When someone tells me they’re in pain, my first thought isn’t, “How do we make them fitter?”
It’s, “What has their body stopped trusting itself to do?”
After more than 15 years as a Personal Trainer, I’ve learnt that pain changes the way people move long before it changes the way they look. People start avoiding stairs because their knees complain. They stop lifting heavy shopping because their back feels unreliable. They ask someone else to carry the suitcase, avoid getting down onto the floor with the kids, or quietly give up hobbies they once enjoyed because everything feels harder than it used to.
Most people don’t make these decisions consciously. They happen gradually. One movement becomes uncomfortable, so you avoid it. Then another. Before long, your world becomes a little bit smaller.
This is one of the reasons I’m so passionate about strength training. Done properly, it doesn’t simply make you stronger. It helps restore confidence in your body.
Strength Changes What Your Body Is Capable Of
One of the biggest misconceptions about strength training is that it’s only for people who want bigger muscles or a better physique.
In reality, strength is one of the foundations of good health.
Every time you stand up from a chair, climb a flight of stairs, carry groceries or reach into an overhead cupboard, you’re relying on strength. If those movements have become difficult, the answer usually isn’t to stop doing them. It’s to gradually improve your body’s ability to cope with them again.
That doesn’t mean pushing through pain or pretending everything is fine.
It means meeting your body where it is today and giving it a reason to adapt.
I’ve coached people who were convinced they’d never squat again because of sore knees. Others arrived unable to lift one arm comfortably above shoulder height. None of them needed to become elite athletes. They simply needed a plan that respected where they were starting and progressed at a pace their body could tolerate.
More Isn’t Better. Better Is Better.
One thing I’ve never understood is the belief that a personal trainer has to destroy someone in every session to prove they’re doing a good job.
Some of the most effective sessions I’ve ever coached have looked incredibly ordinary to someone walking past.
A client learning how to breathe properly during a squat.
Someone practising getting up from the floor without using their hands.
A simple row with perfect control.
A light deadlift that finally feels achievable instead of intimidating.
Those moments don’t make exciting social media videos, but they’re often the turning point. They teach the body that movement is safe again, and once that confidence starts to return, progress tends to build surprisingly quickly.
After more than 25,000 coaching sessions, I’ve found that people don’t need endless variety. They need consistency. They need exercises that make sense, performed well enough and often enough for the body to adapt.
Nutrition Is Often the Missing Piece
This is where my approach is a little different from many personal trainers.
Exercise is only one half of the picture.
Your body can’t build stronger muscles, repair connective tissue or recover efficiently without the nutrients needed to do the job. Every training session creates an opportunity for your body to adapt, but adaptation requires raw materials.
Water is one of the most overlooked nutrients when it comes to recovery. Every cell in the body relies on adequate hydration to function properly, and muscles, tendons, ligaments and cartilage all depend on water to stay healthy and resilient. Vitamin C plays an important role in collagen production, while minerals such as magnesium support healthy muscle and nerve function. A diet rich in colourful whole foods provides the vitamins, minerals and plant compounds that help the body repair, recover and adapt to training more effectively.
None of this replaces good training.
It simply allows your body to get more out of the work you’re already doing.
As both a Clinical Nutritionist and Personal Trainer, I’ve watched clients make significantly faster progress once their nutrition starts supporting their training.
They recover more easily between sessions. Their energy improves. They begin sleeping better. They feel stronger from week to week instead of constantly feeling sore and exhausted.
That’s not because of a miracle supplement or a restrictive diet.
It’s because the body finally has what it needs to respond.
Pain Isn’t Always a Life Sentence
One of the most rewarding parts of my job is watching people stop identifying themselves by their pain.
When someone has lived with discomfort for years, it often becomes part of their identity.
“I’m the one with the bad back.”
“I’ve always had dodgy knees.”
“My shoulder has been like this forever.”
Sometimes those stories have been repeated for so long that they’ve become accepted as permanent.
Then, little by little, things start changing.
They walk further without thinking about it.
They pick something up without bracing themselves.
They realise they’ve spent an entire day gardening and haven’t needed to lie down afterwards.
Those moments matter far more than lifting heavier weights.
They’re the moments people get their life back.
Finding the Right Coach
If you’re looking for a Personal Trainer in Brisbane, I’d encourage you to look beyond before and after photos.
Find someone who asks questions before handing you a program.
Someone who wants to know about your lifestyle, your injuries, your stress levels, your sleep and your goals.
Someone who can explain why you’re doing each exercise instead of simply counting repetitions.
After all these years, I’ve become convinced that good coaching isn’t about making people exercise harder. It’s about making exercise feel achievable again.
That’s how lasting change happens.
If you’ve been putting off strength training because you’re worried about pain, injuries or simply not knowing where to begin, I’d love to help. I work with clients from all over Brisbane, including Holland Park and the surrounding suburbs, as well as people who prefer online coaching. Together we’ll build a body that’s stronger, more capable and ready for whatever life asks of it.
