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Les Mills
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Les Mills
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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Ask an expert: Stress resilience

Stress levels increase for each generation, so should stress resilience training be something health clubs offer as standard? Kath Hudson asks the experts

By Kath Hudson | Published in Health Club Management 2018 issue 9

Mental ill health frequently leads to physical ill health and stress is the root cause of many potentially fatal illnesses, such as depression, obesity, cardiac disease and diabetes.

Since the overall health of our clients is what the health and fitness industry is all about, should we be doing more to help and support people in building their stress resilience?

Research shows that millennials are now more stressed than the 'silent generation', who lived through the world wars.

There are a number of reasons, including the fact that, having been raised with technology, they communicate more comfortably via social media and text than face to face. Social media also brings its own pressures and expectations.

Highly educated, ambitious and confident, millennials have high expectations, but then have to cope with the reality of student loans and few high-paying job prospects.

According to women’s business organisation, One of Many, women are 60 per cent more likely to suffer from stress or burnout than men. They're also less happy than they were 40 years ago, regardless of income, health, job, marital status, age, race and whether or not they have children. Dr Joanna Martin, founder of One of Many, attributes this to women finding themselves running on adrenalin and cortisol – the stress hormones – to fulfil their many roles, and this is not sustainable.

Undoubtedly gyms could help support people to become less stressed. But since stress resilience is not part of PT training programmes, could gyms unwittingly be adding to the problem they're trying to solve? We ask the experts…

Andy McGlynn,

Managing director,

LSF Personal Training

Andy McGlynn
Andy McGlynn

A lot of education is needed around the subject of stress and gyms are a great place to start. Every single senior executive I work with suffers from stress. To get them to train hard from the outset would stress an already adrenally fatigued body even further, causing more inflammation, which leads to a number of issues including sleep disruption, brain fog and IBS.

In extreme cases, it can lead to burnout, insulin resistance and hypothyroidism, as the prolonged high blood cortisol levels will begin to suppress the thyroid.

One of the USPs of my PT company is offering stress-resilience programmes. Each of my clients is assessed for stress using a cortisol saliva test and an in-depth questionnaire. We then start to unpick each stressor: addressing deficiencies of key minerals and vitamins in their diet, and working on developing mental robustness to cope with stressors that can’t be avoided.

People who are suffering from stress need to be introduced to exercise slowly, using parasympathetic exercise and programme design. We don’t let them train hard in the beginning, however, we use primal movement pattern exercise to improve their posture and core strength, and to build up strength throughout the kinetic chain while addressing any weak links which could lead to pain.

In extreme cases, it might take as long as eight weeks, before they are ready to exercise more aggressively.

"Each of my clients is assessed for stress using a cortisol saliva test and an in-depth questionnaire. We then start to unpick each stressor"

John Allison
,

Founder,

StreetGym and Motion to Mind

John Allison
John Allison

Twenty four years in the army made me appreciate the value of physical exercise to sustain yourself mentally in a high pressure environment.

Exercise is a great way of relieving stress, and I think there's definitely the opportunity for gyms to become wellness hubs and for PTs to become wellness coaches, helping people to tackle stress and build resilience by building their mental strength while they also build their physical strength.

Many PTs are already acting in this capacity, but the formal career path isn’t there yet – we don’t have either the education programme or the curriculum.

The Level 4, Physical Activity for Mental Health qualification is a good starting point, but there's much more work to be done.

It is important that we don’t take a one-size-fits-all approach, as this can have a detrimental impact.

One client, who suffers from anxiety, confided that when he was doing a lot of HIIT sessions after work, it disrupted his sleep patterns and led to greater anxiety, by turning on his fight or flight response and flooding his body with stress hormones.

It’s about the right exercise at the right time, for the right person. We need to remember that exercise itself can be a stressor, therefore, PTs need to ensure training is tailored to the client’s mental as well as physical state.

Activities requiring concentration, like yoga or boxing, are good because they keep people in the moment and stop them from ruminating about the past or future, creating breathing space.

It’s also important to restore balance and homeostasis, particularly after a high intensity workout – doing some relaxation and breath work, for example.

Visualisation and engaging the senses is also powerful: focusing on people and places that produce feelings of gratitude and appreciation is deeply restorative and something we should be encouraging our clients to do.

"Exercise is a great way of relieving stress, and I think there’s definitely the opportunity for gyms to become
wellness hubs and for PTs to become wellness coaches"

StreetGym encourages people to develop mental toughness
StreetGym encourages people to develop mental toughness

Oliver Patrick,

Co-founder,

Viavi:

Oliver Patrick
Oliver Patrick

It’s true that many people do need help in managing their stress and that it can get in the way of the results members are seeking to achieve from their gym membership.

