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"I became a triathlete!"
April Bowling, Massachusetts
Age: 32
Height: 5'5"
Pounds lost: 40
At this weight: 1 years
April's challenge
Growing up, April
was always heavy,
though she kept
her weight down
by staying active.
But after a death
in her family
while she was
away at college,
she turned to
food for comfort,
started smoking,
stopped working
out-and gained
40 pounds,
reaching 160.
The first steps
April realized her lifestyle was damaging
her health during a weekend hiking
trip. "I was 21, the youngest in the
group, and I couldn't make it to the top
of the mountain," she says. That very
week, she quit smoking and began
working out-begrudgingly. "My heart
wasn't into exercising," she says. "I also
struggled with eating right. Though I
cut calories at mealtimes, I snacked on
foods like doughnut holes and fries." As
a result, her weight fluctuated over the
next six years. It wasn't until she gave
birth to a daughter and then a son in
her late 20s that she felt motivated to
make a commitment to her well-being.
"I knew that I had to treat my body better,
if for no other reason than to set a
healthy example for my kids," she says.
A new strategy
Rather than fixate on a number on the
scale, April decided to train for a mini
triathlon that was a year away. She
started gradually, walking a mile on the
treadmill every few days. Soon the
walking turned into jogging. When she
was up to three miles, she took her
workouts outdoors, and the pounds really
started to come off; within two
months, she had dropped 16 pounds.
At this point, she knew she needed
a fresh approach to
eating. "I began
looking at food as
fuel rather than as a
treat," she says. She
consistently ate five
servings of fruits and
vegetables every day, along with lean protein and whole
grains, like brown rice. To round out her
triathlon skills, April also started biking
a 12-mile loop around her neighborhood
and swimming laps at the local Y.
Reaching the finish line
A year after kicking off her training
regimen, April hit 130 pounds. More
importantly, she completed the triathlon
she'd set her sights on. Over the
next year, she continued to compete in
short-distance triathlons and reached
her current weight of 120. Now she's
eyeing her first Ironman: a 2.4-mile
swim, a 112-mile bike ride, and a 26.2-
mile run. "Before, I was trying to fit a
mold of how I should look, rather than
working out to take care of myself," she
says. "But these days, the exercise itself
is the reward. I can't believe I ever considered
being active a chore!"
3 stick-with-it secrets
- Find the right gym for you
"Mine has great child care.
If it didn't, I'd never be able to keep up with my training."
- Stock up on fresh produce
"When I got bored eating the
usual fruits and vegetables, I joined a local farmer's co-op."
- Know your limit "If I go 3 pounds over my optimal weight
of 120, I start cutting back on snacks."
Weekly workout schedule
- Running 45 minutes/4 days a week
- Spinning or biking 60 minutes/2 to 3 days a week
- Swimming 60 minutes/2 days a week
To submit your own success story, go to shape.com/model.
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