I love to renovate things,
and I’m pretty good at it. So toward the
fall of last year, I started thinking about how I would begin to renovate my
life. I knew what my first project would
be: getting physically fit. As I told
Joey one day, you can only blame the dryer so long.
I’ve never been a skinny
girl—even at my very thinnest (senior year of high school), I’ve never worn a
single-digit size. Luckily, I have a
large frame, so I can carry a few extra pounds better than my tiny-framed
friends can. I grew up in a state
famous for its good food, and in a family that loved to eat.
My step-father and I worked
at the same hospital for several years. Donald
used to go to suppers with some of the other guys who worked there. One day, I overheard one of them having a conversation
in the cafeteria.
“Have you ever seen Berlin’s
family eat?” he asked.
“No,” came the reply.
“That’s some eatin’ people!”
he exclaimed incredulously.
I laughed, as did Donald
when I recounted the story to him, but it was true. My male cousins, particularly, were legendary
for the amount of food they could put away.
I’ve had a step-brother and several cousins banned from all-you-can-eat buffets. Out of a big extended family, my grandmothers
and my mother were the only mediocre cooks.
Still, I managed to maintain
a healthy weight throughout my early 20s.
Bunny and I got married when we were 24, and were both fit on our
wedding day. Soon after we got married,
though, we both gained a little weight.
Within a few years, we had both gained a lot of weight. By the time I was in my late 30s, I could
only buy clothes from the plus-sized departments, and Bunny had long since
graduated to specialty stores. How did
this happen? We were working long hours
and our free time was fairly sedentary.
We both hated—HATED—to exercise.
It’s a familial trait.
We started a low-fat diet, joined
a gym and got a trainer. For about three
months, we trained together, and we both lost some weight. Bunny dropped out shortly after that—he was tired
of low-fat foods and of taking the time away from whatever his hobby at the
time was. I stuck with it a little
longer—even though I was starving all the time—until my crazy work schedule
made it impossible to be consistent with the trainer. Plus, the trainer had long since begun to
bore me with the lack of variety in my routines.
I hovered at the low end of
the plus-size range for a while, until I changed jobs. Early on in my new position, I periodically went
to live in Houston for weeks or months at a time to help the office there with
a crushing trial calendar. One of the
attorneys from the New Orleans office—Ros—also camped in Houston. We were staying at the same apartment
complex, and she had just read about the Atkins program: low carb, high protein. We could eat meat, eggs, butter, cheese, and most
salad-type vegetables. Potatoes, bread,
and pasta were forbidden. We started
Atkins together, driving our boss batty whenever we went to a restaurant with
him.
On any other diet I’d tried—and
I’d tried them all—I always felt like I was starving to death. Atkins was an adjustment, because I was
suddenly doing without the foods that made me fat in the first place—potatoes,
pasta and bread. But once I got past the
first two weeks, it was easy. The weight
started melting off.
Then I got one of the first
Wiis that came out, chiefly for exercise.
I loved the Wii, because I could work out in the privacy of my own
home. Every day when I exercised, the
cats would gather around to watch. For
some reason, it fascinates them to see me sweating.
During the last two years, I
got less religious about exercising. The
thing that initially stopped me cold in my tracks was when I had a cervical
spine fusion in April of 2010. I had to
wear neck braces for about six weeks, and by the time I was recovered, Bunny
was starting to decline, health-wise. I
spent my spare time going with him to doctor’s appointments or hospitals, or
just spending time with him.
It’s not a good excuse for
my not exercising, but those of us who don’t like to exercise don’t need much
of an excuse. Here’s the biggest lie
that we tell ourselves: I don’t have the
time. I have friends who are
addicted—addicted—to exercise! If they
don’t exercise every single day, they get antsy or out-of-sorts. One has to swim for an hour. One lifts weights. The tri-athletes are the worst—they are like
the vegans of exercise.
Other friends work out
because they realize it’s a necessary evil.
I seem to know a lot of runners in this category. Running has never appealed to me, for a
variety of reasons. As the saying goes,
if you see me running, you’d better run, too, because something is chasing me.
Anyway, over the past two
years, my weight was quietly sneaking upward.
At first, it was because Bunny would bring forbidden foods into the
house. Frosties, cake, ice cream—you name
it; if it was unhealthy, he’d eat it. A
lot of it. On the days when my resolve was strong, I’d
stay away from it. As time wore on, my
resolve grew less strong.
I would chide him for bringing
the forbidden food de jour into the
house, and he’d protest that it was “only a little” and that I shouldn’t eat it
if it was so bad. Ha! That’s like living with a crack addict and
bringing ‘only a little’ crack home and telling her to stay away from it!
