| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
In This Together
A health scare convinced Brad and Ivette Heutmaker to change their eating and
exercise habits. Now, even their daughter is reaping the rewards of their
healthier choices.
By Erin Peterson |
September 2008 |
Time for a Turnaround
Making Time for Fitness
Forward Thinking
Success Summary
Sitting in a dressing room one late-summer day in 2006,
Ivette Heutmaker was faced with an unpleasant realization — she no longer fit
into size 22 jeans. She’d been wearing the size for years, but that day she
could barely pull them over her thighs. Annoyed, she left the store empty-handed
and swore she’d lose weight by improving her eating habits. But it wasn’t until
a month later that her irritation turned into action. That’s when her husband,
Brad, was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Ivette admits she had something of
a breakdown that day. “When we got home, I remember pulling stuff out of the
pantry and the freezer — cookies, chips, ice cream — and throwing it all away,”
she recalls. For years, Ivette, 37, and Brad, 36, had eaten poorly and
avoided exercise, but Brad’s diagnosis was the wake-up call their whole family
needed. They decided to make significant changes to how they were living — not
just for their own health, but for that of their young daughter, too.
Time for a Turnaround
The Heutmakers’ weight struggles began well before
Ivette’s dressing-room epiphany. She’d been putting on pounds since high school,
and by the time she’d reached her 20s, she was eating out frequently and burning
few calories in her sedentary jobs. While pregnant with their daughter, LaRue,
in 2001, the 5-foot-3-inch mom-to-be ate high-calorie Mexican dishes several
times a week. By the end of her pregnancy, she tipped the scales at 270 pounds.
Her weight plummeted just after LaRue’s birth, but her poor diet and activity
habits caused her weight to climb steadily over the next five years. Brad
put on the pounds in college, where fast food and cafeteria fare were his diet
staples. His weight fluctuated over the years, but during Ivette’s pregnancy, he
matched her bite for bite. Meanwhile, his desk job — which kept him sedentary
for most of the day — didn’t help. “I didn’t make time for exercise or anything
else,” he says. By the time of his diabetes diagnosis in 2006, he was carrying
255 pounds on his 6-foot frame. The Heutmakers tended to reinforce each
other’s bad habits. Too tired to cook after long workdays, they often agreed to
order takeout or head to a restaurant. Increasingly, they both worried about
their health, and they were also concerned about the effects their lifestyle
might have on their daughter. So after Brad’s diagnosis, they made major
changes — starting with their grocery list. “The first few times I went
shopping, it took me a lot longer,” Ivette says. “I was more aware of labels. I
realized that if there were ingredients I couldn’t read, they were probably
chemicals I didn’t want to put in my body.” She planned dinners a week in
advance so they didn’t have to rely on takeout meals, and packed healthier
snacks when they were away from home. She made personal changes as well: Instead
of eating her company’s heavy cafeteria meals, she made egg-white scrambles with
broccoli and salsa wrapped in whole-wheat tortillas. She also began packing
healthy lunches for LaRue in an effort to help her develop good eating habits.
Brad, meanwhile, tackled his fast-food addiction. While traveling for his
new sales job, he stayed in hotels with in-room microwaves so he could prepare a
bowl of oatmeal for breakfast, and he learned to make good choices when food
options were limited. “When I’m in the airport, I know what to look for — I can
get a wrap at Subway, for example,” he says. “It’s not the best in the world,
but it’s better than a Quarter Pounder with Cheese.” Within a month of starting
his new diet, he was able to wean himself from his diabetes medication. With
their nutrition under control, Brad and Ivette’s next move was to get
active
Making Time for Fitness
With busy careers and a young daughter, the
Heutmakers could have made excuses not to exercise. Instead, they figured out
ways to make it a part of their routine. Ivette began rising early so she
could exercise at the Life Time Fitness near their home in Maricopa, Ariz.,
before she went to work. She began slowly, logging just a few minutes on the
elliptical machine before becoming exhausted. Within a few weeks, she could
manage 20 minutes at a steady pace. Brad, meanwhile, chose hotels with
fitness centers when he was traveling, so he could cycle or run during his
downtime. Their excess weight soon was melting off: Within a year, both Brad
and Ivette dropped around 75 pounds. By late 2007, they were ready to ramp
up their activity even more. Brad began meeting a few times a month with
personal trainer Graham Gould, who helped him develop an exercise regimen using
resistance bands. Easy to pack, the bands allowed him to do squats, pushups and
lunges with additional resistance. “We worked on finding things that he could
easily do on the road that would provide a quick, total-body workout,” says
Gould. Back home in Arizona, Ivette joined general fitness, cardio
kickboxing and barbell strength classes. She also started running on the
treadmill, a workout that would have been unthinkable just two years earlier.
