In my everyday life, I just wear jeans, t-shirts and trainers - if I can go barefoot, that's even better. But for the events I have a stylist, and in two hours we have selected a whole outfit.
My favourite trainers are Converse.
There's something so familial and intimate between a boxer and his trainer.
I'm really into boxing. I go to a gym and I'm friends with a trainer who's a pretty famous boxing trainer and I train with him.
How can women be as thin as we are? We have personal trainers to work us out. We have specially prepared meals.
I have a treadmill, and I work out with my trainer, Julie Diamond, as often as possible. She's so positive.
I learned Tae Kwon Do and gymnastics and I have a trainer.
I do actually use a boxing trainer when I train for stand-up.
My trainer Jimmy Tibbs and my promoter Frank Warren told me that I had to be patient and get the jab going.
I work out with a trainer five days a week.
In future there will be no more designers. The designers of the future will be the personal coach, the gym trainer, the diet consultant.
I spend most of my time wearing uncomfortable things, so for me, it's all about trainers.
People often wonder just what trainers give the sheepdog in exchange for its boundless willingness. Food treats and praise sit on the trainer's shelf, untouched, unused. The sheepdog is shown its possibilities, he learns what life is like for a good dog and is invited to walk in a rational world whose farthest boundaries are defined by grace.
Take action every day - some small dose at a time.
I never considered myself a trainer, I considered myself a teacher.
We would love to see walking groups more widely recommended by physicians, health trainers and nurses.
I was haunted by trainers going "Up, up, up, get up. " You find yourself picking your head up and then realizing, They aren't talking to me.
My fitness trainer's English, my physio's English, some of my friends are English. I don't have a problem with English people at all.
We think we have to work because the advertising industry has elevated wants into needs. The newspapers and the television batter us incessantly with the latest "must-haves", whether that's shoes, videogames or patio heaters. As a result, mums think they "have" to work at Tesco in order to buy expensive trainers.
I'm up at like 6 a. m. With my trainer, running up the hill you drove up to get here.