Network Magazine spring 2015 | Page 12

TRAINING THE FIT BUSY MUM WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW When it comes to training female clients you should take a couple of unique factors into consideration. WORDS: ROSEMARY MARCHESE ow many times have you asked a female client ‘How are you?’ and been met with the response ‘Really busy’? Yet here they are, making the time to train with you in order to achieve or maintain a fit and healthy body. The concept of ‘having it all’ – a family, career and lifestyle – has become a valued social norm in Western society. However, simultaneously engaging in multiple roles means that many of your female clients may be turning up to training feeling a little dishevelled – if they turn up at all that is. Both media and academic worlds agree that the ‘multiple role’ woman is a high achiever who is often trying to tick all the criteria of ‘Superwoman’, a term we’ll explore in a moment. Two significant factors that affect ‘fit busy mum’ training clients are stress and the menstrual cycle. H The impact of stress on mums Stress is often considered an inevitable outcome of multi-tasking. It has been described as a heightened state of emotional or physical arousal occurring when demands from the environment place pressure on the individual’s ability to adapt. Fit mums engaging in multiple roles fit this description. The mother, career woman, soccer mum, wife/partner, homemaker and sister. Sound familiar? Small bouts of stress can be protective to health, but chronic or prolonged stress can create a physiological nightmare and increase the client’s risk of coronary heart disease. Stress has a negative impact on physical activity: it predicts less physical activity and/or exercise or more sedentary behaviour. This is true for both one-off situations, e.g. exams, and for the chronically stressed populations, e.g. mother looking after child with a cancer diagnosis. As women get older they are more likely to use exercise to help them cope with stress. This is great news for the fit, busy, older mum (or even grandmother), but the younger ‘fit busy mum’ is at risk of struggling to keep up their exercise regime. 12 | NETWORK SPRING 2015