By Hilery Hutchinson There is a quiet shift that begins to occur sometime in the fourth decade of life. It is rarely dramatic at first. Most people notice it gradually. Recovery from workouts takes a little longer. Stiffness lingers after sitting through long meetings. A minor injury that once would have disappeared in a few… Continue reading Strength Training for Longevity: What Changes After 40 and 50
Tag: Back Bay
The Ozempic Era: What weight loss drugs change and what they cannot replace
By Hilery Hutchinson In recent years, a new conversation has quietly entered nearly every corner of the health and performance world. It appears in medical offices, executive boardrooms, private training studios, and dinner conversations among friends. Medications originally developed for diabetes, now widely prescribed for weight loss, have fundamentally shifted how people approach body composition… Continue reading The Ozempic Era: What weight loss drugs change and what they cannot replace
Boston Marathon: Training Mistakes That Lead to Injury
By Hilery Hutchinson Each year, as winter loosens its grip on Boston and the first warmer mornings return to the Charles River Esplanade, the rhythm of marathon training becomes visible across the city. Runners move through Beacon Hill before sunrise, circle Fresh Pond in Cambridge after work, and stretch along Commonwealth Avenue while the skyline… Continue reading Boston Marathon: Training Mistakes That Lead to Injury
The Hidden Cost of Sitting: Why Professionals Are Developing “Office Athlete” Injuries
By Hilery Hutchinson Many professionals underestimate the effects of sitting on the body. What appears to be a passive workday can quietly reshape movement patterns and lead to long-term dysfunction. Modern professional life places a unique set of demands on the body that did not exist for previous generations. Many accomplished professionals spend their days… Continue reading The Hidden Cost of Sitting: Why Professionals Are Developing “Office Athlete” Injuries
Why Bodybuilders Struggle in Pilates: The Truth About Strength vs Control
By Chi Bang, Owner of CLIENTEL3 I was scrolling through Instagram the other night and saw one of those videos again. A heavily muscled bodybuilder walks into a Pilates class. Thick chest. Big arms. Clearly strong. He sets up next to a group of tiny women who look like they weigh half of what he… Continue reading Why Bodybuilders Struggle in Pilates: The Truth About Strength vs Control
Why AI can’t replace your coach: The Human Side of Fitness Programming
By Chi Bang, Owner of CLIENTEL3 Artificial intelligence is everywhere. It writes essays, generates art, and now it builds AI fitness programs that promise “personalized” results in seconds. Type in your goals and available equipment, and an app will instantly design your next 8-week plan. Efficient? Absolutely. Personal? Not quite. At CLIENTEL3, we don’t use… Continue reading Why AI can’t replace your coach: The Human Side of Fitness Programming
There Is No Perfect Time. There Is Only Now or Later.
By Chi Bang, Owner of CLIENTEL3 If you are wondering about the best time to start strength training, the honest answer is this: there is no perfect time. There is only now or later. And later is rarely a strategy that produces meaningful results. Later Is Not a Strategy Think about it honestly. Have you… Continue reading There Is No Perfect Time. There Is Only Now or Later.
Redefining What Being Fit Means in the Modern World
By Chi Bang, Owner of CLIENTEL3 For decades, being fit meant one thing. A lean physique. Visible abs. A number on a scale. Maybe a max bench or a fast mile. However, that definition is outdated. It misses the point. It ignores how the body actually works and how people actually live. The new definition… Continue reading Redefining What Being Fit Means in the Modern World
Why January Isn’t a Fresh Start
By Grayson DiMiceli, Certified Personal Trainer January carries symbolic weight, but it does not erase habits, alter physiology, or remove real-world constraints. Most people enter the new year with the same routines, stressors, and limitations they had in December. When change fails to hold, it is often framed as a lack of motivation. In reality,… Continue reading Why January Isn’t a Fresh Start
The Permission to Pause
By Aidan Antonitis, Certified Personal Trainer Most people enter December feeling stretched thin. Work speeds up, schedules get crowded, and energy drops. Training becomes harder to fit in and even harder to recover from. The real issue is not the missed workout. It is the pressure people place on themselves for slowing down. Rest feels… Continue reading The Permission to Pause