Showing posts with label community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community. Show all posts

Monday, January 4, 2016

Fit and Festive - by Jenni Falconer


With Christmas and New Year's just behind us, many of us will still be in a festive spirit. And with shopping, socializing and snowy evenings in front of the fire on the agenda, it's easy to see how going to the gym can start to take a back seat. During the winter months many of us start to eat more and exercise less which can have a damaging effect on our weight and fitness levels. Research indicates that the average American will gain 2lbs during the Christmas holidays alone and more worryingly, they will fail to lose this come new year. Although you will be busy celebrating, there are still plenty of ways to keep fit and healthy over the Christmas holidays while still having a great time.
Winter exercise
Although the prospect of going out into the cold can seem unappealing, exercising in lower temperatures can actually enable you to burn more calories as the body works harder to keep you warm. You can also exercise for longer periods of time in cooler weather which also adds to your calorie loss. From ice skating to snowboarding, there are a lot of great winter exercises you can do during the colder months. Even going for a brisk walk in the snow can get your blood pumping and those feel good endorphins circulating – this can be good for mental health as well as physical health with many experts recommending light exercise as a good natural mood enhancer to fend off the winter blues.
Eat well and bank calories
It will come as no surprise that one of the main causes of Christmas weight gain is over indulgence of fatty foods and calorific beverages. Although Christmas is a time for celebration and enjoying meals and drinks with the family, it is important to do so thoughtfully if you want to battle the bulge. Be mindful of what you are eating – turkey, vegetables and Christmas pudding are fine but do you really need all of the accompanying trimmings, lashings of gravy and double cream as well? Similarly, choose your drinks wisely as drinking heavily can also contribute significantly to your calorie intake. Opt for spirits and slimline tonics over beers and liqueurs and remember to keep hydrated with plenty of water. It can also be beneficial to 'bank' some calories in the weeks leading up to Christmas with a little extra workout time per day and some short circuit training in preparation for those extra festive treats.
Yoga and meditation
Christmas is a notoriously stressful time of year. Whether it's last minute shopping, cooking preparations or entertaining the family, even the most relaxed person can start to feel the pressure when the big day arrives. Yoga and meditation are great workouts to start the day with over the Christmas period. On a physical level, power yoga in particular can be fast paced and strenuous enough to help burn off calories but any type of yoga will improve immunity and strengthen muscles. Mentally, the time out to focus on your breathing and just relax will give you chance to unwind, decompress and find calmness within. During this hectic time of year it can really make a difference to how well you cope under pressure and thus enhance your overall enjoyment.
Dance
Tis the season to be jolly and why not get into the party spirit by dancing along to your favorite Christmas songs. Aerobic dance is thought to burn over 400 calories an hour so whether you are at the office party or simply bopping along in your own kitchen, it is a great way to keep fit. With technology and exercise going hand in hand these days, you could add a dance mat or game to your Christmas list and enlist the whole family in the fun. Not only will it encourage them to exercise without even leaving the house, but it will bring everyone together in the spirit of Christmas.
Strength workouts
If you do manage to get to the gym over the holidays then it's important to prioritise your workout. One area you definitely shouldn't neglect is strength training as your muscle mass is usually the first thing to decline when you stop exercising. Over the holidays you might find you put a little weight on but this can easily be fixed with plenty of cardio in the new year. Once you've lost that muscle mass you will need to work hard to build it back up again.  

Monday, December 21, 2015

Sweat Inequity and the Evolution of Group Fitness - by Lucinda LaRee


As Co-Owner of City Fitness Gym, Cleveland Park’s neighborhood gym, I take issue with the statement “Gyms suggest a lack of structure, intensity and discipline” in the article Sweat Equity in the December 3, 2015 Style section.

Workouts should have structure – the right variety of fitness classes, personal trainers, and tailored workouts provide that in a gym setting. Workouts should provide intensity – and that means different things to different participants, some want to feel the burn and scream, others find pain to be long-lasting and negative. Workouts do need discipline to be effective – trainers provide that for some; group fitness classes bring a social accountability to others.

