Hawthorn Farm Athletic Club in Hillsboro, OR

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Give Some Love This February With Stress Management

February 3, 2023 by Heidi Sivers-Boyce

Give Love With Stress Management in Hillsboro

With Valentine’s Day coming up, let’s talk about giving some love to you! The most common concerns we hear from HFAC Members are related to stress, all the demands on time and attention, and how stress impacts the body.

We get it! That’s why at HFAC we work so hard to bring meaningful, science-backed tools and resources to the Membership experience, starting with our incredible culture of belonging.

HFAC is a local, women-led business with three generations of our family that work at and enjoy the club. This means Hawthorn Farm Athletic Club is specifically passionate about welcoming all ages and level of fitness. We have a ton of amenities and a relaxed atmosphere that allows for exploration and finding the work outs and amenities that make the biggest impact on your wellbeing. We have everything from swimming and swim lessons to pickleball, and weight training to Zumba and an at-home workout library  with thousands of recorded classes.

As the Nagoski sisters say in the book Burnout, “Physical activity is the single most efficient strategy for completing the stress response cycle and recalibrating your central nervous system into a calm state.”  HFAC has so many ways to de-stress through physical activity, there really is something for every interest. 

Hawthorn Farm is also as much a social club as we are a place for fitness. This is by intention as well. To again quote the research of Emily & Amilia Nagoski, this time in their TED talk,  “Casual but friendly social interaction is an external sign that the world is a safe place. People with more acquaintances are happier. “

This doesn’t mean HFAC is only for extroverts, it means we’re friendly by design. We regularly host social events, our front desk team knows your name, a team member is always available for any questions, and our professional experts love to adapt workouts to meet both your physical needs and preferences.

HFAC also supports healthy social connection with the people who mean the most to you by welcoming families and friends into the Club together.  This month, new members receive 50% off the membership joining fee for themselves (over $99 in value). HFAC is also offering new and existing members the ability to add a spouse and kids to your membership for FREE (up to a $199 value!).  Our HFAC Refer-A-Friend program also incentivizes working out with the friends, coworkers and others in your community who brighten your days.

Whether you are looking at HFAC for the first time, or you are an existing member looking with questions, we’d love to connect. Just drop by, give us a call at 503.640.6404, or email.

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Men in Yoga

June 17, 2022 by Heidi Sivers-Boyce

Men in Yoga at Hillsboro’s Best Gym

Is yoga more appealing to, or better for, a specific gender? It shouldn’t be! Every person needs a physical foundation of strength and flexibility, as well as the mental benefits a yoga practice can bring. Hawthorn Farm Athletic Club (HFAC) specializes in creating a culture of belonging that welcomes everyone into our group exercise classes. In honor of Father’s Day this month, we want to make a point of welcoming MEN into YOGA!

HFAC’s yoga classes and yoga instructors are among our most popular group exercise options. Classes host a wide range of students of all ages and ability level; everyone from devoted yoga practitioners to new explorers and athletes looking to prevent injury or up performance.

If you look back at the history of Yoga, men have deep roots within its practices. We asked HFAC’s deeply experienced yoga instructors Iris Mason, Chris Schaus, and Kari Parkinson, what they would say to men considering trying yoga.

First, what would you say is the percentage of males to females in your yoga class? 

Iris: It ranges, but I would say 33-50% of class attendees are male.

Chris: My experience is that about 15-20% of those in my yoga classes are male.

Kari: There are 10-20% men in my class.

Yoga pose together

What would you say to men thinking about trying yoga?  

Iris: I really emphasize how much yoga can help with stress reduction and increase flexibility. You do not need to be flexible to do yoga. In fact, it is almost better to start yoga not being flexible because you can see the improvements as time goes on. I suggest men add at least one yoga class to their weekly schedule, especially because it can improve cardio and weight-lifting programs. 

Chris: What I say depends on the individual. The conversation would begin by asking what they think they need from yoga, and then talk about how yoga might address those needs – flexibility, strength, aches and pains, disabilities, weight, etc. The best invitation is personal and directed at addressing the individual’s perceived needs. I might direct them to a different teacher’s class if my class is not appropriate for their needs. 