A key symptom of overstress is a lack of energy. Stress can affect energy in many ways, but particularly through disrupted sleep cycles, and if people are tired they often don’t have the energy to go to the gym, and are more likely to crave, and overeat, carbs.

Excess stress over time can also lead to too much cortisol production, which leads to fat storage and, over time, a decrease in the hormones that assist muscle growth and metabolism.

Despite this, I would be wary of operators offering stress resilience as a formal programme, unless they have a clinical background, because there is not a one-size-fits-all approach to managing stress.

Without clinical training, instructors and PTs might fall into the trap of working experientially rather than clinically: using an approach that worked well for one individual on another when it’s not appropriate.

At the moment there isn’t a well-defined and consistent stress professional in the industry and, in our experience, tackling stress requires a broad tool kit of knowledge and behaviours.

In light of this, I believe the safest way to progress is to be wary of launching specific stress or resilience diagnostic services. Instead operators should encourage highly pressurised members to add generic recovery strategies to their life, such as sleep routines, meditation and yoga.

"Operators should encourage highly pressurised members to add generic recovery strategies to their life, such as sleep routines, meditation and yoga"

Yoga can be offered to members to aid recovery and reduce stress / Photo: SHUTTERSTOCK
Yoga can be offered to members to aid recovery and reduce stress / Photo: SHUTTERSTOCK

Gavin Jennings,

Director,

CHEK Europe

Gavin Jennings
Gavin Jennings

Developed by Paul Chek, based on 30 years of clinical practice of working with clients, CHEK Institute has come up with a series of training programmes that take a holistic view of the body, treating the mental, physical, hormonal, emotional and spiritual systems as inextricably linked.

We're in the grey area between the medical and fitness industries and have professionals from both sides coming onto our courses: PTs, doctors, psychotherapists and osteopaths.

Demand for our courses has risen over the last 18 months, reflecting the shift in awareness of mental health, but also PTs not feeling confident about their PT qualification.

Stress comes in many forms, but typically most gym members will be experiencing moderate to high levels of stress related to digestive health, poor sleep patterns and poor diet. A significant number will have ongoing musculoskeletal issues, which can be exacerbated through the wrong sort of exercise.

Often big improvements can be made through some easy fixes: going to bed and getting up at the same time, eating correctly in order to maintain even blood sugar, ensuring they have some quiet time each day and spending restorative time in nature to rest and recharge.

Also important is knowing when and how to ‘work-in’ rather than ‘work-out’. A common stress is people trying to fit too much into their lives, so we help them to prioritise what is important and their core values. Often it is simplistic changes that have the most benefit.

"We take a holistic view of the body, treating the mental, physical, hormonal, emotional and spiritual systems as inextricably linked"

Spending time in nature is a powerful way to rest and recharge / PHOTO: shutterstock.com
Spending time in nature is a powerful way to rest and recharge / PHOTO: shutterstock.com
Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/HCM2018_9stress.jpg
With the incidence of mental health issues at an all time high, we ask what health clubs can do to help people build their resilience
Andy McGlynn, LSF Personal Training: managing director John Allison, Founder: StreetGym and Motion to Mind Oliver Patrick, Viavi: co-founder Gavin Jennings, CHEK Europe: director,millennials, stress resilience, mental health,
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features

Ask an expert: Stress resilience

Stress levels increase for each generation, so should stress resilience training be something health clubs offer as standard? Kath Hudson asks the experts

By Kath Hudson | Published in Health Club Management 2018 issue 9

Mental ill health frequently leads to physical ill health and stress is the root cause of many potentially fatal illnesses, such as depression, obesity, cardiac disease and diabetes.

Since the overall health of our clients is what the health and fitness industry is all about, should we be doing more to help and support people in building their stress resilience?

Research shows that millennials are now more stressed than the 'silent generation', who lived through the world wars.

There are a number of reasons, including the fact that, having been raised with technology, they communicate more comfortably via social media and text than face to face. Social media also brings its own pressures and expectations.

Highly educated, ambitious and confident, millennials have high expectations, but then have to cope with the reality of student loans and few high-paying job prospects.

According to women’s business organisation, One of Many, women are 60 per cent more likely to suffer from stress or burnout than men. They're also less happy than they were 40 years ago, regardless of income, health, job, marital status, age, race and whether or not they have children. Dr Joanna Martin, founder of One of Many, attributes this to women finding themselves running on adrenalin and cortisol – the stress hormones – to fulfil their many roles, and this is not sustainable.

Undoubtedly gyms could help support people to become less stressed. But since stress resilience is not part of PT training programmes, could gyms unwittingly be adding to the problem they're trying to solve? We ask the experts…

Andy McGlynn,

Managing director,

LSF Personal Training

Andy McGlynn
Andy McGlynn

A lot of education is needed around the subject of stress and gyms are a great place to start. Every single senior executive I work with suffers from stress. To get them to train hard from the outset would stress an already adrenally fatigued body even further, causing more inflammation, which leads to a number of issues including sleep disruption, brain fog and IBS.