The Council of the District of Columbia gave us a Resolution as the Longest-Standing Woman owned Fitness business in the District.  We have been in the fitness business for 33 years. We have survived all the fitness trends and continue in our commitment to improve the health and fitness of the community. We did not accomplish this longevity by promoting an elitist attitude, unrealistic physical appearance or a cult like atmosphere with short-term “Killer Workouts” that promise quick results and end in long-term overuse injury from unbalanced programming. Maybe our unique position of being a neighborhood “boutique” gym allows us to offer more attention and promotes adherence.

The article suggests that the Type-A personality is new to DC and that what they seek more stress and pressure. Type-A’s have been here from the beginning. Some thrive off of more stress, but many crave a haven from the storm. When 9-11 occurred, when the Wall Street collapse occurred, when other large stressors have affected our community, our attendance has gone up. What activities were busier? Yoga, group strength, and other mind-body modalities. People did not seek torture, they wanted nurturing and peace. We have many members, Type-A’s and not, who have been exercising in our friendly community for 25-30 years who could not have made it to their Silver years healthy and strong if they focused only on High-Intensity Training Trends.

Don’t get me started on some of the statements or words in this article that I found offensive: HURTS LIKE HELL.  HURTS SO GOOD.  POUNDING.  BODY-NUMBING. HATE IT OR HATE IT YOGA.  MISERABLE.  INSTURMENTS OF TORTURE.   S & M.   FIRE. SCREAMING, FIENDS, BLACK OUT, OBSESSION. These words belong in the article below RUN, HIDE, FIGHT. AND GET USED TO IT, about 355 mass shootings this year in the United States. This is an interesting juxtaposing of articles to say the least. This attitude is not a recipe for longevity but a set up for exercise burnout.

There is nothing new under the sun. What many of these programs have done is to rename and amp up already existing exercise practices. You can take Pilates and yoga, combine them (which has been done for decades) and “Power” market them with a new name…and they are still Pilates and yoga, but not necessarily safer or better. Add a celebrity smile to your marketing and suddenly you have a sensation. Kudos to their marketing teams, but one wonders if their safety guidelines and teacher training can properly keep up with the demand.

An interesting article to write might be the evolution of group exercise and what it does for people. In my 52 years, I have been in a Sports Illustrated workout video, I brought Ashtanga Yoga into the DC gym market, I have taught step, strength, slide, hi/lo, circuit classes, interval training, Pilates and now pole dancing. I get the need for variety and challenge the mind and the body. Our gym offers a huge variety of classes and types of trainers to provide that variety and structure to our clientele. We encourage everyone to work on all fitness components – cardio-respiratory, body composition, muscular strength, endurance, and flexibility. We also encourage balance – physical and mental. I personally use the Medicine Wheel as a guide for wholeness and wellness and we use these same principles to guide our members.

I end this with words that I feel would benefit the Type-A, work-obsessed people of this city and world at large:
BALANCED
GROUNDED
EMPOWERED
STRONG
FLEXIBLE
ENERGITIC
HAPPY
GRACEFUL
CONNECTED
PEACEFUL

How we journey there may be the most interesting story of all.


Lucinda LaRee
Co-Owner City Fitness Gym

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

A Giving Community: The City Fitness Crowdfunding Campaign, by Dega Schembri


Launching a Crowdfunding Campaign is a bit daunting for so many reasons.  For me, however, the biggest challenge, plain and simple, was the sheer fact that we would be asking for donations.   Asking for anything is particularly hard for me unless it is for a donation to a charity that I believe in, and this was a little different.  Although City Fitness is a community, we are also a business, and we are asking people to show their support for it by making donations.

Before we even launched our campaign, the first step I had to take was going out into the Cleveland Park Community to ask for donations from our area merchants.  As part of our Crowdfunding Campaign, we wanted to offer “perks” for anyone that made a financial donation.  For example, if you donate $50.00 you will receive a 20% discount from an area merchant.  In the past, we have received tremendous support from these businesses when we hold our annual Fitness Fiesta Fundraisers to support various non-profit charities, such as Girls On The Run DC.  This time, we are asking them to support our business.  These are other small businesses, like us, struggling to keep afloat. 

