8kg dumbbells was astonishing. Feeling a pushback from him doing a chest exercise went to show me that because the body is in a weakend state structurally, by no means shows that the Mind or the muscles that control them are. Another of the guys was on the British Paralympic team in Atlanta for basketball.

Strength in Numbers

Working with the people I did on my course showed me that not only physical disability can be a problem, but emotional/mental disabilities are just as crippling. One of the course participants dropped out after 3 classes, due to the over-powering depression she suffered. She has promised to come back knowing now what the class work will be like, but she needed some time to adjust.

Another gentleman on my course had severe depression and other ailments. To me, he was a bit of an inspiration. We had a lot in common, and found that we both had similar mental conditions.

He was having difficulty with the stress levels on the course but he worked it. He said to me that he hated leaving the safety of his house, but knows at the same time, that this is an unhealthy option and knows to move it out of his mind.

become a personal trainer superman

He has suffered it all his life, tried many different ways to deal with it. He found that exercise, proper mental preparedness and the thought-out prescription of medication has helped him out tremendously. We also both found out that we were in a minority in fitness, in that we are both varying level vegans. He still eats very small amounts of meat, but is progressing towards getting rid of meat out of his diet, whereas I still eat eggs, but no other dairy/meat products.

What’s Needed

Diet, especially for disabled people, needs to be watched closely. Especially for motorized wheel chair users, diet cannot exceed output too much, otherwise obesity becomes endemic, and you can see this in daily life with how many people under the age of 40 are using scooters to get around.

The final piece, is to find a trainer who has either a good working relationship with the disabled, or is a disabled trainer themselves. This can be the difference between you, the client, coming out of bed on a bad day. There are more of us starting to get out there, and honestly, the more of us that can, the better for the rest of the population. Because remember, everyone is a disabled person in the making. Be it through age, accident or a hidden condition waiting for its kick-in point, we are all going to become disabled sooner or later. And the more trainers we can get out there with an intimate knowledge of disability, the better.

Take this into perspective. Not all disabled trainers are going to be able to train every client that comes into the door. The trainer has the knowledge, but they may lack physical presence or communication that a client wants, so obviously, they would pass them on to an able bodied instructor.

Are you an able-bodied trainer? You may have all the theory in the world, but a disabled person is going to ask, so how hard was it for you to get out of bed this morning? Answering with “Well it was really hard, I was at a huge party last night, and only had 3 hours sleep,” is not going to be an answer they want to hear, or show sympathy towards.

As a community, we should make this a pertinent point to learn from eachother. Not only that, but to also get a wider segment of the disabled community in as well. Nothing scares a disabled person more about coming into a gym, than knowing that there is nobody inside that can fully empathize with their situation.

My deadlift

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Please share this article with anybody who may benefit. Also make sure to “like” thePTDC on our Facebook Page. Look forward to installment #2 tomorrow on why gyms should seriously consider hiring disabled personal trainers.

Check out Part 2 Now

 

how to become a personal trainerJim Smith has been a fitness junkie since his first bicycle at the age of 4. Having Schuermann’s Kyphosis and being born with congenital defect of the right hip has not stopped his belief that everyone can benefit from fitness. He recently finished his Level 2 Gym Instructor course and is looking at going on to Personal Training. He is currently volunteering at the Aspire Gym housed within the Royal National Orthopedic Hospital.


Photo credits: ro_buk [I'm not there] A.Currell

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Written by Jonathan

Jonathan Goodman CSCS is the author of Ignite the Fire: The Secrets to Building a Successful Personal Trainer Career and Race to the Top: How to Take Over the Social Media Feed. He'd love it if you added him on Facebook and/or followed him on Twitter. He also runs a wildly popular web branding and internet marketing coaching program. You can find out more at http://www.viralnomics.com/coaching/.

  • http://twitter.com/FitTwinCities Fit Twin Cities

    Totally inspiring. Thanks for sharing!

  • Stefania

    Loved it! And undoubtedly so many people out there could benefit from training and the mental as well as physical benefits it provides but are just discounted as not a good client. We should all humble ourselves from time to time…

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=742925110 Jim Smith

      Thanks!! I don’t think there is such thing as a no good client. I have the chance in two days to work with Arterial Fibrillation patients, spinal fracture patients and today saw a girl (awesomely inspiring and funny) of 23 or so, with a C4 paralysis using a rower. Somehow, she has retained arm movement, but the tech in this is amazing. Base results are that after 30 sessions or so, there is a 5-10% increase in muscle mass in the legs. Yup, things that don’t move normally, gaining muscle!!!!

      • Kyle Schuant

        Over your career you will discover that there are in fact “no good clients”, but that the cause of their being no good is never physical. Some people are just a pain!

  • Fisfitness

    Truly inspiring for all able-bodied people whether we are trainers, coaches or simply mums and dads deciding to get off the couch and do some exercise. All the best Jim and kick ass!! :)

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=742925110 Jim Smith

      Thanks.. only with my left leg though, not allowed to get the right leg above 90 degrees.. :-)

      Hope things are going well for you and all.

  • Dean Somerset

    Jim is truly a beast.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=742925110 Jim Smith

      Learned from the one of the best… 

  • Anjie

    PROUD of you Jim from an old school mate that would stand and fight for you any day  …………..never ever give up  :) Anj xi

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=742925110 Jim Smith

      Thanks my dearest friend.. Give your dad my best and love! Now he is an inspiring bloke!

  • Kyle Schuant

    Well done, good luck in your future career. The industry needs more people who’ve had to struggle up like that, we have too many natural athletes who are clueless when it comes to training  people with injuries or health issues, or even worse, complete newbies. 

    Remember that sedentary beginners will usually be weaker and less fit than active “disabled” people. “Disabled” is very much a relative term. Consider two guys in my gym, both are in their 20s, one cannot do a chinup, nor deadlift with a neutral spine, the other does chinups with a 20kg plate tied to him and deadlifts 80kg. One of them has a below-knee amputation and prosthetic, it’s not the weaker one. Which one is disabled? 

    The one thing I would suggest is, don’t fall into only training “disabled” people simply because you supposedly are. This happens a lot in gyms, the women train the women, the young males train the young males, the older trainer trains the older members, etc. It works better for all concerned if we mix it up. 

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=742925110 Jim Smith

      Thanks Kyle. You bring up some great points, and especially the last one. Thankfully one of the people I have had the great time of training wants to run a 1/2 marathon in September. Also during course, I got the opportunity to write a cardio programme for a multiple time Martahon runner, and to his delight (and shock I think) corrected his running technique.. 

      The only part I would disagree with.. the young males there train the young females LOL… again thanks Kyle!

  • Kyle Schuant

    I agree that gyms should hire trainers with a disability. However, in the gyms I’ve worked in I’ve seen over 50 people apply in person or interview, and none of them had any significant disability. I know my current manager would be delighted to hire some, but there are so few who go through the courses, and of those (able-bodied or not) who go through the courses, few go onto a career in the industry. 

    My manager can’t even get as many women trainers as he wants in the gym. 

  • Bill Sonnemaker, MS

    Great article!

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