Personal Trainer, Personal Training in phoenix, Scottsdale, Arizona

personal trainer phoenix, scottsdale, arizona. personal training old town scottsdale

 Success Fitness Training

 

Ryan Johnson, Personal Trainer
480-330-9295

 

Arizona Personal Training Locations:
Scottsdale | Tempe | Phoenix

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Just a thought...Every day you are either getting better or worse than you were the day before...but never the same.  Create an environment that allows you to succeed with your fitness and your life goals.

 

Success Fitness Training Programs

 

1 on 1 personal training-offers individualized workouts for the client to make sure your goals are made

Group Training- A great way to save money with getting in shape super quickly.  Train in groups of 2 plus to keep one another motivated.

Weight Loss

specific meal plan tailored towards your needs.  Not a diet but a lifestyle change that you can stick to for the rest of your life.  Eating plan includes lots of organic foods-cutting out sugars, eating the right protein and fats, lots of fruits and vegetables, supplements, cutting out processed food

-weight training-specific program for loosing fat.  Includes: body weight exercises, plyometrics, high intensity cardio, boxing, drills, weights, Swiss Ball exercises, medicine ball exercises.  Designed to put on a little  muscle while maximizing fat loss!!

Loose weight effectively and efficiently.  You will be coached and motivated to reach your goals. 

 

Sports specific training

Sports specific- training all range of athletes, seniors, children, youth

Wrestling, football, basketball, baseball, skiing, mixed martial arts, volleyball

Each sport program varies in what the athlete wants to accomplish.

Every athletes will work on some sort of flexibility drills, plyometics, strength training, power training, functional training, endurance training.

Condition yourself to be the best.   If you want a edge on your competition for the next season you need to start today!!

 

Rehabilitation/people with special conditions

  • exercise therapy after physical therapy

  • Posture analysis-corrective muscle imbalance, which muscles to strengthen and which ones to stretch out.  Better posture means making your body function better

  • different types of stretching used-static stretching, dynamic stretching, pnf (proprio neuromuscular facilitation, stretching

  • relief of aches and pains

Stretching

Active stretching is also referred to as Static-active stretching. An active stretch is one where you assume a position and then hold that position with no assistance other than using the strength of your agonist muscles. A great example of this is lifting your leg up high and then holding it there without the support anything (other than your leg muscles themselves), and keeping the leg in that extended position. The tension of the agonist muscles in an active stretch helps to relax the muscles being stretched by reciprocal inhibition (when an agonist muscle contracts, in order to cause the desired motion, it usually forces an opposing, complementary antagonists muscle to relax).

The practice of active stretching increases active flexibility and strengthens the agonistic muscles. Active stretches are usually quite difficult to hold and maintain for more than 10 seconds and rarely need to be held any longer than 15 seconds for proper effectiveness. Subsequently, many of the stretches and movements found in various forms of yoga are active stretches.

Dynamic stretching involves moving parts of your body and gradually increasing their reach, speed of movement, or both.  Often times, dynamic stretching is confused with the practice of ballistic stretching.  Dynamic stretching, or example, would consist of controlled leg and arm swings that take an individual gradually to the limits of their natural range of motion. Ballistic stretches on the other hand would involve trying to force a part of the body to go beyond its natural range of motion. With dynamic stretches, there are no bounces or sudden yanking, tugging or jerking movements. An example of dynamic stretching would be slow, controlled leg and/or arm swings, and/or torso twists.

Passive stretching is also referred to as Relaxed stretching, and as Static-passive stretching. A passive stretch is a stretch where an individual will assume a position and hold it with the help of some other part of the body, or with the assistance of a partner or some other equipment or apparatus.  An example of passive stretching would include lifting your leg up high and then holding it at that height with your hand. An extreme example of a passive stretch is doing the splits (in this case the floor is the "apparatus" that you use to maintain your extended position).

Passive stretching is useful in relieving muscle spasms that are healing after an injury. Of course, an individual should ALWAYS check with their doctor first to see if it is okay to attempt to stretch the injured muscles.  Additionally,  relaxed stretching is a great tool for cooling down after a workout and it also helps to reduce post-workout muscle fatigue, and soreness.

PNF stretching is currently the fastest and most effective way known to increase static-passive flexibility. PNF is an acronym for proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation. It is, theoretically, not a type of stretching but is a technique of combining passive stretching and isometric stretching in order to attain maximum static flexibility. In actuality, the term PNF stretching is in on of itself quite misleading. PNF was initially developed as a technique for rehabilitating victims of stroke.  PNF refers to any of several post-isometric relaxation stretching techniques in which a muscle group is passively stretched, and then contracts isometrically against resistance while it is in the stretched position.  The muscle group is then passively stretched again through the resulting increased range of motion. PNF stretching usually requires the help of a partner.  The partner provides resistance against the isometric contraction, and then again later passively takes the joint through its increased range of motion. PNF stretching may be performed alone without the assistance of a partner, though, it is usually more effective with the  assistance of a partner.

  

 

 


Personal Trainer in Phoenix, SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA

SUCCESS FITNESS TRAINING

RYAN JOHNSON

480-330-9295

Personal Trainer@ Scottsdale. com

 

 

 

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