My first stop was Weygandt Wines, our downstairs neighbor in the Park-n-Shop.  Without hesitation, they agreed to offer a 20% discount on any wine purchases.  I was met with success again and again right in our own center with Ibhana’s, the new woman’s clothing shop that just opened, Parcel Plus DC and Paragon Thai.   From that point on, I would say that 99% of the merchants that I approached readily agreed to very generous “perks” - discounts on services, discounts on meals, free eye exams – it was simply unbelievable.  Our own trainers offered discounts on their training packages.   A member offered a discount on acupuncture and our staff massage therapist offered a discount on massages. In less than two days, we accumulated so many perks that the Indiegogo site could not handle the volume.  We had to combine some of the perks to fit into the site’s template to fit them all!

This was just the beginning of my being overwhelmed with the amount of generosity shown.  We launched the campaign and as of right now we are almost at 50% of our goal.  We received two very generous donations of $1,000.00 and another of $500.00.  Unbelievable.  Many of the women who are students of mine at our corporate site, the US Supreme Court, who do not even and will probably never come to City Fitness Gym donated.  We had one member who is struggling financially and offered to help in any other way than with a monetary donation and then ended up donating anyways!  Another member not only donated, but is offering to buy a drink to the first 25 folks that show up to our public Crowdfunding event, the date and location to be determined.

I understand the expression, “my cup runneth over”.  It is with a very full and grateful heart that I offer my deepest thanks to everyone that has participated so far.  It does indeed take a village to create and continue our special City Fitness community.

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Small Business – The Roots of a Community, by Lucinda LaRee


I come from working class roots, as does my business partner, Dega.  I grew up at the base of a 13,688-foot Mt. Tom in the Eastern High Sierra.  My father worked for Union Carbide, The Mine in the Sky.   One of the most productive tungsten mines during WW2.  We lived in a little mining village called Rovana.  At the heart of the community was the gymnasium and in close second, the baseball field.  It was here we gathered as a community to watch our father’s train with old leather boxing gloves and medicine balls and our fathers and our mothers play ball. It was here boys and girls alike learned to play basketball, volleyball, baseball, softball, football, as well as cheerleading and gymnastics.  It was here we gathered for the Halloween Carnival and the company Christmas party to sit on Santa’s Lap and Vacation Bible camp.  Because I grew up in a close-knit community that valued exercise and sports it was a natural fit for me, coming of age during the fitness boom to dream up a future in fitness.  I just wanted to continue running, dancing and “cheering” people on!



This past summer I visited Rovana on my way into the backcountry for a backpacking trip.  The mine closed over 20 years ago and the village has found itself populated with a different community. Since its back yard consists of some of the best rock climbing and mountain climbing in the world, you can find mountain and rock climbers from all over the world.  I was heart broken when I saw the little gym had been torn down. 

The fitness business has changed so much over the past 31 years (the lifetime of our business). The industry started out primarily as small independently owned fitness studios, offering aerobics “Jane Fonda” style and gyms for weight training, in the style of bodybuilding like Arnold Swartzneger.   The studio trend is making a comeback in the yoga and specialty class world although their fiscal wellness is being compromised by the name brand/elite celebrity sponsored fitness trend businesses like Soul Cycle and Balanced Core. 

The health and fitness business has grown into large, corporate, impersonal box gyms that are doing their best to not only gobble up the market share of memberships and personal training, but are now going after the yoga and specialty market too.  These gyms focus on quantity of membership over quality of member service.
  
We are “The Little Gym That Could.”   Our roots go deep.  We got our start as a business offering fitness at the work site, grew into a fitness studio and then a neighborhood gym.
We have keep our doors open despite the competition because we focus on the people first.  We believe in paying a living wage and want to help our employees grow their fitness careers and be successful. We believe in our members and we want to see them in the gym, working out and getting stronger. We believe in relationships.  In a world that promotes isolation and individualism we go against the grain.    We have purposefully resisted some of the tech trends like TVs everywhere in the gym, and key cards to check members in by sliding their card through a scanner.  We check everyone in by their name, we want to get to know you and we want to create a community where people can come and feel welcome and make friends. 

