| The best yoga teacher I ever had was a tubby male. |
| Barre isn’t going to make you skinny. A good diet will. |
Maybe she just had a baby??? |
Well said. |
| Unclear on why you think she is out of shape. Is she unable to complete the class? Having to take frequent rests? |
One of the best yoga instructors I ever had was just a wee bit on the chunky side and not visibly toned. She was extremely flexible and a great teacher with a really nice rapport with her students. In contrast, I am very muscular but have the flexibility of a steel beam.
|
| can she perform all the exercises she is instructing you to perform? if she can then she is plenty fit. Stop judging a book by it's cover. There are lot of women who look fit but they are really skinny fat, not strong and not at all fit. On the flip side I know some incredibly strong women who are not cut/have a thin layer of fat, but are in incredible shape and could out lift and out run most of the skinny girls. There is more to health and fitness than how your body looks. |
bar and pilates is not going to give you a fit toned body what matters is having a diet that keeps your body fat low. Anyone can look fit and "toned" with a low enough body fat percentage.
but I guess looking "toned" matters more to you than actually being strong. I can follow Gisele's yoga routine all i want, but i am NEVER going to have her body. Simply not possible giving my genetic build and all the barre in the world isn't going to give you a ballerina's body. |
| I say for your money either change your schedule or go somewhere else. You are who you are. DCUM will not change your feelings. |
| One of the best instructors I know looks like a couch potato and kills it in class — totally in awe of her and wish I could perform the same. |
You're disgusting. |
|
Old thread, but I go to 9 Round and one of the trainers at my location is on the bigger side, but her technique and stamina is awe inspiring. There are all kinds of body types among the trainers and I actually found the diversity inspiring.
|
+1 have you seen Christine from peloton? One of the bigger women, huge following, professional cyclist. OP life is passing you by. So sorry for you. |
| The thin instructors at my barre studio are younger than me. I had a really toned, fit looking body at their ages. Problem was that I still ate junk then and now, I’m my mid-30s, my diet has a helluva lot more to do with my appearance than it did before. Plenty of people leave the studio and go to brunch or happy hour. I no longer have that option if I want to see visual progress. You could also be enamored with ectomorph body types that struggle to put on weight. |
|
Many people are posting on this thread that "you can be many body shapes and be fit." I agree, but I think what's good for you in a coach/trainer depends on your definition of "fit" and your goals.
My immediate goals right now are mostly related to strength. Lots of guys who hit the kinds of numbers have a lot more body fat than me. I know that they can teach me a lot about technique and load management, but I'm not comfortable eating like they do even if it would help me get to my strength goals faster. And those guys' answer to questions about gaining strength from guys who are thin is usually some variant of "just eat more" which isn't helpful. So I'd likely do better with a strength coach who has hit my strength goals while maintaining bodyfat in a similar range as my goal. When I was a runner, my goals were a sub-3 hour marathon and a sub 19 5K. I could have gotten good coaching from somebody heavier than me (lots of great track coaches are), but it's hard to know which of those people really know there stuff. On the other hand, a coach who is running 15:XX 5Ks is likely somewhat genetically blessed but also likely knows a bit about training, so that's the kind of person I'd seek out. None of those people are heavy. If someone's goal from barre is good posture or being good at barre, then I agree with PPs. If the person's goals include wanting lower bodyfat, then I agree with OP that a trainer who has accomplished that might be a better fit because the instructor's body composition acts as a proxy for what they know and their experience (as unfair as that may be for a whole variety of reasons). |