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The world came to know Amanda Kloots as a caregiver and cheerleader for her husband Nick Cordero, who died in 2020 after a long battle with Covid-19. But her own creative journey and fitness career was long in the making. Former Radio City Rockette and Broadway performer and current fitness entrepreneur, rope enthusiast, CBS talk show host The reason, dancing with the Stars Contestant and memoir and children’s book author, Kloots is constantly pursuing her multiple passions and spreading her own infectiously positive outlook in the process.
One of her latest projects is a collaboration with Voltaren, an arthritis pain gel that was a favorite of hers when she had an arthritic hand injury during dancing with the Stars Season 30 at the end of 2021. He already believed in the product itself and since the campaign was around making sure that caregivers of parents, partners, children or other loved ones take care of and strengthen their bodies, it was a no- smart to create a partnership. “When they came to me with the carers partnership, I loved it because I’m a single mum and I was looking after Nick in hospital. You don’t realize how much you lose yourself when you have to take care of someone else…. caregivers are not given the respect and care they need,” says Kloots.
She developed a series of exercises for caregivers to do in the minutes of the day they have to themselves (see her Instagram videos for a demonstration). These are designed to be simple sequences of movements and stretches that you can do at home, with minimal equipment. This is how Kloots has already set it up fitness businessfeaturing cardio dance, jump rope, and bodyweight and toning exercises that you can stream from your living room without gym equipment.
The focus of the training sequence is to keep your body strong, especially if you have to lift and help other people and use movement as a stress reliever. “One of my favorite reasons to exercise is to take a break and clear my mind,” says Kloots. “It’s about finding those five minutes a day to follow along with the exercises I’ve created, doing a downward dog, holding a plank, taking a 10-minute walk around your neighborhood or doing a 10-minute meditation ».
Kloots is so adamant that caregivers give back to themselves because it can be a grueling and often thankless (unpaid) job. Both movement and self-care should be incorporated into your day, but so should self-recognition of everything you do to care for another person. “Remind yourself to pat yourself on the back,” says Kloots. “When you care, a lot goes unseen, and even the person you care for doesn’t always have the ability to say thank you — it could be an elderly person with dementia who can’t tell you how much they appreciate you.”
That’s why Kloots has to walk the walk and make sure she takes time for herself as she juggles parenting her four-year-old son, Elvis, who she hosts The reasonand other professional projects. With her early morning schedule, it can be hard to find the motivation and energy to work out after work (related). Her solution? She likes to constantly change up her fitness routine to keep herself energized. “I mix it up. Every day I do something different: train, attend another trainer’s class or take a dance class. I like being a student for a change,” says Kloots. And while filming The reason, has been known to jump rope in the studio parking lot. “Sometimes I’m on producer calls at the same time. I could be roping on that call right now and no one would know,” he laughs. He equates this non-negotiable 10-minute jumping routine with showering every day.
As much as she embraces change in her workout routines, she’s learned to embrace change in life as well, though that can be harder to put into practice. In particular, the Covid-19 pandemic has had a life-changing impact on Kloots and her family. “I think the pandemic has changed a lot of things for everyone, whether we recognize it or not, even subconsciously, the way many of us live, act and think,” says Kloots. Losing her husband so suddenly, with him going from a state of health to a systemic illness in a matter of months, radically changed her outlook on life and relationships. “Every day is a gift and we don’t know what’s in store for us – I’m a huge advocate of finding peace in our lives, not going to bed angry, not fighting and trying to find solutions. We don’t know the other side of tomorrow,” he says.
Her plans for her life before the pandemic are nothing like her life now. “It’s hard to plan. I’m a huge dreamer and goal setter, but I’ve learned to love change. We are meant to change, grow and evolve. I am a completely different person than I was three years ago,” says Kloots. He actively encourages others to fight the fear of personal growth, even when it’s uncomfortable, and when you change in your environment and situation. “I’m a hugely positive person,” she says. (She posts a “positive quote of the day” to her Instagram story daily, often alongside videos of “Musical Mornings” jamming with her son Elvis, who has blossomed into a musically inclined, free-spirited in front of followers the last three years.) One of her favorite quotes of all time? “The scariest thing is to be the same person in 6 months.”