This can’t happen if everyone is into himself or herself and their own technology just tuned out with their headphones or watching TV or IPADS.  We hope to continue to be a place neighbors want to gather and motivate each other to stay strong mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually.  Many studies show that friendship makes people happier and happy people live longer!

But the truth is that staying vibrant in this business means keeping up with the trends, staying innovative in training methods and fitness class offerings as well as equipment.  We have been doing business in Cleveland Park for 21 years and our business needs a facelift.   We are grateful recipients of the Great Streets Grant and this has allowed us to make some much needed faculty upgrades from our locker room renovations, to new very expensive HVAC units.  Not so glamorous but necessary.  Now we need working capital to upgrade our weight equipment and other facility needs.

To do this, we have become a part of this DC Crowd Funding Challenge. This is an exciting fundraising program allowing staff, members and friends of City Fitness Gym to give us that little extra financial help to reach our goals as we continue to go the extra mile to help them reach theirs. Check out our Crowdfunding website and please consider being a part of maintaining our special community. http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/the-little-gym-that-could

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Perspective about Physicality, by City Fitness member Neil Proto

I just returned from the Falklands, South Georgia, and the Antarctic,€“ a National Geographic expedition. Twenty-four days. Departing from Ushuia, Argentina, through the Beagle Channel once explored by Charles Darwin. My imperative for going was the journey of Sir Ernest Shackleton; what he and other Antarctic explorers saw, in part, even though IĆ¢€™d see it through the 21st century prism of better gear and an obvious safety net. We did not avoid risk, and often could not avoid the radical, often abrupt changes in the weather, ice conditions, the rough sea and wind currents in the Drake Passage, and the potential for the accident, including in the places Shackleton journeyed with his men during his failed expedition in 1914. It's been 100 years since his expedition began. 

Many elements of the trip resonated with me: one was the way National Geographic managed risk, the other was how physical preparation - training of a deliberate, intense kind over decades - made a difference. I include in that a range of outdoor activities - snowshoeing, hiking, kayaking, and sailing (as the crew) among them, mostly in the Pacific Northwest, and with friends who taught me the meaning of safety, preparation, weather, and the value of camaraderie at hard moments. There also was running, playing tennis, standing on the METRO, and walking, not riding the escalator. Consistently throughout all of that, at times daily, certainly regularly, were workouts and the occasional expert training lessons and very particularized guidance at CityFitness. It has been, and was on this expedition, of imminent value to know my body, what muscles to use and what to call upon at different times. Perhaps most surprising to me were the few moments when the "accident" loomed or happened, including once when I slipped on wet tussock grass coming down a steep incline, and found that I "fell" into a position that I'd learned in yoga! It was the first thought I had when I stood up, and then continued, unharmed, down the hillside. 

The ultimate benefit was that I got to see more, walk higher and longer, cross rapidly moving streams coming off melting glaciers, and embrace every physically demanding opportunity. I did it with a very clear understanding of my physical limitations. It also meant, I got to see yet broader, stunning vistas, experience harsher winds and cold, and see penguins walk confidently up thousands of feet in snow and ice to reach their colony. Neil Thomas Proto CityFitness member for 15 years. (anyone interested in more narrative, photos, and videos can go to FACEBOOK; 7 posts, all of which are "public" (not confined to Friends) or to http://www.neilthomasproto.com

Friday, November 7, 2014

The Positive Influence of Physical Training During Recovery, by Jennifer Elson



Substance abuse is a growing concern, with close to 24 million Americans misusing drugs each month. While drugs such as marijuana, crystal meth and heroin may come to mind when you think of substances that people are likely to become dependent on, this is only part of the issue as increasing numbers of people are becoming hooked on prescription drugs. Indeed, one-third of people who took drugs for the first time reported taking a prescribed product recreationally. Opiate based painkillers are among those most commonly abused, with increased demand for specialist opiate recovery programs. However, there is growing evidence that besides the traditional medical and psychological approach to drug treatment, exercise offers significant benefits during the recovery process.

Working out to achieve better mental health
One way in which getting active can help addicts is by promoting good mental wellness. It is acknowledged that poor mental health is a risk factor for taking prescription medications and illegal drugs. That’s not all though, as conditions such as depression and anxiety can also make it much harder for addicts to successfully quit. The ability of physically training to boost your mood and relieve anxiety is therefore beneficial for anyone in recovery who is already affected by these mental health problems, but how does working out improve your well-being?

