We asked some brilliant folks to tell us about the best advice they’ve ever given to a client and have highlighted some of the responses below.
Alfred Nwagbo

Best Advice giving to a client: Don’t be like Samson ( from the biblical story ) and die with your enemies. They’ll stay close to find your secret. I’ll end the story there lol Read more>>
Gail Turner-Cooper

The best advice I give my clients is to take ownership of their health. To learn, apply, and maintain a new lifestyle that serves you is only part of the process. In order for the healthy changes to be sustainable, it is important to own everything about them. How the changes make you feel and why you are making the changes are part of the foundation. With ownership also comes a renewed belief in oneself. When you believe in yourself, you are empowered. Read more>>
Saara Haapanen

The best advice I’ve ever given to a client is this, “you have the ability to change”. We as human beings are hardwired to repeat the things we have done in the past. Our brain’s main function is to keep us safe and to keep us from dying. Because of this, it automates processes that we do every day as well as our thinking patterns. 90% of our processes are automated in our subconscious. Read more>>
Lara Bercu

The best advice I give to my clients is to have a home care routine with products that I recommend after their treatments. 85% of healing and maintaining the skin is a at home treatment. While the skin is being taken care of at home the skin will be healed and prepared for another treatment. Read more>>
Leslie Bobo

As a dietitian many clients come to me thinking that I care exactly what is on their plate, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. Hear me out. Food is so much more than just fuel, it encompasses experiences, emotions, cultures, etc. So do I care how you feel? Of course I do, but if we are so focused on food choices that it is causing mental distress then it doesn’t matter what we are (or aren’t eating). With that, the best advice I give my clients is to tune out external messages, and tune into internal cues. Read more>>