Health clubs begin marketing one-on-one stretching sessions.
assisted stretching
Some professional-assisted stretching techniques, such as proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation (PNF), have been around for decades and used mostly on elite athletes. However, health clubs have begun aggressively marketing one-on-one stretching sessions as part of their personal training menus. The majority of the WAC's nearly 100 personal trainers possess the requisite skills to perform assisted stretching, and 15- and 30-minute sessions are currently offered for $10 and $20, respectively, with multi-session discount packages available.
That's a bargain, according to personal trainer Loretta Lynn, owner of Dynamic Body Stretch in Santa Monica, Calif. Lynn sets up shop at a Powerhouse Gym location, where clients pay $250 an hour for her stretching assistance. "Trainers stretch their clients all the time, but now it's becoming more of a separate thing," Lynn says. "People work out and then get a full-body stretch."
That old workout mantra - no pain, no gain - also applies to assisted stretching. "We tell people it's a seven or eight on the pain scale," Neitzel says. "They just need to deal with it and push through it."
Clients are expected to push, quite literally, during PNF. An assisted hamstring stretch using PNF, for example, puts the client on his or her back with one leg in the air. The trainer maximizes the stretch and then holds the leg in place as the client contracts the hamstring muscles. After a deep breath and a relaxing exhale, the trainer can typically advance the leg a full three to five inches farther. "You see people's faces, and it's like, 'I can't believe it. How does that happen?' " Neitzel says. "You're shortening the muscle, so you do the stretching for us. When you exhale, your body relaxes. I just take what lengths your body has given me."
Such gains aren't possible when stretching solo, adds Neitzel. Neither is the optimal "wet noodle" mindset - PNF notwithstanding - that clients should carry into professional-assisted stretching sessions. It all adds up to a profitable programming opportunity for clubs. "I charge twice as much money for stretching as I do for training," says Lynn, who stretches athletes, children and the elderly. "Basically they're lying there and I'm doing all the work."