Exercise is certainly a useful treatment for mild to moderate depression, though no particular form of training seems to offer benefits over another, so whether you prefer a gym session or fitness classes, either can potentially lift your spirits. This is partly thanks to the endorphins released when you work out. Endorphins are chemical messengers in your brain, which promote positive feelings and you can feel euphoric after intense exercise, which is what a “runner’s high” refers to. These aren’t the only mood-boosting chemicals released on activity, as you also produce more serotonin and dopamine. At the same time as these positive chemicals rise, those that induce stress, such as cortisol, fall, which helps you to relax. However, changes in your brain chemistry and your blood work only go some of the way to explaining the mental boost you get from exerting yourself.
For instance, exercise is a great distraction, helping you to forget your troubles. Even if this gives you just temporary relief from anxious thoughts, this is still a welcome opportunity for some respite. Another benefit is that when you set yourself achievable fitness goals and you meet them, this enhances your self-esteem, so you feel better about yourself. A further plus point for physical activity is that it promotes healthier sleep patterns, so you find it easier to drop off and are less inclined to wake up during the night. This is good news, as low mood and anxiety can stop you sleeping, but a lack of sleep can also make the conditions worse, so a vicious circle develops. Finally, when you join a fitness center, it is another opportunity to engage socially, which itself is known to improve the way you feel.

Fitness training as part of rehab
There is certainly evidence in relation to cocaine, amphetamine and crystal meth that regular exercise has a positive influence on drug taking. For instance, when someone works out experimentation is less likely to become a regular habit, you consume less overall, your habit is less likely to spiral out of control or lead to binges, and when it comes to getting clean you are at lower risk of a relapse. So how can physical training have such a positive influence on drug use?
Firstly, as already mentioned exercise helps to reduce depressive and anxious symptoms, with users often taking drugs to mask these or to offer a form of escape. The positive changes that occur in your brain when you work out can also trigger its reward center, resulting in feelings of pleasure similar to those that you might achieve from drug taking. In the same way that focusing on a training session can help to distract you from your problems, this additionally allows you to better cope with your cravings. Similarly, knowing that you have met your exercise goals gives you the confidence that you can achieve a life free from drugs, so spurs you on to do just that. Then if that isn’t enough, the chance to meet new people is helpful when you are trying to avoid old acquaintances that you associate with your previous habit.
Although making the gym a regular part of your week can potentially help you to overcome problems with substance abuse, you should always seek professional help if you are struggling to free yourself from the hold of drugs.

Jennifer Elson is a writer who contributes to a number of health and wellness sites on various topics. Prior to taking a career break to bring up her two children, she worked in the healthcare sector helping people achieve better diets and fitness.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Finding the Fountain of Youth...in the Potomac River, by Dega Schembri





Somehow I got it into my head that when I turned 60 I would do a triathlon.  But, then I had a minor health scare at age 57 and the perfect counter strike was to strengthen my lungs.   So I decided to take up swimming and what better motivator to learn how to swim than by signing up for a triathlon?  Don’t get me wrong; I was no stranger to the water having been raised in Detroit in the proximity of the Great Lakes. But swimming free style, breathing properly, and going for 750 meters (1/2 mile) in the open water was, in a word, frightening!  I couldn’t even swim 25 meters without stopping and that was in a pool. Open water would be even worse. So what was I thinking? 

For the sake of full disclosure I have been in the fitness business for 30 plus years steadily teaching aerobic and body sculpting classes and providing personal training sessions at the fitness facility in Washington, DC that I co-own, City Fitness Gym. I also do my own weight training workouts. While I am not a cyclist, a runner and clearly not a swimmer, I knew that I had the physical ability and endurance to do all three.  I would just be completely out of my comfort zone.  I decided that this would be a good thing. 

I believe that as we age, our fears often become bigger and we stick with what we know and take fewer risks. I also believe that when you stop exploring, stop trying new things, and stop pushing yourself beyond your own level of comfort, you accelerate the aging process. 

