Fitness
Raising the bar: How an Edmonton gym is making exercise accessible | Xtra Magazine
In a nondescript one-storey building in the west end of Edmonton, you’ll find Action Potential Fitness, a small gym nestled in between a service dog training centre and a scrapbooking supplies shop. On the inside, it doesn’t look much different than any other fitness facility. Free weights and kettlebells, workout benches, a couple of squat racks and other manner of fitness equipment line the walls. Clients come and go on the hour, mingling with each other and the trainers before or after their individual sessions and group classes.
The uniqueness of this gym lies in the fact that over 70 percent of the staff, including the owners of the gym, identify as LGBTQ2S+. Look a bit closer and you’ll see a trans-flag-coloured stuffed shark mascot on a shelf overseeing one section of the gym, Progressive Pride flags and rainbows throughout the facility, non-gendered bathrooms and staff and clients who often wear pronoun pins or T-shirts.
Action Potential Fitness is where Toni Harris, co-owner and trans fitness trainer, finally had the opportunity to create and implement a project they’d been dreaming about for years: a fitness program designed for trans people, by trans fitness professionals.
Harris started to notice the need for more LGBTQ2S+-friendly fitness spaces in Edmonton after they graduated from their fitness-trainer program in 2017 and began working at a big box gym. One of the other trainers they worked alongside reached out to a local LGBTQ2S+ organization to recruit participants and start a group fitness class at the gym where they were working. But there was a catch: the owners of the facility would only allow the class to be scheduled 30 minutes after the gym closed and all of the other clients and trainers had left the building. It was then that Harris really began to understand the barriers and discrimination that the LGBTQ2S+ community face in the fitness world.
In the majority of fitness facilities, the gender binary is still very much entrenched. Policies such as gendered change rooms and classes, or requiring forms to be filled out with the name and gender on your ID create an exclusionary environment in which those who identify outside the binary are often forced to “choose a side.” This experience can make something as simple as exercising feel embarrassing and stressful.
“Gyms don’t even know how not inclusive they are,” says Zita Dube-Lockhart, Harris’s business partner and co-owner at Action Potential Fitness. Dube-Lockhart feels that one of the major limitations in the fitness industry is that it hasn’t done any real work to recruit, develop and train diverse people with different lived experiences. “The fitness world talks a big game about how we’re for everyone, but being for everyone means actually ensuring that you have everyone at the table in your leadership, in your instruction, in your conceptualization and in your participation. And actively looking for gaps in who you are not reaching.”
Back in 2017, Harris may have been somewhat heartened to see at least some space in the fitness world being carved out for LGBTQ2S+ people, but knew there had to be a better way to foster inclusion than relegating queer and trans clients to an after-hours slot. So they made it their personal and professional mission to better understand the fitness needs of the queer and trans community and to be part of building a space where those needs could be met.
Harris, who was not yet out as trans at the time, started researching exercise response and accessibility within the trans community, and began training more trans and non-binary clients one-on-one. They were slowly building a reputation as a safe and well-informed fitness professional within the local trans community in Edmonton. It was also through these interactions with trans clients that helped them build up the confidence to start their own transition. “The connections and relationships [I was building] with other trans humans and hearing their experiences made it less scary for me.”
Harris met Dube-Lockhart as they were both finishing the fitness-trainer program at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. They connected instantly and shared very similar views on fitness accessibility, body neutrality and inclusion. In April 2019, Harris moved their solo personal training practice to the gym space Dube-Lockhart was already running. When the pandemic struck, the two decided to weather the storm together. They formalized their partnership, rebranded the facility as Action Potential Fitness and worked relentlessly for two years to hold their community together.
“Their vision was to have a fitness space that was built on the framework of belonging, dignity and social justice.”
Their mission—fitness for every body and health for everyone—set the course of the facility and their niche quickly turned toward barrier reduction for marginalized populations. Dube-Lockhart says their vision was to have a fitness space that was built on the framework of “belonging, dignity and social justice.”
“We recognize that health is an individual and communal experience, mediated by issues of accessibility, social power and privilege,” says Dube-Lockhart, who is also queer and neurodivergent. “There are often difficulties in accessing the right information and professionals who understand and have similar lived experiences.” In order to address these challenges, and with the help of their mostly queer and neurodivergent staff, programs offered at Action Potential Fitness include ones for early learning and gross motor skill development for neurodiverse children and their parents/caregivers, youth programs and radical body acceptance fitness programs that are affirming and weight-neutral.
