| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Persistence Pays Off
At nearly 400 pounds, Denise Morth decided to transform her life. Now she’s
running marathons.
By Erin Peterson |
June 2008 |
Discipline and Rewards
From Treadmill to 26.2
Enjoying It All
Success Summary
Denise Morth can’t remember ever being fit. Overweight
as a child and teen, the life-insurance case manager from Coon Rapids, Minn.,
continued to gain weight in her 20s and 30s, eating slice after slice of
greasy pizza — and whatever else appealed at the moment — while avoiding all
exercise. “I just liked to eat and didn’t like to move,” she recalls. At
more than 300 pounds, Morth was painfully self-conscious, yet she couldn’t find
the motivation to make any changes in her life. In 2003, though, she hit
rock bottom. Riding the bus to work, she realized she could no longer fit in a
single seat — and that she wouldn’t fit through the emergency exit. As a
result, Morth, now 40, began avoiding social situations and turning down
invitations to plays and other events she and her husband, Mike, received. “It’s
one thing to inconvenience yourself,” she says, “but I realized I was also
dragging my husband down. It wasn’t fair to him.” So in late 2003, with 390
pounds on her 5-foot-3-inch frame, she pleaded with her doctor for gastric
bypass surgery. She was desperate: Walking even short distances had become a
struggle, and her health was suffering (she was diagnosed with prediabetes, as
well as high cholesterol and high blood pressure). But her doctor strongly
discouraged surgery because of the risks, such as leaks, infections and
psychological challenges. “I went into that appointment with the attitude that I
was going to do whatever she suggested, and what she suggested was Weight
Watchers,” Morth recalls. Well aware that if she didn’t make significant
changes she’d quite literally be killing herself, Morth was ready to do more
than lose weight — she was ready to transform her life.
Discipline and Rewards
With her doctor’s warnings fresh in her mind, as
well as a sense that she could no longer ignore her health, Morth joined Weight
Watchers in early 2004. She began limiting the foods she’d come to rely on —
chips, hot dogs and other prepared foods — and controlled her cravings by
occasionally treating herself to small portions of favorites. She was
pleasantly surprised, though, by how much she enjoyed whole foods. “It might
have been easier to order pizza, but I realized that I really liked fruits and
vegetables when I prepared them,” she says. In addition to improving her
eating habits, Morth incorporated a small amount of physical activity into her
daily routine, such as getting off the bus a few stops earlier and walking.
Her efforts soon began to bear fruit. Morth dropped 10 pounds a month, and by
year’s end, she weighed 277 pounds and could move more easily. She and her
husband celebrated her success with a trip to New York City, and she discovered
that she could once again fit into plane and theater seats. In January 2005,
she was ready to challenge herself again. Knowing she needed to exercise more
regularly, she joined the Life Time Fitness club near her home and signed up for
the T.E.A.M. Weight Loss program. The 12-week regimen, which combines
exercise, education and nutrition, not only pushed her physically, but also
encouraged her to think about the health benefits of the foods she ate. (A
muffin and a bowl of oatmeal might be worth the same number of points, for
instance, but the fiber and nutrients in oatmeal made it a far better choice.)
By the end of the program, she’d lost another 23 pounds, down to 254.
From Treadmill to 26.2
Morth had begun doing treadmill workouts during the
T.E.A.M. Weight Loss program, starting at a slow walk and eventually speeding up
to a jog. Once the program ended, she stuck to the treadmill, using inclines and
heart-rate training to further improve her fitness throughout 2005. It was
during a workout in early 2006 that Morth learned about the club’s six-week
training program for a 5K run. Intrigued, she signed up. Jackie Liu, the Run
Club coordinator and coach at the Coon Rapids club, remembers that Morth was
slow but determined. “The first day we went out, she ran and walked a 23-minute
mile,” Liu recalls. “But she was very coachable. She took in all the information
like a sponge and just did it.” The three-times-a-week training sessions
soon had Morth running confidently. By the time race day rolled around six weeks
later, she finished the three-mile race at a 14-minute-mile pace. She was
exhilarated and decided to stretch herself even further. By now a member of the
Run Club, Morth began increasing her weekly mileage to prepare for longer races.