At age 57 I signed up for the 2009 New Jersey Sprint Triathlon and immediately enrolled in the DC Triathlon Club’s “New Triathlete Program” (NTP).  Their first training session began with a 5 K run and I was undoubtedly the oldest in the group.   I quickly discovered, though, that most everyone was nervous about the run, not everyone was a runner and “triathlete wannabes” came in all sizes and shapes. It was a hopeful start.

During the NTP program I participated in all the group workouts and clinics.  Not only did I stand out because of my age, I also had a bike that was not your state of the art “Tri-Bike”.  It was a bike that I was emotionally attached to, having been given to me by my staff when I turned 50.  With it’s purple flower decorations, I was constantly asked if THIS was the actual bike I was going to use in the NJ Triathlon, to which I would proudly reply, YES!


When the day finally arrived, I was a wreck.  A few weeks prior to the real event I participated in a practice triathlon sponsored by the DC Tri Club.  It’s called “practice” for a reason.   First, the swimming was done in a pool – a far cry from the open water of a lake – and though I completed the swim, I was the last one out of the pool. Next, I had to immediately hit the bathroom (nerves) before I could get on my bike, and to top it off I started my run with my bike helmet on. 

The memory of all of that forced me awake even earlier than I needed.  We arrived at the event at about 6 a.m. and as I waited for my group to get called into the water, a woman about my age standing next to me could feel my fear (and probably also see my entire body shaking). She told me not to worry and that once I got out of the water I would probably pass her up on the run. The open water is intimidating because as you follow the big orange buoys that help you keep track of where you are going, you have a pack of other folks swimming over you, doing the same thing.  Despite all my freestyle training, my swim on that day consisted of a combination of the backstroke, sidestroke, and breaststroke and sometimes the front crawl. But I made it out of the water, the endorphins kicked in, the hardest part was over and I was in competitive mode. 

When you participate in triathlon events, they make sure that your body is marked using a bold black marker to write your race number on your arm and your age on your calf. This mortified me until I passed someone younger than me and was elated that they could see my age. The encouraging woman that calmed me down at the beginning of the race was correct – I did pass her during the running segment.

I don’t think I will ever forget the feeling of crossing that finish line, especially with my son watching and cheering me on.  I did it!  I wanted to do more!  I was hooked.  And most importantly, from that day forward, I could say that I AM A TRIATHLETE!

Since my first triathlon, I spent a lot of time and money learning how to swim better.  I now enjoy the quiet, meditative, and rhythmic back-and-forth of swimming laps; my Zen of swimming.  I bike almost one hour to and from work whenever I can and get a short run in about once a week.  I even sign up for some 5K and 8K runs.

I have since participated in four more triathlons, three of which were on the Potomac River.  Of those five I have actually won my age division three times! Even though winning isn’t really my goal, getting up on the platform and being number ONE is quite the emotional boost! My goal is to do one triathlon a year.  I love the cross training aspect of triathlon training because it does not limit you to just one sport. Swimming has made my entire upper body noticeably more toned and the running and biking have strengthened my lower body.  I still participate in other types of fitness activities including Yoga and Pilates.

Today, I feel physically younger at 62 than I did at 52 and attribute it to my triathlon training.  Who would have thought that I would find the fountain of youth swimming the notoriously murky waters of the Potomac River?  So, don’t let your chronological age hold you back either mentally or physically.   I challenge you to TRY A TRI!  It only takes completing one to say “I AM A TRIATHLETE!”

Friday, October 18, 2013

A Small Village in the Big City - By Lucinda LaRee


I am so excited and grateful to be celebrating a special anniversary with my business partner, Dega Schembri. 2013 marks 20 years for our gym, City Fitness, and 30 years for Fit Physique, Inc., our parent company.   Little did I know that when I showed up at 1500 Mass. Ave., Washington, DC, with only my O’Neil surf bag to my name to audition to teach classes for Dega that this was one of those life-changing moments.