With the resources now in place in their own facility, Harris also began to develop programming to serve and support the trans community on a larger scale. In January 2023, the first cohort of trans and non-binary clients were enrolled in a free six-week “Intro to Weight Lifting” pilot program, called Fitness Trans Formed.
“We had put up a feeler post on social media, along with a registration link and thought we might get five or six people. We had 36 people register,” Harris says. They were elated and a bit overwhelmed with the response, but “just couldn’t turn anyone away.” Many of the fitness and wellness programs that were previously offered through other LGBTQ2S+ organizations in Edmonton had shut down during the pandemic and never restarted. “We heard from so many people who said they’d been waiting for something like this.”
Dorian Block was part of the inaugural group of Fitness Trans Formed participants. He had recently moved to Edmonton from the U.S. to be with his partner and was looking to find a community. His partner sent him an Instagram post about the program and he jumped at it and registered right away.
“I really started trying to masculinize my body in different ways when I started considering top surgery. I was not the physical type, and started with yoga stuff and then just weightlifting.” Block joined a gym when the date for his surgery was set. He was in Texas then, and he says walking into the gym was scary at times. “I felt like I was always putting myself in a space that wasn’t specifically built for me and always had to mentally pump myself up to go. I would say to myself, ‘You are paying to be here, you were here first for this piece of equipment.’” He was also very aware of how he dressed going to the gym, and before surgery, often wouldn’t use the men’s change room.
After surgery, Block was doing workouts he found online from trans creators posting on Instagram, but never anything that was tailored to him or his personal fitness goals. “Finding a trainer locally who shared an identity with me and was able to kind of match my fitness goals to my workouts, and my eating habits and dietary needs, was not something I ever thought possible.”
Block admits that being around other trans people had historically not been affirming for him. The pervasiveness of diet culture, shame and hyper-macho attitudes he had previously experienced left him with a lot of anxiety about even entering a space with other trans folks. One of the first things Block noticed when he joined the Fitness Trans Formed program was how body-neutral the environment was. “Everyone just showed up at whatever stage [they were at] in their little gender journey.” Instead of feeling anxious, Block said he felt empowered being in such a trans-affirming and safe space and this renewed his sense of motivation to get back to working out.
Harris notes the intake forms that participants fill out ahead of time put people’s minds at ease way before they even get to the gym. The forms ask questions about pronouns and names (Harris points out that they will never ask to see someone’s ID or need to know their deadname, something many mainstream gyms require for membership). “We also have a lot of non-binary people register for the programs who just want to be in a space with other people who aren’t going to question what the heck non-binary means!”
Every personal trainer who works with the participants in the Fitness Trans Formed program is trans. It’s this lived experience and the specialized knowledge they have about the unique considerations of trans people that is not only key to the success of the program, it’s also imperative for the safety of all involved. “It’s things like having an understanding of the different physiological effects of being on hormone therapy or knowing how to safely modify workouts because participants are wearing gender-affirming garments like binders or gaffes,” Harris says.
All of these considerations are talked about very openly in the workshop portions of the program. Dube-Lockhart says the goal is not only to teach the participants the basics of weightlifting and using fitness equipment, but also the importance of the mind-body connection and understanding how trauma affects both mental and physical health.
Harris’s ultimate goal with the Fitness Trans Formed program is to not only get trans people moving their bodies, but to also help them reconnect with their bodies—something that can be difficult for many trans people who come to the program with anxiety, trauma and/or gender dysphoria.
A 2022 New York Times article exploring the healing power of weightlifting explained how people who’ve experienced trauma will often avoid exercise entirely because of the physical stress response it can generate. The heart beats faster, blood pressure increases, there’s shortness of breath—physical symptoms that are similar to those experienced during a trauma response. Harris agrees that for many of their clients differentiating between a trauma response and the physical discomfort of starting a new workout program can be difficult. The Fitness Trans Formed trainers work through a trauma-informed lens to educate participants to recognize these discomforts and help them to incrementally build both their physical strength and their mental resilience.
The Fitness Trans Formed program is run out of the Action Potential Fitness facility, but officially through the Centre for Trauma-Informed Fitness, a not-for-profit Harris and Dube-Lockhart established in order to be able to further develop programs for the trans and gender-diverse community and provide them at a low or no cost to participants. Having the not-for-profit designation helps in accessing grants and funding from other agencies and gives the pair the ability to partner with like-minded organizations who may be interested in hosting programs in their own facilities.
