Fitness Magazine is looking for stories about people who qualify as both overweight and/or obese and also identify as a "Fitness Buff" When I saw the call for stories, I thought to myself, Self, you need to tell YOUR story. Then I read the 24 or so comments.
Some of the comments were very positive and people identified themselves as both a fitness buff and overweight. What? They thought they were just like me! I was so happy reading those posts.
Then I saw several responses that accused "Overweight and Fitness Buffs" of 'stuffing their face' or challenging that you can't be both overweight and healthy. I immediately felt embarrassed that I even thought I might be a fitness buff.... then I got angry.
I as a person am important. I may not be 100% but I am a work in progress. So I wrote my entry and sent it off!
Here is what a wrote:
After 3 years of Boot Camp workouts I had lost over 40 pounds. I had tried spinning, I had jogged with friends, and I had started to play tennis and hike on the weekends. I was happy, confident, and proud of my body for the first time. I decided to take a giant leap with the support of all my friends. I earned my Personal Trainer Certification! Life threw me a curve ball, as sometimes happens, and I ended up moving to Germany with my husband. Now I've started Cherry Wellness, a place I can bring both my training as a mental health counselor and personal trainer together to help people. I want to help people take the big steps both physically and emotionally to live a strong healthy long life and enjoy it!
I hope Fitness Magazine get's thousands of entries from women like me. I hope this can be a start to understanding that health and thin do not go hand in hand. I hope other people are inspired, challenged, and uplifted by this project even if they do not choose my story.
Some of the comments were very positive and people identified themselves as both a fitness buff and overweight. What? They thought they were just like me! I was so happy reading those posts.
Then I saw several responses that accused "Overweight and Fitness Buffs" of 'stuffing their face' or challenging that you can't be both overweight and healthy. I immediately felt embarrassed that I even thought I might be a fitness buff.... then I got angry.
I as a person am important. I may not be 100% but I am a work in progress. So I wrote my entry and sent it off!
Here is what a wrote:
My name is Jen Cherry and am both a Fitness Buff and overweight. I qualify as overweight really easily. I am 5 ft 8, 178 pounds. I have a BMI of 27.1, solidly in the overweight category My body fat percentage is 29.9% (nearly obese) and I have 54 pounds of fat on my body. I wear a size 10-12 in the United States, but here in Germany where I am stationed with my Active Duty Military husband, I often cannot fit in to clothing that is sold in regular stores. I find myself needing to go to the the "grossedammen" shops, or the large woman's store. This can, at times, be disheartening.
Qualifying as a Fitness Buff is pretty easy too! I am a certified personal trainer and small group instructor. I teach a 2 popular programs on our military base: A Serious Weight Loss Clinic for women with more than 30 pounds to lose and a high intensity Boot Camp. I'm also the aerobics manager at our facility, teach indoor cycling, and am occasionally invited to appear as a guest on our local radio station during "Fitness Power Hour." I work out regularly 3-5 times per week and am lifting at this time trying to increase my muscle mass. I have personal fitness goals to do an unassisted pull up and bench press my body weight! I eat healthy and use MyFitnessPal to count calories and model healthy choices for my clients who can all view my log.
I have been called, "The Fat Trainer." I have at times felt humiliated and ashamed that I do not look "the part." I have cried, doubted myself and my vision. I almost quit more than once.
I have overcome illness and injury, separation from my family, friends, lost careers, and all the stress that comes with Military life. I am independent, have created a strong positive community and developed programs for my clients that not only work; they are healthy programs that have long term lifestyle changing success. I'm proud of my life and my body on a daily basis. Though I still struggle with insecurity. I didn't always look the way I do now. I have been varying degrees of overweight my entire adult life.
I have had many struggles with my body and my feelings towards my body. After college I began my career as a Mental Health Counselor, a desk job and started gaining weight. When I turned 30 my struggles became harder and harder. I was lucky to adopt a dog. He made it necessary for me to take a walk every day, before I knew it, we were jogging together. He was an older dog though, and he couldn't run in the summer heat in Arizona. So I joined a Boot Camp Class. Suddenly working out was fun. I had a smile on my face every day at an ungodly hour of the morning and it stayed there all day. I had energy and motivation. I will always be grateful for Boot Camp, the instructor, and the women who cheered for and challenged me. Boot camp changed my life. Up to that point I had joined and quit dozens of gyms, rented and bought hundreds of DVD programs, and used just about every quick fix miracle diet cure sold.
After 3 years of Boot Camp workouts I had lost over 40 pounds. I had tried spinning, I had jogged with friends, and I had started to play tennis and hike on the weekends. I was happy, confident, and proud of my body for the first time. I decided to take a giant leap with the support of all my friends. I earned my Personal Trainer Certification! Life threw me a curve ball, as sometimes happens, and I ended up moving to Germany with my husband. Now I've started Cherry Wellness, a place I can bring both my training as a mental health counselor and personal trainer together to help people. I want to help people take the big steps both physically and emotionally to live a strong healthy long life and enjoy it!
I hope Fitness Magazine get's thousands of entries from women like me. I hope this can be a start to understanding that health and thin do not go hand in hand. I hope other people are inspired, challenged, and uplifted by this project even if they do not choose my story.
Love this Jen! I made me teary, you know I feel you :) Maybe we will always be the "fat trainers" but that's ok with me because we would never call anyone a "fat" insult and that makes us better people already. Its easy to be judgmental, its hard to stay above the prejudice. I hope it gets published!
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOU JEN for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteI often feel discouraged, like I should just give up.... because as I work out daily and east healthy....the weight just isn't coming off like I thought it would.... but, I'm loosing inches, can lift more, push more, spin faster and fun longer!
It is all because of that first boot camp class I took at spang... its because of you!
Thank you!
~ Sara m
DeleteWhen I see you I never think you are fat. You look proportional for your build. It is a shame that in our society if someone is not underweight we see them as overweight. I would be super happy to wear a 10-12 again and I'm 5 1/2 inches shorter than you. The average size for American women is size 14, yet dize 14 is the beginning of being "plus sized". I personally think we should rename it so that all sizes smaller than a 14 is a "minus size".
ReplyDeleteYou inspire me on a regular basis! Keep doing your thing. you are loved and appreciated. I will take a trainer who is "healthy" over a thin trainer any day of the week. Fitness Magazine, which I purchase regularly, would be crazy not to choose your entry!
ReplyDeleteJennifer, what an amazing letter. Thank you so much for posting this very personal aspect of your life. I hope they choose this letter! You are truly an elegant and wonderful person.
ReplyDelete