I generally acknowledge that Yoga can be intimidating for most men because 1) men generally are less flexible than women, and 2) the class will likely have some long-time practitioners. So, the first thing is to acknowledge the ego and get over it. A lot of people in the class are not flexible.

I also like to offer my personal experience as a testament to the power of yoga practice. After two major spinal surgeries 20 years apart, permanent nerve root damage and muscular atrophy; the ruptured discs have completely recovered, and my spinal flexibility is better than ever at over 60 years of age. My body is a living testament to the power of yoga. 

Kari: I would say the same thing to anyone, that regular yoga creates the necessary balance to a weekly workout by improving range of motion, flexibility, attention to breath and pause to be present. With men in particular, there is more often the misconception to push through and build or burn to keep your body fit, but everyone needs to balance that with pause and space. Your body will love you for much longer with regular yoga practice.

Are you thinking about trying to improve your flexibility and overall health? At HFAC, we offer weekly yoga classes for our members to get you on a routine to mobility and fitness. Check out our membership overview for details. We offer monthly joining promos that can accommodate most anyone looking to join our Hawthorn Farm Athletic Club Community. Book a two day trial pass and get a tour of our spacious facility!

Yoga Chris Instructor

What is a Healthy Mindset… For YOU

February 6, 2022 by Heidi Sivers-Boyce

A Healthy Mindset for Exercise

If you’re putting yourself under pressure to exercise more, train harder, and perform at your peak, you may benefit from adjustments to your mindset.  HFAC specializes in approaching fitness, health and wellness in ways that work for each individual. We are all different.  This blog explores the mindset of acceptance, how to know when to hustle, and why it can be okay to go with the flow.

Les Mills Fit Planet interviewed Emma Slade, an Australian Exercise Psychologist who works with everyone from pro athletes and keen gym-goers to people battling depression and struggling to get up off the couch.  Emma Slade observes that when it comes to getting the maximum benefit from exercise, most believe a good mindset equally as important as physical abilities. Yet, chances are we spend plenty of time chasing physical fitness gains and nowhere near as much working on getting our mindset in good shape.

At HFAC we hear daily from our community members working on keeping a strong mindset during the unique and long challenges of the pandemic.

A focus on mindset “doesn’t mean we should all down tools (or in this case barbells) and switch our focus entirely from muscles to mental fortitude. But exercise psychology offers key things to consider when it comes to building a strong mental foundation for any physical activity you pursue.”

HOW CAN EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGY HELP YOU?

Emma Slade: “When people think of sports and exercise psychology they think of elite athletes, and a lot of exercise psychologists work in this space. But I have always wanted to work with the everyday person and help them establish their own healthy relationship with exercise. Everybody knows exercise is good for them. So simply slamming people with more of this knowledge isn’t necessarily going to promote long-term change. “I just can’t get going today. I’m not motivated. I don’t feel like it.” are all statements with both physical AND psychological roots. Exercise psychology focuses upon the latter.”

A lot of HFAC Members find support in the physical and psychological components of exercise with individual, partner or small group Personal Training   But sometimes the need is different.

Emma Slade: “Confidence, perceptions of self, or previous experiences around exercise are just some of the other mindset barriers that get in the way of exercise. A lot of what I do is work with people to overcome these barriers. It’s a classic statement that if exercise was a pill it would be the most widely prescribed medicine out there. However, even though we have this beautiful thing we could all use in various capacities for overall wellbeing, a lot of the population don’t. And that’s where the psychology component comes into it. There’s no specific fitness formula that will work for everyone, it’s about working one-on-one and using psychology to explore what works for the individual.”

WILL YOU ONLY BENEFIT FROM A PSYCHOLOGIST IF YOU’RE DEALING WITH ‘ISSUES’?

“Seeing a psychologist still, unfortunately, has a stigma associated with it but you can work with a psychologist for multiple reasons. Yes, as a psychologist, you work with individuals experiencing mental health concerns and assist people to overcome some of the hardest and most challenging parts of their life. But it’s not all about being at rock bottom. It’s also so much about potential. A massive part of psychology is increasing wellbeing and performance that’s already good and making it better. Not everyone experiences a mental illness in their lifetime, but we all have mental health and psychology works with both.”

