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experiencelifemag.com
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A Source of Strength
When her mother died, Patty Masters decided to relaunch her life.
By Erin Peterson |
October 2007 |
A Friendly Push
Fueling Fitness Success
The View Ahead
Success Summary
Patty Masters never gave much thought to the importance of health and fitness
until July 2005, when her mother, Dee, died at age 72. Overweight and bedridden,
her mom suffered from a variety of chronic ailments, including
osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. “She was in terrible pain, she
never wanted to exercise, and I think she just gave up,” Masters recalls. “I
knew I didn’t want to go like that.” But the Sugar Land, Texas, homemaker was
already following a similar path. Heavy since childhood, Masters never exercised
and frequently relied on diets to help her lose weight — with short-lived
success. At 52, she was significantly overweight and relying on prescription
drugs to control her high blood pressure and ease her joint pain. She also
fought lower-back pain and plantar fasciitis. Despite these painful
conditions, it wasn’t until January 2006, when the now 54-year-old Masters
learned she was prediabetic, that she realized how serious her health problems
were. “It scared me,” she recalls. “I really hoped I hadn’t done anything I
couldn’t reverse.” Her doctor, Tayma Weber, MD, gave her two options: She
could take yet another medication to treat her prediabetes, or she could
exercise and improve her diet. “I told her that she could use pill power,” says
Weber, “or she could use willpower.” Masters chose to take her health into
her own hands and began moving in the direction in which she’d become healthier,
fitter and stronger than ever.
A Friendly Push
When Masters first visited Weber in 2006, she weighed in
at 278 pounds — far too much for her 5-foot 8-inch frame. Weber encouraged her
to join a gym and take a water aerobics class, which would help her get
active without putting additional strain on her already overburdened
joints. Masters took her advice, joining the Life Time Fitness club near her
home and signing up for water aerobics. Though she was intimidated and
self-conscious at first, it proved to be a perfect fit. The instructors were
encouraging, and she was able to work out six times a week without pain. The
excess weight soon began to melt off: She lost 60 pounds in the first three
months. Support from her husband, Ron, and their two grown sons motivated
Masters to keep going, as did the encouragement of Mary Beth Olvey, whom she met
in class. “When I started making friends in water aerobics, it wasn’t a
chore to go,” Masters says. “It was a fun, social thing to do.” Olvey urged
her to expand her routine beyond the pool. “I’d been doing a Pilates class, and
I encouraged her to do it, too,” Olvey says. “It took her awhile before she
joined me, but when she did it, she liked it.” Before long, Masters was doing
Pilates two or three times a week, in addition to her water workouts.
Despite her new fitness regimen, Masters’s weight plateaued at 195 pounds in
August. Determined to continue down the healthy track, she met with a personal
trainer who gave her a fitness assessment and offered further guidance. When
the results showed she had 29.6 percent body fat, the trainer suggested adding
resistance training to her routine, which would build strength and rev up her
metabolism. She started with resistance machines and gradually added squats,
chest inclines and other free-weight exercises to her workouts. She began
incorporating core work with a medicine ball when she started training with
Chris Mooney, assistant personal-training department head at the Sugar Land
facility, in the fall. “I enjoyed the power I felt when doing resistance work
and watching muscle definition appear,” she says. To maintain her enthusiasm
for strength training, she asked Mooney to tweak the workouts monthly. “She was
extremely self-motivated,” Mooney recalls. “All she needed was a little
guidance.” The new routine did the trick: She lost about 10 pounds a month and
reached her goal weight of 140 pounds in early 2007.