The two offer each other plenty of support, despite Brad’s hectic travel
schedule. They regularly discuss their workouts, and whenever they’re together
at the club, they warm up and stretch with each other. And every Friday night,
they go to the gym as a family.
Forward Thinking
In just two years, the Heutmakers have turned their
eating and exercise habits upside down. Brad, who ran his first marathon in
June, is now working to build more muscle and reduce body fat. Ivette,
meanwhile, maintains her workouts but has put her weight-loss efforts on hold —
she’s expecting baby No. 2 in January. “If it weren’t for the weight
loss,” Brad says, “we don’t believe we would have gotten pregnant again.”
They’re ecstatic about their progress, but are proudest of the great example
they’re setting for LaRue and their baby to come. “LaRue tells us she can’t wait
until she’s 12, so she can exercise with us at the gym. She’s our best
cheerleader,” says Ivette. “I do this for me, but I also do this for her. I like
getting down on the floor and playing games with her. And that’s something I
want to do with grandchildren someday, too.” Erin Peterson is a freelance
writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary
Meet: Brad and Ivette Heutmaker, 36 and 37, from Maricopa, Ariz. He’s a
consultant and salesman; she’s now a stay-at-home mom. Big
achievements: For Brad, losing 75 pounds and learning to stay healthy on the
road; for Ivette, losing 75 pounds, improving her family’s eating habits and
gaining confidence at the gym. Big inspiration: For Brad, getting off his
diabetes medication; for Ivette, teaching good habits to their 6-year-old
daughter, LaRue. What worked: For Brad, avoiding fast food and finding ways
to bring healthier habits on the road; for Ivette, making time in her day for a
workout. What didn’t: For Brad, focusing on fitness only for the week or two
he was home each month; for Ivette, eating nutritionally suspect and
calorie-packed meals provided by her former employer. Words of Wisdom:
Recognize your choices. “Nobody is making you buy those chips and cookies,” says
Ivette. “Don’t go down those aisles in the grocery store in the first place.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In This Together
A health scare convinced Brad and Ivette Heutmaker to change their eating and
exercise habits. Now, even their daughter is reaping the rewards of their
healthier choices.
By Erin Peterson | Success Stories Department, September 2008 |
Time for a Turnaround
Making Time for Fitness
Forward Thinking
Success Summary
Sitting in a dressing room one late-summer day in 2006,
Ivette Heutmaker was faced with an unpleasant realization — she no longer fit
into size 22 jeans. She’d been wearing the size for years, but that day she
could barely pull them over her thighs. Annoyed, she left the store empty-handed
and swore she’d lose weight by improving her eating habits. But it wasn’t until
a month later that her irritation turned into action. That’s when her husband,
Brad, was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Ivette admits she had something of
a breakdown that day. “When we got home, I remember pulling stuff out of the
pantry and the freezer — cookies, chips, ice cream — and throwing it all away,”
she recalls. For years, Ivette, 37, and Brad, 36, had eaten poorly and
avoided exercise, but Brad’s diagnosis was the wake-up call their whole family
needed. They decided to make significant changes to how they were living — not
just for their own health, but for that of their young daughter, too.
Time for a Turnaround (Back to Top)
The Heutmakers’ weight struggles began well before
Ivette’s dressing-room epiphany. She’d been putting on pounds since high school,
and by the time she’d reached her 20s, she was eating out frequently and burning
few calories in her sedentary jobs. While pregnant with their daughter, LaRue,
in 2001, the 5-foot-3-inch mom-to-be ate high-calorie Mexican dishes several
times a week. By the end of her pregnancy, she tipped the scales at 270 pounds.
Her weight plummeted just after LaRue’s birth, but her poor diet and activity
habits caused her weight to climb steadily over the next five years. Brad
put on the pounds in college, where fast food and cafeteria fare were his diet
staples. His weight fluctuated over the years, but during Ivette’s pregnancy, he
matched her bite for bite. Meanwhile, his desk job — which kept him sedentary
for most of the day — didn’t help. “I didn’t make time for exercise or anything
else,” he says. By the time of his diabetes diagnosis in 2006, he was carrying
255 pounds on his 6-foot frame. The Heutmakers tended to reinforce each
other’s bad habits. Too tired to cook after long workdays, they often agreed to
order takeout or head to a restaurant. Increasingly, they both worried about
their health, and they were also concerned about the effects their lifestyle
might have on their daughter. So after Brad’s diagnosis, they made major
changes — starting with their grocery list. “The first few times I went
shopping, it took me a lot longer,” Ivette says. “I was more aware of labels. I
realized that if there were ingredients I couldn’t read, they were probably
chemicals I didn’t want to put in my body.” She planned dinners a week in
advance so they didn’t have to rely on takeout meals, and packed healthier
snacks when they were away from home. She made personal changes as well: Instead
of eating her company’s heavy cafeteria meals, she made egg-white scrambles with
broccoli and salsa wrapped in whole-wheat tortillas. She also began packing
healthy lunches for LaRue in an effort to help her develop good eating habits.
