This is what I dislike very much about the so called fitness industry.
building strength (the by products many) and losing fat (counting calories) is a very simple process, made complex by douche bags wanting to make a living out of it.
*shrug*
You ever ordered steak at a restaurant? Isn't cooking a steak a very simple process? So why not do it all yourself? There are lots of things we could do entirely by ourselves. Programme a workout routine, learn good form, cook dinner, wash our clothes, make our own shirts, knit our own socks, wire up our own house, grow our own vegies, paint our house, do our own taxes, and so on. And how dare you drive to work when you didn't build your own car from metal ingots and drill and refine the oil yourself!
We can spend time doing these things ourselves, or spend money having someone else do them. Unless you live in a cabin in the woods preparing everything from raw materials mined, harvested or grown by yourself, you're not really in a position to criticise. It's not a matter of
if you pay people to do things for you, only
which you pay for.
You can certainly argue that health and fitness-related things are something everyone should take care of themselves. Guess what, I know a chippie who thinks people are idiots to pay chippies. So each of us can make that argument about any particular area. But in the end, most of us don't have the time to do everything ourselves. So we pay others to do those things, this leaves us time for the stuff we do want to spend time on.
And of course, when you do the thing as a hobby and the other person does it as a profession, you will generally find they do it better. So you can do a crap job on your own, or mediocre job with help - and that's if you have an idiot PT like those in this thread - after all, if you think people do dumb shit with a PT, watch the ones doing stuff on their own. If you have a decent trainer it's a choice between crap or at best mediocre on your own, and good with someone else.
I often had gym members tell me that PT is expensive. And yes it is. But 2/3 of gym members never get a programme at all, and 2/3 of those who do, don't do it, and 2/3 of those who do it, don't progress the effort. So 26/27 new members doing things on their own aren't progressing at all. And they pay $1,000 a year at most gyms. So you can pay $1,000 to fail, or $4,000 to succeed.
"Why did you buy a car with no wheels and engine?"
"Well the car that would actually take me somewhere was much more expensive..."
I look forward to your tales of living in a cabin in the woods making everything by hand from scratch.