As a child my father moved every six months.  My grandfather, Otis worked on a road crew, known for his excellent eye for leveling.  He paved many of the roads through the High Sierra in California, Nevada and the deserts of Arizona. Because of this, my father was committed to raising his children in one place.  He said it was difficult on him to move every 3-6 months as a child because he never had a chance to bond to a place, make lasting friendships or participate in sports. My father went into the Air Force and when he got out in 1964 he was stationed in Clovis, New Mexico, where I was born. He moved our family to Round Valley, near Bishop California and got a job working for Union Carbide, a tungsten mine or as some called it “The Mine In The Sky.”

He kept his word, raising his three daughters at the base of the 13, 470’ Mt. Tom, on the Eastern Side of the Sierra, in a small mining village called Rovana.  This was in company housing provided by Union Carbide.   Here we had the freedom to run wild.  We never meet a fence we would not cross or a yard we would not play in.  At the heart of this small, isolated, rural community was the gym.  It was here the fathers played on the company basketball team as the kids ran around playing hide and seek under the bleachers.  Some of my earliest memories are of my handsome, six foot three father who was strong and lean looking like Elvis as he shot hoops, trained with old leather medicine balls and shadow boxed with old leather boxing mitts.  Our TV reception was poor so many nights were spent watching old black and white film of Causuis Clay and George Forman fights when we were not planet and star gazing.

As I grew, the gym and the baseball field became the place to explore my own athletic abilities.  We considered ourselves “tomboys” and played every sport the boys did; baseball, football, basketball, volleyball, track and field & skiing on Mammoth Mountain. When we were not playing sports we rode horses, swam in the creeks, climbed the mountains and chased the coyotes and mule deer through the sagebrush.  At 11 years old, I became a cheerleader and my love of dance and movement began.

As a teen, growing up in one of the most isolated communities, I had a dream to travel the world. Inspired by my love of Jane Fonda and Jazzercise I announced at my high school graduation that I wanted to be a Diet and Fitness Consultant for the Rich and Famous.  This got quite the laugh, as this was unheard of in my small town and not a career path in 1981.

My professional fitness path started out at The Total Workout 1983 in North County San Diego.  It was here I was introduced to the person who was instrumental in getting me a job at the exclusive spa Cal A Vie where I trained such celebrities as Gary Busey, Stockard Channing, Leslie Ann Warren - my childhood Cinderella - and fitness star Kathy Smith.  Meeting the rich and famous at this job opened doors to working as a trainer on the east coast at the Norwich Inn and Spa which lead to me to the opportunity to audition and become the trainer for the Sports Illustrated Super Shape Up Video Series with Cheryl Tiegs, Elle McPherson and Rachel Hunter.

Riding the wave of the release of this popular video set, and being a bit of a gypsy for a few years, I moved to DC.  Soon, I found myself pregnant, a single mom to be, and I realized in order to make it work I needed to settle down.  Having done what I said I wanted to do traveling to some amazing places in the world and training the rich and famous I was ready to see a long held vision of my own fitness business come to a reality. My son was born in 1992 at Georgetown Hospital, and like my father before me, I wanted to raise him in a close-knit community.

I was hired by the Forsheimers to design and open City Fitness Gym on October 1, 1993, and became business partners with Dega Schembri October 1, 1996. Together we purchased City Fitness Gym. We have built a wonderful community here in Cleveland Park.  This neighborhood has been a support network to our families. My son went to the neighborhood public schools, he has many friends that he met here in kindergarten and has an extended family made up of the gym staff and members.  He is now 21, with a son of his own, and I get the grand adventure of a grandmother with a growing family! 

I want to share my gratitude to my family of origin and their encouragement of my physical activities and dreams.  My childhood community and friends were always up for an adventure and my DC family made up of friends, staff, fitness instructors and gym members make my amazing world go round everyday.  I want to thank my son for giving me a reason to get my act together 20 years ago.  Last but not least I want to thank Dega for her commitment to our life as business partners as we work together creating this amazing space where I can “Be Lucinda” and offer up my unique talents and serve with her to help make the residents of DC happier, healthier and fit!

A master in the art of living draws no sharp distinction between his work and his play: his labor and his leisure: his mind and his body: his education and his recreation.  He hardly knows which is which He simply pursues his vision of excellence through whatever he is doing, and leaves others to determine whether he is working or playing.  To himself, he always appears to be doing both. 

Francoise Rene Auguste Chateaubriand