Date: Fri 05-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 05-Feb-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
personal-trainer-schneider
Full Text:
Trainer Says Most Exercise Programs Do Too Much Too Fast
(with photos)
BY KAAREN VALENTA
Say the words "personal trainer" and most people think of a stern taskmaster
who coaches a celebrity like Oprah Winfrey through several hours of exercise
every day. Walt Schneider isn't like that at all.
The award-winning competitive body builder will be the first to tell you that
70 percent of the people in America who start an exercise program quit long
before they have achieved any measurable success. The reason usually is
because they try to do too much, too fast.
"I always say take baby steps," Mr Schneider told an attentive audience
recently in the Monsignor Conroy Room at St Rose School. "Start with 20
minutes of exercise two days a week for two weeks. Set attainable, realistic
goals. If the most exercise you get is walking to your mailbox, the next time
you go out walk to the stop sign and back. Next week, walk a little further or
add an extra day. Small accomplishments -- one step at a time."
Mr Schneider spoke on personal fitness -- how exercise and nutrition together
promote good health -- as part of the Parish Nurse Ministry's health series
organized by Sally O'Neil.
"Exercise is a real commitment to yourself, and from that to your family," Mr
Schneider said. "The worst thing you can do is sit in your office all day,
then sit watching television at night."
"The exercise can be whatever you like to do, he said, such as walking, riding
biking, swimming, roller blading, playing basketball, or using a treadmill,"
he said.
"It's difficult to get started, but once you start exercising it becomes a
habit, you feel invigorated afterwards, and soon it's something you have to
do."
Walt Schneider was a wrestler at Newtown High School in the 1970s. After he
graduated in 1977, he operated an automotive detailing business and took up
weight lifting as a hobby.
"I went to a gym, pumped a little iron. I was 32 when I started. I saw
[competitive body builders] on stage and thought `I can do that,'" he said.
"My wife thought I was nuts. My kids thought I was nuts. But I did pretty well
in competitions, sold my business and we moved back to Newtown.
"My wife, Margaret, and I live on Meadow Street with our daughters, Mali, who
is 11, and Rhea, who is 4. I'm now a full-time personal trainer, working out
of World Gym in Trumbull.
"A gym atmosphere is fantastic but you absolutely also can exercise at home,"
he said. "There are exercise classes on TV, and videos, and lots of magazines
available."
Drawing a large circle on a blackboard, Mr Schneider divided it into three
equal wedges and said they represented exercise, food and adequate rest. All
are equally important, he said.
"Food is not our enemy. Dieting doesn't work," he said. "You have to eat to
burn body fat -- you have to eat to lose weight.
"How many people are always tired or run out of gas at the end of the day?" he
asked. "You have to ask yourself if you are getting enough calories."
The phrase "eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a
pauper" reflects the fact a person needs calories to provide energy to get
through the day, not a large dinner to be eaten before bedtime.
Mr Schneider recommends six small meals a day to keep the body well-fueled.
For breakfast, a cup of raisin bran cereal or regular oatmeal with low-fat
milk, a medium banana, eight ounces of juice and a slice of stone-ground wheat
bread with some all-fruit spread; mid-morning, a cup of yogurt or piece of
fruit.
Lunch might be a turkey sandwich on whole wheat bread with mustard or low-fat
mayo, lettuce and tomato and, instead of potato chips, 16 reduced-fat wheat
thins, plus a sugarless drink. For that mid-afternoon slump, eat a protein bar
or power bar, such as those sold in health food and grocery stores.
"Eat a sensible dinner -- chicken, fish, turkey -- with a baked potato, salad,
green vegetable," he said. "And if you need a late-night snack, try a handful
of pretzels or some air-popped popcorn."
Be sure to drink six or seven glasses or water every day, he said, because
that is what is needed to keep the body functioning well.
A young active woman needs to consume 2,000 to 2,400 calories a day; a young
man, 2,400 to 2,800. Women will always have more body fat because that is the
way they are made, Mr Schneider said. An average woman, in good shape, will
have 20 to 25 percent body fat; a man, 15 to 18 percent.
Premenopausal women also need iron because low iron levels will cause them to
tire easily, he said. Seek out natural whole-food -- not chemical-based --
vitamins and supplements that are available in health food stores.
Mr Schneider said that once a person has begun an exercise program, 30 minutes
three times a week is enough to gain the benefits of working out. "Four times
is great if you can do it, but five, six, seven -- forget it, you won't be
giving yourself enough rest to gain muscle."
Weight training is easy to do at home, he said. A flat weight bench and three
pairs of dumbbells (3, 5 and 8-pound for beginners) are enough to set up an
adequate home gym, but even that isn't absolutely required.
"Start with two dumbbells in a weight that is comfortable," he said. "Do 10 to
12 repetitions of each exercise, or 12 to 15 at most. When the exercise
becomes effortless, switch to a heavier dumbbell.
"You want to work, not just go through the motions," he said. "If you are
really working on those last three, four or five repetitions, that will burn
more calories and build muscle."
But exercises must be done properly, keeping constant pressure on the muscle,
to be effective and not cause strains or injuries, he added.
"There are very few things in life that you can control, but being in shape is
one of them," he added. "It promotes a feeling of self-worth, gives you energy
for other activities, an improved attitude, and relieves tension.
"My philosophy is getting people to feel good about themselves, not only to
look good, but also to feel good," he said.