“Today we have a real hustle mentality. We have access to all sorts of tools and resources to help us be our best and rule the world, but should we strive for that?”

IS ALWAYS PUSHING TO BE YOUR BEST IMPORTANT?

“It’s important to check where your desire to achieve more is coming from. If you’re a driven person and you have a real growth mindset, where you want to face challenges and overcome barriers, that’s great. But if wanting to go hard, be better and be stronger is coming from a place of comparison, a place of self-judgment, or a place of punishment, then that’s something to be wary of.

Today we have a real hustle mentality. We have access to all sorts of tools and resources to help us be our best and rule the world, but should we strive for that? There’s nothing wrong with accepting where you’re at. And if you’re truly happy there, then stay there.”

DOES THIS MEAN GOAL-SETTING IS NOT AS IMPORTANT AS WE ONCE THOUGHT?

At HFAC we encourage setting regular, achievable goals. This is a fundamental part of HFAC’s unique New Member onboarding and our New Start Training Programs. 

“Research shows when it comes to behavior change, self-monitoring of behavior, not a pure focus upon the intended outcome, is key. So goals are valuable, but they must be behavioral-based, not outcome-based.

For many, setting a goal to lose weight can be a great motivator, but what’s important is the difference between process and outcome. This means you don’t focus on losing 10 kilos, you focus on the process (eating well, exercising, prioritizing sleep, managing stress levels). When you engage with that process, there’s a high likelihood you’ll lose the weight anyway. By focusing on the process, you promote the likelihood of finding a form of exercise that doesn’t feel like a chore and you do it because you enjoy it.

It’s important to note that most people are actually very good at losing weight. But if you’ve only been focused on the outcome of losing weight, and the process hasn’t been overly enjoyable, meaningful, or fulfilling, then you are probably going to put the weight back on.”

FEELING ANXIOUS ABOUT EXERCISE CAN KICK IN WHETHER YOU’RE SUPER FIT OR IF YOU’RE JUST STARTING OUT. IS EXERCISE ANXIETY A BAD THING?

“You don’t want to eliminate anxiety from all aspects of life, because anxiety has a purpose. Anxiety is our body perceiving physically threatening or emotionally frightening situations and alerting you so that you can effectively deal with them. Anxiety becomes dysfunctional when it’s telling you that absolutely everything is threatening, even when there is no rational reason to be anxious. The interesting thing about anxiety and exercise is the physical sensations associated with each are very similar. Your heart rate goes up and you may feel hot, you feel sweaty, you’re experiencing shortness of breath. So if you’re already feeling anxious about exercise, and then you start to exercise and you further experience these sensations, it can be hard to differentiate what is anxiety and what is a by-product of exercise. A large part of a sport and exercise psychologist’s work is helping individuals to learn how to differentiate these physical feelings and unpack the thoughts and behaviors that may promote anxiety and influence future involvement in exercise.”

HOW CAN ANXIETY IMPACT YOUR EXERCISE EXPERIENCES AND THE RESULTS YOU GET?

“There are some who have quite traumatic associations with exercise. For example, a client who was a strong swimmer in her teenage years. The motto on the swim club wall was ‘Go hard or go home’ which instilled the idea that unless you’re going hard you may as well not bother. So, when she was considering exercise as an adult it was anxiety-provoking and negative. For others, anxiety can come from not feeling comfortable or connected with your body, confident in your skills, or that you have the support around you to start exercise.

It also works at the other end of the scale, where someone finds something that works for them really well, but like a lot of things, when you do too much it becomes dysfunctional. What we’ve seen lately, is that for some, when the world seems to be falling apart, it can feel like the only thing you can control is how much you eat, and how much you exercise. People tend to grasp on to exercise in order to grasp some control, which is great, but then that’s also the space where anxiety and exercise dependency and overtraining can kick in.”

You have legitimate reasons for struggling to exercise, but you can work with that and navigate around it.

IS LAZINESS A THING? WHY DO WE MAKE EXCUSES TO EXERCISE? AND IS IT BAD?