“Affordability is probably the biggest barrier besides safety and space,” says Harris. “Every time we run a program, we have a tiered pricing structure that goes all the way down to ‘I can’t afford to pay anything’. We don’t turn anybody away based on financial need.” Dube-Lockharts adds that services through the Centre are provided on a volunteer basis with all revenues being directly reinvested into program delivery.
There have been three cohorts and approximately 50 participants through the Fitness Trans Formed program since its inception. Seven out of the eight fitness team members who help run the programs are trans- or queer-identifying, and both Harris and Dube-Lockhart were recognized earlier this year as top Canadian fitness professionals for their work with diverse communities.
In the coming months, Harris and Dube-Lockhart are holding their first industry workshop for fitness professionals to help guide others in making their spaces more inclusive for the queer and trans community. The next Fitness Trans Formed sessions are set to start this month, with the first one being a youth program that incorporates both Fitness Trans Formed and DiversiFit—the centre’s program for neurodiverse clients. They have 15 participants enrolled in this new program, with 10 of them identifying as gender expansive.
Given the current climate in Alberta for the trans community, Harris and Dube-Lockhart are even more steadfast in their mission to provide safe and affirming spaces for trans and non-binary clients of all ages. Harris is also exploring a hybrid in-person/online version for people experiencing barriers accessing their facility or for whom being publicly out is not safe. “Ideally, we want our Fitness Trans Formed participants to feel confident enough to join any of our fitness classes and know they are an integral part of our fitness community.”
For Block, being part of that first Fitness Trans Formed group provided him with more than just motivation to get back to the gym. His new workouts have been mentally healing for him and when he finds himself in a space of hurt or anger, he returns to the mat to do some heavy lifting and recalibrate. “Up to this point, all of my fitness journey has been alone,” he says. But on a work trip to the U.S. this year where he experienced some direct transphobia, the Fitness Trans Formed group back in Edmonton had his back and was checking in with him the whole time. “Having had this safe space and a common goal around fitness was a really unique way to create a kind of lasting community.”
Fitness
Alexandra Daddario, 40, relies on this underrated crunch upgrade for strong abs – here’s how to do it properly
From enduring some serious physical prep for Baywatch to working consistently with elite trainer Patrick Murphy, Alexanda Daddario’s dedication to fitness is well-documented. She often shares insights on social media, and in a recent Instagram post, the White Lotus star gave an insight into how she trains her core with one powerhouse movement: the reverse crunch into shoulder stand.
Why is it so good? Most traditional ab exercises require repetitive spinal flexion – the process of pulling your chest down toward your knees, like in a standard crunch. This isolates only the upper section of your abs, and for women who spend hours sitting at a desk, it can reinforce a slouched, rounded posture.
Daddario’s movement flips the mechanics entirely since you actively curl your pelvis up toward your chest. In doing so, you target not only your upper abs, but the lower portion and your obliques (the sides) simultaneously, all while keeping your chest open and your neck unstrained. This translates into a much stronger core, better posture and crucial lower back protection. Research also shows that a controlled posterior tilt – the lower-body curl that initiates Daddario’s move – recruits a significantly higher percentage of deep core muscle fibres than traditional crunches.
Daddario then drives her hips directly up into a vertical shoulder stand. This completely removes momentum from the equation (meaning you can’t “cheat”) and forces your abs – particularly your obliques – to balance your body and prevent you from tipping sideways.
She then takes it one step further into a Pilates plow position with her legs overhead, before reversing the movement and, again, using her abs to control the lowering of her entire lower body as she slowly unrolls her spine down onto the mat. The plow portion is optional (and super advanced); the slow, controlled, lowering phase, which happens whether you move into plow or not, is where the magic happens, challenging your core through both lifting and resisting gravity. Inspired? Here’s exactly how to do the move with good form, and how many reps and sets to aim for.
How to do a reverse crunch into shoulder stand
- Lie on your back (either on a mat, or on a reformer Pilates machine, like Daddario, with your arms anchored tightly to the floor.
- Engage your core to curl your knees toward your chest, then fluidly press your feet straight up toward the ceiling, lifting your hips and lower back off the floor.
- Slowly lower down, one vertebra at a time. Aim for 3 sets of 6-8 controlled reps.
Optional progression:
- As you reach shoulder stand with your legs extended to the ceiling, slowly start to lower your toes toward the floor over your head. Your weight should rest entirely on your shoulders and upper back – not your neck.