In extreme cases, it can lead to burnout, insulin resistance and hypothyroidism, as the prolonged high blood cortisol levels will begin to suppress the thyroid.

One of the USPs of my PT company is offering stress-resilience programmes. Each of my clients is assessed for stress using a cortisol saliva test and an in-depth questionnaire. We then start to unpick each stressor: addressing deficiencies of key minerals and vitamins in their diet, and working on developing mental robustness to cope with stressors that can’t be avoided.

People who are suffering from stress need to be introduced to exercise slowly, using parasympathetic exercise and programme design. We don’t let them train hard in the beginning, however, we use primal movement pattern exercise to improve their posture and core strength, and to build up strength throughout the kinetic chain while addressing any weak links which could lead to pain.

In extreme cases, it might take as long as eight weeks, before they are ready to exercise more aggressively.

"Each of my clients is assessed for stress using a cortisol saliva test and an in-depth questionnaire. We then start to unpick each stressor"

John Allison
,

Founder,

StreetGym and Motion to Mind

John Allison
John Allison

Twenty four years in the army made me appreciate the value of physical exercise to sustain yourself mentally in a high pressure environment.

Exercise is a great way of relieving stress, and I think there's definitely the opportunity for gyms to become wellness hubs and for PTs to become wellness coaches, helping people to tackle stress and build resilience by building their mental strength while they also build their physical strength.

Many PTs are already acting in this capacity, but the formal career path isn’t there yet – we don’t have either the education programme or the curriculum.

The Level 4, Physical Activity for Mental Health qualification is a good starting point, but there's much more work to be done.

It is important that we don’t take a one-size-fits-all approach, as this can have a detrimental impact.

One client, who suffers from anxiety, confided that when he was doing a lot of HIIT sessions after work, it disrupted his sleep patterns and led to greater anxiety, by turning on his fight or flight response and flooding his body with stress hormones.

It’s about the right exercise at the right time, for the right person. We need to remember that exercise itself can be a stressor, therefore, PTs need to ensure training is tailored to the client’s mental as well as physical state.

Activities requiring concentration, like yoga or boxing, are good because they keep people in the moment and stop them from ruminating about the past or future, creating breathing space.

It’s also important to restore balance and homeostasis, particularly after a high intensity workout – doing some relaxation and breath work, for example.

Visualisation and engaging the senses is also powerful: focusing on people and places that produce feelings of gratitude and appreciation is deeply restorative and something we should be encouraging our clients to do.

"Exercise is a great way of relieving stress, and I think there’s definitely the opportunity for gyms to become
wellness hubs and for PTs to become wellness coaches"

StreetGym encourages people to develop mental toughness
StreetGym encourages people to develop mental toughness

Oliver Patrick,

Co-founder,

Viavi:

Oliver Patrick
Oliver Patrick

It’s true that many people do need help in managing their stress and that it can get in the way of the results members are seeking to achieve from their gym membership.

A key symptom of overstress is a lack of energy. Stress can affect energy in many ways, but particularly through disrupted sleep cycles, and if people are tired they often don’t have the energy to go to the gym, and are more likely to crave, and overeat, carbs.

Excess stress over time can also lead to too much cortisol production, which leads to fat storage and, over time, a decrease in the hormones that assist muscle growth and metabolism.

Despite this, I would be wary of operators offering stress resilience as a formal programme, unless they have a clinical background, because there is not a one-size-fits-all approach to managing stress.

Without clinical training, instructors and PTs might fall into the trap of working experientially rather than clinically: using an approach that worked well for one individual on another when it’s not appropriate.

At the moment there isn’t a well-defined and consistent stress professional in the industry and, in our experience, tackling stress requires a broad tool kit of knowledge and behaviours.

In light of this, I believe the safest way to progress is to be wary of launching specific stress or resilience diagnostic services. Instead operators should encourage highly pressurised members to add generic recovery strategies to their life, such as sleep routines, meditation and yoga.

"Operators should encourage highly pressurised members to add generic recovery strategies to their life, such as sleep routines, meditation and yoga"

Yoga can be offered to members to aid recovery and reduce stress / Photo: SHUTTERSTOCK
Yoga can be offered to members to aid recovery and reduce stress / Photo: SHUTTERSTOCK

Gavin Jennings,

Director,

CHEK Europe

Gavin Jennings
Gavin Jennings

Developed by Paul Chek, based on 30 years of clinical practice of working with clients, CHEK Institute has come up with a series of training programmes that take a holistic view of the body, treating the mental, physical, hormonal, emotional and spiritual systems as inextricably linked.