Fueling Fitness Success
As Masters overhauled her fitness, she also
radically changed her diet. An emotional eater who frequently turned to ice
cream when she felt anxious, she says the prediabetes diagnosis was especially
tough to handle. “I mourned how I would have to give up desserts forever,” she
says. “But then I realized that I had eaten a lifetime of them already.” She
started a food journal immediately after the initial appointment with Weber and
began swapping out her high-calorie, high-carbohydrate meals of bread, rice and
pasta for a diet full of lean meats, beans, legumes and plenty of
vegetables. She also monitored her blood-sugar levels. In early 2007,
when those levels stayed high even after losing weight, she switched to a vegan
diet — lots of beans, organic fruits and vegetables, tofu, and oat bran. While
the options at first seemed restrictive, Masters sought out good recipes and new
foods that fit into her regimen. “I’ve found that the variety of things I eat
now is much greater than it ever was before,” she says. Though
she’s reached her goal weight, Masters continues to keep the journal — as a
reminder of her past eating habits and to ensure that she doesn’t slip. “I try
not to take too much for granted,” she says. “I don’t want to get on a downward
spiral.” So far, her vigilance has served her well. In addition to shedding
more than 130 pounds, her new, healthy way of life has allowed her to eliminate
four of the six medications she once took for her chronic conditions.
The View Ahead
When Masters began working out and eating healthy, she
primarily wanted to avoid insulin shots. She realized as the weight came off,
however, that she was happier and more energetic than she’d ever been. She also
saw how much more she could do. Once unable to lift her feet off the floor to do
a jumping jack, she recently started taking kickboxing classes. Food and
fitness, once Masters’s weaknesses, have become her strengths. And while the
numbers on the scale suggest that she’s achieved her goals, she’s now pushing to
get even stronger and more physically fit. “Losing weight went hand-in-hand with
getting healthy,” she says. “Now I would like to see how far I can go.” Erin Peterson is a freelance writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary
Meet: Patty Masters, 54, a homemaker from Sugar Land,
Texas Big achievement: Losing more than 130 pounds and eliminating the need
for four medications Big inspirations: Frequent wardrobe upgrades. “Every
month I was buying new clothes, and as I lost weight, the clothes I could choose
from were much nicer. It was good motivation.” What worked: Connecting
exercise with social activity through fitness classes. “The wonderful
friendships I have made make coming back day after day a pleasure.” What
didn’t: Dieting without exercise. “Diets worked for a while — but I always
gained the weight right back.” Words of wisdom: Forget vanity. “Some people
say that they could never get into a bathing suit, but you just need to go to
the gym and do it. No one will know you, and when you get there, you’ll realize
that there are other people who look just like you.”
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A Source of Strength
When her mother died, Patty Masters decided to relaunch her life.
By Erin Peterson | Success Stories Department, October 2007 |
A Friendly Push
Fueling Fitness Success
The View Ahead
Success Summary
Patty Masters never gave much thought to the importance of health and fitness
until July 2005, when her mother, Dee, died at age 72. Overweight and bedridden,
her mom suffered from a variety of chronic ailments, including
osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. “She was in terrible pain, she
never wanted to exercise, and I think she just gave up,” Masters recalls. “I
knew I didn’t want to go like that.” But the Sugar Land, Texas, homemaker was
already following a similar path. Heavy since childhood, Masters never exercised
and frequently relied on diets to help her lose weight — with short-lived
success. At 52, she was significantly overweight and relying on prescription
drugs to control her high blood pressure and ease her joint pain. She also
fought lower-back pain and plantar fasciitis. Despite these painful
conditions, it wasn’t until January 2006, when the now 54-year-old Masters
learned she was prediabetic, that she realized how serious her health problems
were. “It scared me,” she recalls. “I really hoped I hadn’t done anything I
couldn’t reverse.” Her doctor, Tayma Weber, MD, gave her two options: She
could take yet another medication to treat her prediabetes, or she could
exercise and improve her diet. “I told her that she could use pill power,” says
Weber, “or she could use willpower.” Masters chose to take her health into
her own hands and began moving in the direction in which she’d become healthier,
fitter and stronger than ever.
A Friendly Push (Back to Top)
When Masters first visited Weber in 2006, she weighed in
at 278 pounds — far too much for her 5-foot 8-inch frame. Weber encouraged her
to join a gym and take a water aerobics class, which would help her get
active without putting additional strain on her already overburdened
joints. Masters took her advice, joining the Life Time Fitness club near her
home and signing up for water aerobics. Though she was intimidated and
self-conscious at first, it proved to be a perfect fit. The instructors were
encouraging, and she was able to work out six times a week without pain. The
excess weight soon began to melt off: She lost 60 pounds in the first three
months. Support from her husband, Ron, and their two grown sons motivated
Masters to keep going, as did the encouragement of Mary Beth Olvey, whom she met
in class. “When I started making friends in water aerobics, it wasn’t a
chore to go,” Masters says. “It was a fun, social thing to do.” Olvey urged
her to expand her routine beyond the pool. “I’d been doing a Pilates class, and
I encouraged her to do it, too,” Olvey says. “It took her awhile before she
joined me, but when she did it, she liked it.” Before long, Masters was doing
Pilates two or three times a week, in addition to her water workouts.