Once Bunny was gone, I didn’t
have the desire to do much of anything in my spare time, particularly
exercise. By the fall of last year, I
realized that I had to make some changes, and getting fit was top of the list. There’s a relatively new gym about three
miles from my house. We actually joined
when it first opened, but never went. I
got online and signed up, then visited on the next Monday.
There are some projects I
won’t attempt by myself: auto repair comes to mind. Getting into shape fell into auto repair
territory—I wanted a trainer to help me efficiently get into shape and help me
get motivated to keep it up. Even though there were lots of classes at the gym, I didn’t join any. There are some things I just don’t like doing
in a group.
I was introduced to the personal
trainer manager (or, as I like to call him, the personal trainer pimp (he prefers
the term godfather)). He oversees the personal
trainers and their clients. We met for
about an hour, and he quizzed me on my health, my goals, and numerous other
things. We decided that my training program
would be three times a week, for 25 minutes each time. I could change trainers any time I wanted,
and he encouraged me to change them every once in a while to work with a variety
of styles.
He encouraged me to start out
with Sarah (not her real name), who was good with people who hadn’t exercised
in a while. On November 1, 2012, I
started training. Sarah seemed nice
enough, but she wasn’t exactly a ball of fire; she had less personality and enthusiasm
than a damp dish cloth. By the end of the first month, I was ready to
change. She convinced me to stick with
her a little longer. Every time I
mentioned changing, because the pimp—er—godfather--had told me to change, she would
give me a sad look, like I was abandoning her.
Finally, I couldn’t stand
her another minute. I was very
discouraged, because I wasn’t seeing the kind of results I’d expected after a
month’s time. I was also bored out of my mind with her routines. I went to see the pimp. We discussed a number of
trainers on the roster, and he described each one’s style to me. When he got to Corey (which really is his
name), he looked a bit doubtful.
“He’s got a different style
all together. He’ll push you hard.”
“Perfect! Sign me up!”
I met Corey Trainer (so as
not to confuse him with Corey daughter-in-law) the next day. I loved him immediately—he was efficient, knowledgeable
and no-nonsense. I could tell that a personality
lurked beneath the drill sergeant-like exterior he presented at our first
meeting.
We focused on stretching
exercises at the first session. He told
me I needed to stretch every day, no exceptions. I questioned this requirement to myself, but
I’ve since learned that stretching does make a huge difference. Plus, it’s made me hella flexible!
He asked about physical
limitations. I told him that, other than
hyperextending my neck, the only limitations I had were because of my—ahem—ample
bust. I have what my mother used to call
the “Chatelain Boobs.” I come from a
family of well-endowed women.
“Get some good sports bras. Double or triple them up. We’re going to be doing a lot of running.” Hello!
How had the other trainer—a woman, no less—failed to mention this? When the Chatelain Boobs had gotten in the
way during her exercises, we moved to different exercises.
“How much cardio are you
doing every week?” he asked.
“Thirty minutes almost every
day,” I answered. It was true, and
probably the only reason I’d lost any weight since November.
“Try doing an hour four
times a week. And you gotta sweat.”
Maybe at our first meeting,
he thought he was stuck with some doughy grandmother who would quickly flame
out. I’ll have to ask the next time I
see him. If that was the case, it wasn’t
long before he learned differently.
“I love your
motivation. And your focus. You’re very driven,” he said at our third
session, when I was on my third set of lifting a seemingly impossible amount of
weight. I never have forgotten my Lamaze
techniques, 31 years on—focus, breathe—deliver an almost 10 pound baby without
anesthesia or lift a gazillion pounds of weight.
Corey Trainer challenges me,
pushes me, and motivates me. He makes me
feel like he’s actually invested in my outcome. He’s loosened up a lot since
our first meeting, and he does have a playful side. Now—shock of all shocks—I actually
look forward to going to the gym! What new torture has he devised for me
today? I’ll show him! Every trip is like an adventure--a big,
sweaty adventure.
Based on his advice, I started
dancing (Wii Just Dance 1-4, mostly) for
an hour a night rather than 30 minutes.
I started out at four times a week, but love doing it so much that I do
it nearly every night. In fact, if I don’t
dance, I start jonesing to do it. Am I—gasp—addicted
to the dance? I think I am.
Since November 1st,
I’ve lost a little over 20 pounds. Most
of that has come off since December 17th, when I started working out
with Corey Trainer. I’ve got tone and
definition in places that never had them before (hello, biceps!), even when I
was at my lowest weight. I’ve become
one of those freaky exercise addicts, dancing my butt off—literally and
figuratively. Hey, at least it keeps the
cats entertained.