Soon, she was running five to six days a week. In October 2006, she ran the
Twin Cities (TC) 10 Mile race, clocking a 13-minute-mile pace. She also joined a
second T.E.A.M. Weight Loss program and slimmed from 237 to 210 pounds. By
then, it wasn’t just her friends and family who were noting her dramatic
progress. “People on the bus and in the grocery store came up to me and said,
‘Hey, I’ve been watching you, and you look great,’” she recalls. In October
2007, she again ran the TC 10 Mile race, this time at just under an
11-minute-mile pace. That’s when she knew she was ready to take on an even more
ambitious running goal: a marathon. Morth joined a marathon training class
and continued increasing her daily mileage and weekly long runs. And in
January 2008, weighing just under 160 pounds, she completed the Disney World
Marathon in Orlando in 5:10.
Enjoying It All
Morth’s marathon experience was a deeply satisfying one,
but she says it’s the everyday little things that make her appreciate how
powerfully her new level of fitness has improved the quality of her life.
Each day, she says, she feels the difference. “I feel like I’m really
living now, not just existing,” she says. “I can move. I can breathe.” Her
husband feels the difference, too. “We go to baseball games, we go to movies, we
go to plays,” Mike says. “We even run together. But the biggest change has been
Denise’s attitude — the way she carries herself and how she relates to others.
It’s been such a positive thing.” Above all, the four-year odyssey also has
helped Morth understand the power of persistence. “I just keep moving,” she
says. “As long as I keep doing what I’m supposed to be doing, I know I
will get there.” Erin Peterson is a freelance writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary
Meet: Denise Morth, 40, a case manager for a life-insurance company in Coon
Rapids, Minn. Big achievements: Losing more than 230 pounds and running her
first marathon. Big inspiration: Wanting to enjoy life’s simple freedoms.
“Before, I couldn’t go to plays or baseball games because I couldn’t fit in the
seat,” she says. “Now I can.” What worked: Taking things a step at a time
and staying committed. “Embrace where you currently are and make the changes you
can make now,” she says. What didn’t: Hoping for an outside fix, such as
gastric bypass surgery, to change her life. Words of Wisdom: Face your fear.
“I always avoided stepping on scales or looking in the mirror — I was living
in denial,” she says. “But you can’t change anything until you realize it’s
a problem.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Persistence Pays Off
At nearly 400 pounds, Denise Morth decided to transform her life. Now she’s
running marathons.
By Erin Peterson | Success Stories Department, June 2008 |
Discipline and Rewards
From Treadmill to 26.2
Enjoying It All
Success Summary
Denise Morth can’t remember ever being fit. Overweight
as a child and teen, the life-insurance case manager from Coon Rapids, Minn.,
continued to gain weight in her 20s and 30s, eating slice after slice of
greasy pizza — and whatever else appealed at the moment — while avoiding all
exercise. “I just liked to eat and didn’t like to move,” she recalls. At
more than 300 pounds, Morth was painfully self-conscious, yet she couldn’t find
the motivation to make any changes in her life. In 2003, though, she hit
rock bottom. Riding the bus to work, she realized she could no longer fit in a
single seat — and that she wouldn’t fit through the emergency exit. As a
result, Morth, now 40, began avoiding social situations and turning down
invitations to plays and other events she and her husband, Mike, received. “It’s
one thing to inconvenience yourself,” she says, “but I realized I was also
dragging my husband down. It wasn’t fair to him.” So in late 2003, with 390
pounds on her 5-foot-3-inch frame, she pleaded with her doctor for gastric
bypass surgery. She was desperate: Walking even short distances had become a
struggle, and her health was suffering (she was diagnosed with prediabetes, as
well as high cholesterol and high blood pressure). But her doctor strongly
discouraged surgery because of the risks, such as leaks, infections and
psychological challenges. “I went into that appointment with the attitude that I
was going to do whatever she suggested, and what she suggested was Weight
Watchers,” Morth recalls. Well aware that if she didn’t make significant
changes she’d quite literally be killing herself, Morth was ready to do more
than lose weight — she was ready to transform her life.
Discipline and Rewards (Back to Top)
With her doctor’s warnings fresh in her mind, as
well as a sense that she could no longer ignore her health, Morth joined Weight
Watchers in early 2004. She began limiting the foods she’d come to rely on —
chips, hot dogs and other prepared foods — and controlled her cravings by
occasionally treating herself to small portions of favorites. She was
pleasantly surprised, though, by how much she enjoyed whole foods. “It might
have been easier to order pizza, but I realized that I really liked fruits and
vegetables when I prepared them,” she says. In addition to improving her
eating habits, Morth incorporated a small amount of physical activity into her
daily routine, such as getting off the bus a few stops earlier and walking.