We're in the grey area between the medical and fitness industries and have professionals from both sides coming onto our courses: PTs, doctors, psychotherapists and osteopaths.

Demand for our courses has risen over the last 18 months, reflecting the shift in awareness of mental health, but also PTs not feeling confident about their PT qualification.

Stress comes in many forms, but typically most gym members will be experiencing moderate to high levels of stress related to digestive health, poor sleep patterns and poor diet. A significant number will have ongoing musculoskeletal issues, which can be exacerbated through the wrong sort of exercise.

Often big improvements can be made through some easy fixes: going to bed and getting up at the same time, eating correctly in order to maintain even blood sugar, ensuring they have some quiet time each day and spending restorative time in nature to rest and recharge.

Also important is knowing when and how to ‘work-in’ rather than ‘work-out’. A common stress is people trying to fit too much into their lives, so we help them to prioritise what is important and their core values. Often it is simplistic changes that have the most benefit.

"We take a holistic view of the body, treating the mental, physical, hormonal, emotional and spiritual systems as inextricably linked"

Spending time in nature is a powerful way to rest and recharge / PHOTO: shutterstock.com
Spending time in nature is a powerful way to rest and recharge / PHOTO: shutterstock.com
Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
Young people and older people each have different needs to which programmes should be tailored
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/HCM2018_9stress.jpg
With the incidence of mental health issues at an all time high, we ask what health clubs can do to help people build their resilience
Andy McGlynn, LSF Personal Training: managing director John Allison, Founder: StreetGym and Motion to Mind Oliver Patrick, Viavi: co-founder Gavin Jennings, CHEK Europe: director,millennials, stress resilience, mental health,
Latest News
Peloton has made the strategic acquisition of Pilates start-up, Skōp, to support the expansion of ...
Latest News
Crunch Fitness has announced the launch of Crunch Reform Pilates – its own reformer concept ...
Latest News
The 20th State of the Industry Report from LeisureDB has revealed a resilient, expanding and ...
Latest News
Purpose Brands has announced its entry into the Italian market, having sold the franchise rights ...
Latest News
Fitness First UK is integrating red light therapy into its yoga and Pilates classes through ...
Latest News
Nuffield Health has told HCM that it takes its responsibilities towards its colleagues seriously and ...
Latest News
Technogym has announced the launch of the Run X World Treadmill Championship, the first world ...
Latest News
Shocked by the UK loneliness statistics, charitable trust Mytime Active has been doubling down on ...
Latest News
Portugal’s leading operator, SC Fitness, is celebrating a milestone by reaching 100 gyms.  The company ...
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Speedflex has launched a strength training programme for 10 to 16-year-olds, to make it safer, ...
Opinion
promotion
Strength training has moved from the margins to the mainstream.
Opinion: Building smarter strength spaces for today’s operators
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Supporting long-term health: why whole body vibration belongs in clinical settings
As healthcare continues to shift towards prevention, there’s a growing focus on helping people stay active, independent and feeling good for longer.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Reaching the people most gyms miss: Bedford Gym & Swim Campaign delivers 410 new members
One of the biggest mistakes the fitness industry still makes is advertising almost exclusively to people who already look and live like gym members.
Company profiles
Company profile: Connect
Connect is a UK-based technology company redefining how the fitness and wellness industry builds digital ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Brass Monkey
Brass Monkey designs and builds the world’s finest commercial-grade ice baths, working with leading gyms ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - From nightclub to health club
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - Future-proofing
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
GLL press release: GLL joins National Year of Reading as research reveals books beat social media for post-exercise recovery
GLL, the charitable social enterprise operating Libraries and Leisure Centres across the UK, has today (9 June 2026) announced that it will be supporting the National Year of Reading as a major campaign partner alongside national organisations, including BBC Sport, Audible, DC Thomson and Tesco.
Featured press releases
BLK BOX press release: Inside the build: Ironbound. Turning an empty underground space into a thriving functional fitness facility
When brothers Patrick and Kevin first approached BLK BOX, they had a vision and an unusual space. Beneath a building in Embrach, Switzerland, sat an underground facility with huge potential. What it needed was the right layout, the right equipment, and a partner who understood functional fitness.
Directory
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Spa and beauty equipment
Oakworks Inc: Spa and beauty equipment
Industrial washing machines
Miele Company Limited: Industrial washing machines
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
Property & Tenders
Stratford, East London.
Lee Valley Regional Park Authority
Property & Tenders
Y Felinheli, LL56 4QN
Newmark
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
13-13 Jun 2026
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
21-24 Sep 2026
The Langham Huntington Pasadena , Pasadena, United States
Diary dates
06-08 Oct 2026
Messe Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
22-22 Oct 2026
QEII Conference Centre, London,
Diary dates
26-29 Oct 2027
Koelnmesse Exhibition Centre, Cologne, Germany
Diary dates
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