“Some people are just naturally more wired to be active and some aren’t. As adults, it’s easy for us to just say, ‘I’m just lazy’, but that’s a massive overgeneralization. Our lives are all busy in different ways. You might have five kids, run your own business, juggle financial concerns, and on top of all of that are just trying to get through each day. Or you may have a seemingly smooth day-to-day work life and routine, but are experiencing a mental health concern that consumes a lot of your space. In both situations, it’s easy to blindside exercise from the list. It’s not that you’re being lazy, you’re understandably occupied in other areas of life. You have legitimate reasons for struggling to exercise. I’m always very quick to challenge a client’s ‘excuses’ for not exercising – are they actually excuses? Often they are real and valid reasons, other times they are just excuses. But when we get clarity on this we then work together to explore the motivation to change – we acknowledge the process to becoming an ‘exerciser’ won’t necessarily be linear as we navigate that process of change, and that’s okay!”

The process to becoming an ‘exerciser’ won’t necessarily be linear … and that’s okay!

This content was adapted with permission Les Mills Fit Planet . THANK YOU!

HOW TO SURVIVE & GROW STRONG THROUGH ADVERSITY

January 25, 2022 by Heidi Sivers-Boyce

How to Survive & Grow Strong Through Adversity

During this time of extreme challenge it can be helpful to hear from someone who has overcome great adversity. A Les Mills Fit Planet interview with Brooke Rosenbauer offers just such inspiration. HFAC is a proud Les Mills partner, and we are pleased to share this adapted content with permission. This isn’t about someone who found fitness and it changed her life (though we have plenty of those in the HFAC community!). Brooke grew up as a super athletic overachiever. She was involved in soccer, alpine ski racing and ultimate frisbee. Brooke studied international health, led sports-based youth development programs, became a personal trainer, established a career at Reebok, and taught a remarkable number of group fitness classes along the way. However, two pivotal events make Brooke’s story something we can really learn from during hard times. In her early twenties, Brooke was in a traumatic car accident. She spent 10 days in an Ecuadorian hospital before being medically evacuated back to the US. She was bedridden for many months and spent a long time learning to walk again. Then in 2019 Brooke faced another international medical crisis. While holidaying in Greece, she suffered a pulmonary embolism (a life-threatening blood clot in the lung). She spent a month in a Greek hospital before returning to the US and again starting to rebuild her health and fitness from scratch. Les Mills Fit Planet spoke to her about how dealing with dark times has refined her approach to fitness, and how she now coaches others to become the best versions of themselves.
PUTTING THINGS INTO PERSPECTIVE IS KEY
“Going through something that threatens your health, or even your life puts everything into perspective. You realize that nothing else matters if you aren’t healthy. Health truly is wealth. “I’ve stopped worrying about being lean and how my clothes fit or how I look in photos. Now, my motivation is that I want to take care of my body. I want to feel empowered when I lift weights, or free when I run. If my stomach jiggles a little, it doesn’t upset me like it used to because I have more important priorities. I am now playing the long game, and I respect my physical body so much. Nurses told me I survived the pulmonary embolism because of my fitness level, but I feel that in the past I had been beating up on my body by pushing it too much. No more of that. I want to celebrate my body just like it is. “I now know exercise is an amazing way to reconnect with our bodies and take control of our lives. Exercise can help discharge anxious energy or strong emotions that we might not be able to verbalize. It is such a beautiful, healthy way to take care of ourselves. The secret is to honor the bodies we’re given and make sure to balance that exercise with rest and recovery.”

HFAC Personal Trainers specialize in connecting people to healthy goals that motivate & strengthen long term. 

YOU NEVER “WIN” AT FITNESS – IT’S AN ENDLESS JOURNEY
“I tell my coaching clients that bumps can and will happen. You need to be able to make adjustments all the time because life never goes to plan. Your ability to throw the plan out the window and adapt makes all the difference. I always say yesterday is over, so don’t beat yourself up. Today is a new day and there are a lot of good things in the world.”
IT’S OKAY TO FEEL BROKEN, POWERLESS, WEAK, OR VULNERABLE
“I’ve realized humans are capable of feeling multiple emotions at the same time. You can be scared and resolved, vulnerable and joyful, confident and weak. There have been times when I’ve felt broken and vulnerable because I was comparing my capabilities to a past self. As scared as I was, I also accepted that I wouldn’t be “broken” forever. “There are some days that I still feel weak. We all have those days. Exercise has been a huge part of my recovery, because it helps me reconnect with my body; it helps me work through the emotions that are just too big to even talk about; and it has provided an incredible community that supports me and accepts me just as I am.”