Despite her new fitness regimen, Masters’s weight plateaued at 195 pounds in
August. Determined to continue down the healthy track, she met with a personal
trainer who gave her a fitness assessment and offered further guidance. When
the results showed she had 29.6 percent body fat, the trainer suggested adding
resistance training to her routine, which would build strength and rev up her
metabolism. She started with resistance machines and gradually added squats,
chest inclines and other free-weight exercises to her workouts. She began
incorporating core work with a medicine ball when she started training with
Chris Mooney, assistant personal-training department head at the Sugar Land
facility, in the fall. “I enjoyed the power I felt when doing resistance work
and watching muscle definition appear,” she says. To maintain her enthusiasm
for strength training, she asked Mooney to tweak the workouts monthly. “She was
extremely self-motivated,” Mooney recalls. “All she needed was a little
guidance.” The new routine did the trick: She lost about 10 pounds a month and
reached her goal weight of 140 pounds in early 2007.
Fueling Fitness Success (Back to Top)
As Masters overhauled her fitness, she also
radically changed her diet. An emotional eater who frequently turned to ice
cream when she felt anxious, she says the prediabetes diagnosis was especially
tough to handle. “I mourned how I would have to give up desserts forever,” she
says. “But then I realized that I had eaten a lifetime of them already.” She
started a food journal immediately after the initial appointment with Weber and
began swapping out her high-calorie, high-carbohydrate meals of bread, rice and
pasta for a diet full of lean meats, beans, legumes and plenty of
vegetables. She also monitored her blood-sugar levels. In early 2007,
when those levels stayed high even after losing weight, she switched to a vegan
diet — lots of beans, organic fruits and vegetables, tofu, and oat bran. While
the options at first seemed restrictive, Masters sought out good recipes and new
foods that fit into her regimen. “I’ve found that the variety of things I eat
now is much greater than it ever was before,” she says. Though
she’s reached her goal weight, Masters continues to keep the journal — as a
reminder of her past eating habits and to ensure that she doesn’t slip. “I try
not to take too much for granted,” she says. “I don’t want to get on a downward
spiral.” So far, her vigilance has served her well. In addition to shedding
more than 130 pounds, her new, healthy way of life has allowed her to eliminate
four of the six medications she once took for her chronic conditions.
The View Ahead (Back to Top)
When Masters began working out and eating healthy, she
primarily wanted to avoid insulin shots. She realized as the weight came off,
however, that she was happier and more energetic than she’d ever been. She also
saw how much more she could do. Once unable to lift her feet off the floor to do
a jumping jack, she recently started taking kickboxing classes. Food and
fitness, once Masters’s weaknesses, have become her strengths. And while the
numbers on the scale suggest that she’s achieved her goals, she’s now pushing to
get even stronger and more physically fit. “Losing weight went hand-in-hand with
getting healthy,” she says. “Now I would like to see how far I can go.” Erin Peterson is a freelance writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary (Back to Top)
Meet: Patty Masters, 54, a homemaker from Sugar Land,
Texas Big achievement: Losing more than 130 pounds and eliminating the need
for four medications Big inspirations: Frequent wardrobe upgrades. “Every
month I was buying new clothes, and as I lost weight, the clothes I could choose
from were much nicer. It was good motivation.” What worked: Connecting
exercise with social activity through fitness classes. “The wonderful
friendships I have made make coming back day after day a pleasure.” What
didn’t: Dieting without exercise. “Diets worked for a while — but I always
gained the weight right back.” Words of wisdom: Forget vanity. “Some people
say that they could never get into a bathing suit, but you just need to go to
the gym and do it. No one will know you, and when you get there, you’ll realize
that there are other people who look just like you.”
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