Brad, meanwhile, tackled his fast-food addiction. While traveling for his
new sales job, he stayed in hotels with in-room microwaves so he could prepare a
bowl of oatmeal for breakfast, and he learned to make good choices when food
options were limited. “When I’m in the airport, I know what to look for — I can
get a wrap at Subway, for example,” he says. “It’s not the best in the world,
but it’s better than a Quarter Pounder with Cheese.” Within a month of starting
his new diet, he was able to wean himself from his diabetes medication. With
their nutrition under control, Brad and Ivette’s next move was to get
active
Making Time for Fitness (Back to Top)
With busy careers and a young daughter, the
Heutmakers could have made excuses not to exercise. Instead, they figured out
ways to make it a part of their routine. Ivette began rising early so she
could exercise at the Life Time Fitness near their home in Maricopa, Ariz.,
before she went to work. She began slowly, logging just a few minutes on the
elliptical machine before becoming exhausted. Within a few weeks, she could
manage 20 minutes at a steady pace. Brad, meanwhile, chose hotels with
fitness centers when he was traveling, so he could cycle or run during his
downtime. Their excess weight soon was melting off: Within a year, both Brad
and Ivette dropped around 75 pounds. By late 2007, they were ready to ramp
up their activity even more. Brad began meeting a few times a month with
personal trainer Graham Gould, who helped him develop an exercise regimen using
resistance bands. Easy to pack, the bands allowed him to do squats, pushups and
lunges with additional resistance. “We worked on finding things that he could
easily do on the road that would provide a quick, total-body workout,” says
Gould. Back home in Arizona, Ivette joined general fitness, cardio
kickboxing and barbell strength classes. She also started running on the
treadmill, a workout that would have been unthinkable just two years earlier.
The two offer each other plenty of support, despite Brad’s hectic travel
schedule. They regularly discuss their workouts, and whenever they’re together
at the club, they warm up and stretch with each other. And every Friday night,
they go to the gym as a family.
Forward Thinking (Back to Top)
In just two years, the Heutmakers have turned their
eating and exercise habits upside down. Brad, who ran his first marathon in
June, is now working to build more muscle and reduce body fat. Ivette,
meanwhile, maintains her workouts but has put her weight-loss efforts on hold —
she’s expecting baby No. 2 in January. “If it weren’t for the weight
loss,” Brad says, “we don’t believe we would have gotten pregnant again.”
They’re ecstatic about their progress, but are proudest of the great example
they’re setting for LaRue and their baby to come. “LaRue tells us she can’t wait
until she’s 12, so she can exercise with us at the gym. She’s our best
cheerleader,” says Ivette. “I do this for me, but I also do this for her. I like
getting down on the floor and playing games with her. And that’s something I
want to do with grandchildren someday, too.” Erin Peterson is a freelance
writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary (Back to Top)
Meet: Brad and Ivette Heutmaker, 36 and 37, from Maricopa, Ariz. He’s a
consultant and salesman; she’s now a stay-at-home mom. Big
achievements: For Brad, losing 75 pounds and learning to stay healthy on the
road; for Ivette, losing 75 pounds, improving her family’s eating habits and
gaining confidence at the gym. Big inspiration: For Brad, getting off his
diabetes medication; for Ivette, teaching good habits to their 6-year-old
daughter, LaRue. What worked: For Brad, avoiding fast food and finding ways
to bring healthier habits on the road; for Ivette, making time in her day for a
workout. What didn’t: For Brad, focusing on fitness only for the week or two
he was home each month; for Ivette, eating nutritionally suspect and
calorie-packed meals provided by her former employer. Words of Wisdom:
Recognize your choices. “Nobody is making you buy those chips and cookies,” says
Ivette. “Don’t go down those aisles in the grocery store in the first place.”
Print
| Email
| Comment
| Subscribe
| Give a Gift
|
|