Her efforts soon began to bear fruit. Morth dropped 10 pounds a month, and by
year’s end, she weighed 277 pounds and could move more easily. She and her
husband celebrated her success with a trip to New York City, and she discovered
that she could once again fit into plane and theater seats. In January 2005,
she was ready to challenge herself again. Knowing she needed to exercise more
regularly, she joined the Life Time Fitness club near her home and signed up for
the T.E.A.M. Weight Loss program. The 12-week regimen, which combines
exercise, education and nutrition, not only pushed her physically, but also
encouraged her to think about the health benefits of the foods she ate. (A
muffin and a bowl of oatmeal might be worth the same number of points, for
instance, but the fiber and nutrients in oatmeal made it a far better choice.)
By the end of the program, she’d lost another 23 pounds, down to 254.
From Treadmill to 26.2 (Back to Top)
Morth had begun doing treadmill workouts during the
T.E.A.M. Weight Loss program, starting at a slow walk and eventually speeding up
to a jog. Once the program ended, she stuck to the treadmill, using inclines and
heart-rate training to further improve her fitness throughout 2005. It was
during a workout in early 2006 that Morth learned about the club’s six-week
training program for a 5K run. Intrigued, she signed up. Jackie Liu, the Run
Club coordinator and coach at the Coon Rapids club, remembers that Morth was
slow but determined. “The first day we went out, she ran and walked a 23-minute
mile,” Liu recalls. “But she was very coachable. She took in all the information
like a sponge and just did it.” The three-times-a-week training sessions
soon had Morth running confidently. By the time race day rolled around six weeks
later, she finished the three-mile race at a 14-minute-mile pace. She was
exhilarated and decided to stretch herself even further. By now a member of the
Run Club, Morth began increasing her weekly mileage to prepare for longer races.
Soon, she was running five to six days a week. In October 2006, she ran the
Twin Cities (TC) 10 Mile race, clocking a 13-minute-mile pace. She also joined a
second T.E.A.M. Weight Loss program and slimmed from 237 to 210 pounds. By
then, it wasn’t just her friends and family who were noting her dramatic
progress. “People on the bus and in the grocery store came up to me and said,
‘Hey, I’ve been watching you, and you look great,’” she recalls. In October
2007, she again ran the TC 10 Mile race, this time at just under an
11-minute-mile pace. That’s when she knew she was ready to take on an even more
ambitious running goal: a marathon. Morth joined a marathon training class
and continued increasing her daily mileage and weekly long runs. And in
January 2008, weighing just under 160 pounds, she completed the Disney World
Marathon in Orlando in 5:10.
Enjoying It All (Back to Top)
Morth’s marathon experience was a deeply satisfying one,
but she says it’s the everyday little things that make her appreciate how
powerfully her new level of fitness has improved the quality of her life.
Each day, she says, she feels the difference. “I feel like I’m really
living now, not just existing,” she says. “I can move. I can breathe.” Her
husband feels the difference, too. “We go to baseball games, we go to movies, we
go to plays,” Mike says. “We even run together. But the biggest change has been
Denise’s attitude — the way she carries herself and how she relates to others.
It’s been such a positive thing.” Above all, the four-year odyssey also has
helped Morth understand the power of persistence. “I just keep moving,” she
says. “As long as I keep doing what I’m supposed to be doing, I know I
will get there.” Erin Peterson is a freelance writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary (Back to Top)
Meet: Denise Morth, 40, a case manager for a life-insurance company in Coon
Rapids, Minn. Big achievements: Losing more than 230 pounds and running her
first marathon. Big inspiration: Wanting to enjoy life’s simple freedoms.
“Before, I couldn’t go to plays or baseball games because I couldn’t fit in the
seat,” she says. “Now I can.” What worked: Taking things a step at a time
and staying committed. “Embrace where you currently are and make the changes you
can make now,” she says. What didn’t: Hoping for an outside fix, such as
gastric bypass surgery, to change her life. Words of Wisdom: Face your fear.
“I always avoided stepping on scales or looking in the mirror — I was living
in denial,” she says. “But you can’t change anything until you realize it’s
a problem.”
Print
| Email
| Comment
| Subscribe
| Give a Gift
|
|