- Keeping your legs straight, use your core to extend them straight back up to the ceiling, then control the descent by rolling your spine down one vertebra at a time, with your legs remaining straight.
One of our most frequently asked questions here at Women’s Health? How to build muscle and burn fat at the same time. So, we asked superstar trainer Oyinda Okunowo exactly how to do it. In this 4-week plan – created exclusively for Women’s Health COLLECTIVE members – you’ll get the workouts and nutrition guidance needed to help you on your way to better body composition. Tap the link below to unlock 14 days of free access to Oyinda’s plan and start training today.
GET THE PLAN
As Women’s Health UK’s fitness director and a qualified Pilates and yoga instructor, Bridie Wilkins has been passionately reporting on exercise, health and nutrition since the start of her decade-long career in journalism.
After earning a first-class degree in journalism and NCTJ accreditation, she secured her first role at Look Magazine, where she launched the magazine’s health and fitness column, Look Fit, before going on to become Health and Fitness writer at HELLO!
Since, she has written for Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Elle, The Metro, Runner’s World and Red. Today, she oversees all fitness content across Women’s Health online and in print, spearheading leading cross-platform franchises, such as ‘Fit At Any Age’, which showcases the women proving that age is no barrier to exercise.
She has also represented the brand on BBC Radio London, plus various podcasts and Substacks – all with the aim to encourage more women to exercise and show them how. Outside of work, find her trying the latest Pilates studio, testing her VO2 max for fun (TY, Oura), or posting workouts on Instagram.
Fitness
Built Strong: Fitness forges unbreakable father-son bond
Fathers often share special bonds with their children. For 80-year-old Chanka Ramrattan, that bond is a shared love for fitness and exercise with his 46-year-old son Nari.
The Rousillac resident recalled that he began exercising at the age of 14, lifting weights and taking long walks, a passion that remains with him today. During his time working as a clerk at Texaco, he said he would walk from Forest Reserve to his Rousillac home, a distance of approximately 12 kilometres.
“I have done every marathon in Trinidad; you name a marathon, I could tell you. Miami Marathon, Tobago Sea-to-Sea, which is the most difficult marathon that I’ve ever done. I even have a trophy where I got the fastest speed walking man, and I have all my medals,” he recounted.
Chanka’s last marathon was a virtual one in 2021. Since then, his doctor has advised him to slow down because of his age. Now, he spends his time at the Health and Fitness Gym in Debe and South Oropouche about three times a week, walking marathons of his own on the treadmill.
“I do cardio walking for one hour, and I do weight training for one hour. Then, I go in the sea and I swim and dive for one hour,” he noted.
Chanka firmly believes regular exercise has contributed to his longevity and said he plans to keep going.
“Exercise is very important, and I like exercise. You go to Miami, and you’ll see 90-year-olds and 100-year-olds in the gym, walking, and even going to marathons. That’s because if you don’t exercise, you feel lethargic, you feel down. And you also have to read a lot. So, you exercise the brain, and you exercise the body,” Chanka advised.
His son Nari believes that perseverance was one of the most important lessons his father passed on to his children, along with a love of fitness and exercise.
“When you are looking at your dad, and your mom, and you are seeing them exercising and you are seeing them fit, why would you not want to do the same thing? So, it was instilled in all of us, myself and my two siblings. That exercising became a routine. My bigger sister, she would run, and my smaller sister would do cardio,” Nari explained.
The engineer and businessman recalled starting to exercise and lift weights with his father and uncle from a young age, crediting the experience with shaping the discipline and fitness mindset he still follows today.
However, in 2016, he faced a big obstacle after he hit his head during a diving accident, damaging his C6 and C7 vertebrae and spinal cord.
“I was 37 at the time when I got into the accident. I lost all feeling in my body. The person that you see in front of you now is not the person I was three years ago. I actually couldn’t move at all; I could only move my toe. It took a lot of hard work and will, to come out of that situation. Eventually, I started to transfer from my wheelchair to a bed, to a car. I even built a machine for me to stand up with a harness, and it pulls me up in the air so I can stand up straight. So, I used that for two years to get my body back to where it is,” Nari explained.
Nari, who is currently a quadriplegic, said he was only able to make progress through persistence and support from his loved ones. Chanka admitted that period was one of the most difficult experiences of his life as a parent.
“I wouldn’t like to explain that, that is a different thing altogether. He was in Mount Hope for six months, we had to go every day. It was a real trying thing, but you know, he is on the way to recovery. His mother wants to see everything good for him. For me, she will treat me second class and she will treat them first class, and she is right. Because the ones that are able to walk, you give them less attention because they are tending to themselves. You have to give more attention to the one that needs attention,” he acknowledged.