“Exercise can help discharge anxious energy or strong emotions that we might not be able to verbalize.”

YOUR GREATEST WEAKNESS CAN BE YOUR GREATEST STRENGTH
“I’m really stubborn, and my whole life I thought it was a bad attribute. It wasn’t until I was in hospital in Greece when I realized my stubbornness was actually a positive. I was in a very low place, I thought that I might have to give up on my fitness career, but then a friend reminded me I was far too stubborn to do that. And that’s what got me through. “I had also been very stubborn a few years earlier. I ran a half marathon just a few months after my accident forced me to learn to walk again. It wasn’t the smartest thing to do, but I did it out of blind determination. It was born from someone congratulating me on being able to walk on my own. It was well-meaning, but I didn’t want to be congratulated for such a basic physical task. So I ran 13.1 miles to prove I could. I’m not sure I regret doing that run, but what was regrettable was that the healthcare system wasn’t really there making sure that I wasn’t doing harm to myself. I had no idea if my body was really ready for this and nobody to help or guide me. It was this experience that really inspired my fitness career, so that I could help other people overcome health challenges and not feel so alone.”

“Building a healthy lifestyle can feel intimidating. There’s way too much information out there, and it’s really hard to get through it alone.”

SELF-LOVE IS AT THE CENTER OF WELLNESS
“When we love and respect ourselves, we take better care of ourselves and fitness is no longer a chore or punishment, it’s something we do because it feels good. The reason I preach self-love so much is because fitness can have the opposite effect if we treat it as a punishment or a way to fill an emotional void. In that case, it can actually be really stressful. Power can be used for good or for evil – exercise is the same. When it comes from self-love, exercise is the healthiest thing we can do for ourselves.”
 YOU DON’T NEED SERIOUS HEALTH ISSUES TO FEEL THE STRUGGLE
“Trauma doesn’t always have to be dramatic, and it is much more prevalent than we realize. As we go through our lives, we accumulate experiences that shape our perceptions about what we can and cannot do. If you struggled with gym class or felt unloved for being out of shape, it can have a deep impact on your ability to engage with fitness, because you believe you’re unfit or unathletic. “If you are struggling, it could be you’re working towards a goal that doesn’t serve you. Too often people just grab goals from Google, but they’re setting themselves up to fail if there’s no basis for that goal. Building a healthy lifestyle can feel intimidating. There’s way too much information out there, and it’s really hard to get through it alone. It’s easy to feel like you’re not succeeding if you don’t know how to set the right goals.”
HAVING A COACH IN YOUR CORNER PAYS OFF
“Whatever your fitness level, and wherever you are on your fitness journey, having a professional in your corner can be amazing. The benefit of a coach is that they ask powerful questions, and they might make you realize that the trade-offs required for achieving a goal might not actually be what you want – and that can be really liberating. I think the difference between a trainer and a coach can be those conversations. While trainers deliver you exercises, they may not push you on your goals or your perceptions. A good coach will find a way to help seek what you’re looking for, but maybe find it in a different way. And they will help you navigate any storms or bumps in the road. A good coach will always cheer you on. But you always need to be your own cheerleader too.“ HFAC offers Personal Training, Small Group Training, and our signature New Start Programs perfect for those looking for a fresh start. BROOKE’S SECRETS TO SUCCESS
  1. Self-love is at the center of wellness – respect and honor the body you’ve got and the life you’ve been given
  2. Seek help as a practice – not just at your lowest points
  3. Turn your pain into power by focusing on what you’ve gained versus what you’ve lost
  4. Celebrate small wins – it could be doing one push up on your toes, making a smart food choice, or choosing a 45-minute workout over the 30-minute option.
  5. Try different types of exercise until you find something you love.
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Club Building Hours:
Mon-Thurs: 5am-9pm
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4800 NE Belknap Ct, Hillsboro, OR
(503) 640-6404
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