But their bond through exercising didn’t change. During COVID-19, Nari said his father returned to weightlifting under his son’s guidance.
“When my dad was trapped in the house and he couldn’t go anywhere, he was very miserable. So, we had a schedule where he and I would use the weights that I have at home, and I would tell him what to do. He actually got a six-pack during COVID. So, we stayed home and exercised with my wife and all too. After, I realised now I could start back to go to gym,” Nari reflected.
Chanka said his son’s determination continues to inspire him.
“When you see somebody who is a bit incapacitated and they’re exercising, they give you inspiration. Like if that man could do that, I could do that too. I wish Nari all the best. He is adhering to all his exercises, and he has a will that you won’t get in your next life. It’s probably my genes passed on to him,” Chanka shared.
Nari said none of that would have been possible without his father’s influence.
“Dad, I just want to tell you, thank you very much for being in our lives. You give us the encouragement to go day to day, and just keep being who you are, because you have a strong will, strong mind, and that is what keeps us going every day,” he said.
Fitness
Angela Rippon, 81, reveals the one exercise she never skips for strong legs: ‘I do it every morning without fail’
At 81, Angela Rippon is one of the UK’s most energetic and active broadcasters. A long-time advocate for movement, the former ballet dancer has often credited simple, consistent habits with helping her stay strong, mobile and independent as she gets older. And among her daily rituals is one surprisingly simple exercise she swears by: pliés.
‘I’ll do 20 pliés in the morning, because that’s really good for your balance, your knees, your posture, your core strength, for everything,’ she told Good Housekeeping. ‘Ballet is a wonderful thing for keeping your legs in good shape. It builds the right muscles in your calves and thigh. I go to class whenever I can. I’m a great advocate for dance being the best form of exercise for your mind and your body.’
Pliés are an easy move that require no equipment and Rippon’s 20 reps take less than a minute to do, yet experts agree that they can offer a host of benefits, from improving balance and posture to building lower-body strength and supporting healthy joints. As Women’s Health Fashion Editor and dance instructor Isabelle Knevett says, ‘Plies strengthen the legs, glutes and inner thighs simultaneously. They also require core activation in order to maintain an upright posture, which helps train your balance and stability.’
Research backs Rippon’s morning habit, too. A 2024 study found that a 10-week classical ballet programme improved lower-body strength and physical function in women over 50, suggesting ballet-inspired movements may help support mobility and independence as we age.
And Angela has one more non-negotiable within her morning routine: stretching. ‘I do it every day without fail. Even if I’m on a really tight schedule and in a very small hotel room. Think about a cat. A cat might sleep for five hours, but when they get up, they stretch absolutely everything. I feel that after I’ve been sleeping, that’s what I need to do to get everything moving again.’
As for its benefits for longevity, a recent study published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports found that greater flexibility was associated with a lower risk of early death, while other research found that a 10-minute at-home stretching routine can counteract significant decreases in strength, flexibility and jumping performance caused by low physical activity levels. Consider us influenced.
One of our most frequently asked questions here at Women’s Health? How to build muscle and burn fat at the same time. So, we asked superstar trainer Oyinda Okunowo exactly how to do it. In this 4-week plan – created exclusively for Women’s Health COLLECTIVE members – you’ll get the workouts and nutrition guidance needed to help you on your way to better body composition. Tap the link below to unlock 14 days of free access to Oyinda’s plan and start training today.
GET THE PLAN
As Women’s Health UK’s fitness director and a qualified Pilates and yoga instructor, Bridie Wilkins has been passionately reporting on exercise, health and nutrition since the start of her decade-long career in journalism.
After earning a first-class degree in journalism and NCTJ accreditation, she secured her first role at Look Magazine, where she launched the magazine’s health and fitness column, Look Fit, before going on to become Health and Fitness writer at HELLO!
Since, she has written for Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Elle, The Metro, Runner’s World and Red. Today, she oversees all fitness content across Women’s Health online and in print, spearheading leading cross-platform franchises, such as ‘Fit At Any Age’, which showcases the women proving that age is no barrier to exercise.
She has also represented the brand on BBC Radio London, plus various podcasts and Substacks – all with the aim to encourage more women to exercise and show them how. Outside of work, find her trying the latest Pilates studio, testing her VO2 max for fun (TY, Oura), or posting workouts on Instagram.
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