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Showing posts with label Fashlete of the Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashlete of the Month. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Fashlete of the Month: Share Your Story!

February's Theme: SMALL STEP, BIG DEAL

It's important to celebrate the baby steps we take along the way to our larger goals.  Email me your story to enter February's "Fashlete of the Month" contest.

Maybe you just got your first pull up, or ran a mile without stopping for the first time, signed up for your first 5k, did your first "RX" WOD...  Write in describe the significance of this moment.  If you felt like throwing yourself a party after getting your first muscle up then I want to hear from you!

Your story will be posted on the Fashletics blog and you will receive a customized sterling silver necklace as a thank you for putting yourself out there and inspiring others through your hard work and willingness to share your story.

January's Fashlete of the Month: Sheron Smith
December's Fashlete of the Month: Lorraine Browne
November's Fashlete of the Month: Haley Sztykiel

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Fashlete of the Month: Sheron Smith

The Athlete Within

If Sheron Smith does not inspire you to conquer your goals in 2011 then I don't know who will. Sheron is a hero (though she is so humble I doubt she would ever admit it).  I am very excited to take this opportunity to share Sheron's story with you and give her a much deserved moment in the spotlight. 

If you read this and it strikes a chord I urge you to leave a comment here for Sheron to read. A little bit goes a long way and even a few kind words from a total stranger are extremely powerful.  Trust me, after you read this you will want to give Sheron a big hug, a pat on the back, a standing ovation... but since we are all hanging out here in cyberspace you can give her the next best thing... a "virtual high five" in the form of a comment on this post.  :)  Enjoy!

Then (2007) & Now (2011)
My name is Sheron Smith. I am a mother, a grandmother, a wife. Until a few years ago I was on a downhill spiral of self-destruction. I was morbidly obese and my health was quickly becoming a problem.


The realization that I needed to drastically change my life hit me quite abrupt. I stepped on the scale on August 1st, 2007 and it broke at 300 pounds. I sat on the bathroom crying mostly out of shame but also out of despair! I didn’t know what to do or where to start but at that moment I knew that if I were to continue living I needed to do something.

January 7th is my anniversary. No it is not my wedding anniversary but an important one nonetheless.  On January 7th, 2008 I made a commitment to turn my life around and become a healthier, happier person. On that day I walked into a local gym and joined over one hundred other people signing up to participate in a “biggest loser” contest.

My life-changing journey technically began in August of 2007 when I weighed over 300 pounds. I began walking at a nearby community track with some friends and by the first official weigh in of Hanover’s Biggest Loser Contest I weighed in at 269 pounds, having already lost over 40 pounds.

I had never been in a gym before and found it all very intimidating. The people, the machines, the lingo were all foreign to me.  Dan Sell, who was running the contest and at that time was the General Manager of the gym taught me how to use some of the machines. His enthusiasm for fitness was contagious and was just the boost that I needed to get me started.

I also worked with a nutritionist, Brandy Schuster. Brandy taught me how to “listen to my body” and how to eat healthy.

As I began to lose weight I wanted more. I worked out harder and longer and craved an intensity that I could not satisfy in the gym.

As the weeks went by there were so many highs and lows. As I lost pounds and my body began to change on the outside it also began to change on the inside. Hormones were out of control and emotions were always on high alert! My team mates and I often joked about how we shared “blood, sweat and tears”! During those 6 months my way of thinking changed and I knew that I had made a lifestyle change. I became focused on taking this journey to the end!

Half her size!
The contest ran for six months and I finished in 10th place, weighing 213 pounds. I did not win the contest but I felt like a winner. I had gained some self-respect. I had motivation. I had found a great support system. I was on a mission and I was not nearly finished! I wanted more. It was at this time that Dan began coaching a Boot Camp. I so desperately wanted to try it but feared I would not be able to keep up with the group. It was tough and I struggled but did not quit. I found a part of me that I didn’t know existed. I loved the intensity of the Boot Camp workouts and I still wanted more.

Dan left his position at the gym to open his own and for a few months while he looked for a suitable space I worked out in his garage.  In March of 2010 Dan opened CrossFit Hanover.   I have learned so much since I began CrossFit. I joke that Greg Glassman invented CrossFit just for me. CrossFit has taught me how to deal with stress. There is nothing better after a stress filled day of daycare than to swing a 16# sledgehammer at a tire or flip a tractor tire for a mile. Pushing prowlers, doing kipping pull-ups, dead lifting chains, or swinging a Kettle bell………….have all made me stronger, has increased my endurance and has made me extremely happy. I always say that the best WODs are the ones that leave me breathless on the floor when I’m finished.

The CrossFit community has become my family. I have made many good friends at the Hanover box and have made many friends at the four nearby boxes that I have visited.

There's no stopping her now!
My accomplishments are far beyond anything I could have ever envisioned. I rode a 75 mile bike ride for MS. I did “Grace” for Barbells for Boobs two times. Last month I reached my goal for 2010 by dead lifting 251#. But my biggest accomplishment of all has been to cut my initial weight in half. I have become healthier and happier! It hasn’t always been easy and there have been many road-blocks along the way but with the support from my CrossFit friends and Dan’s never ending patience and guidance I travel on.  I am not sure where or how my journey will end but for now I am happy to just enjoy the moment.
  
Sheron is receiving this customized gift from Fashletics as a thank you for sharing her story and inspiring others. Sheron chose to have the word INTENSITY to be inscribed on this sterling silver charm. She says that has been her word all along... and it has clearly served her well!  Congratulations Sheron!


Check out Sheron's blog for more about her weight loss journey, nutrition and fitness tips, and plenty of motivation.  http://next-level-weight-loss-support.com

Don't forget to leave a comment below for Sheron to read!! 

Who will be February's Fashlete of the Month? Email your story or nominate a friend. Submissions can be emailed to sarah@fashletics.com

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Fashlete of the Month: Share Your Story!

Fashletics is all about celebrating your commitment to health and fitness... but it is a celebration of more than just increased physical strength.  When I stared training I was simply interested in getting faster and stronger. I wanted to race and I wanted to win.  Most people who start a training program have some sort of tangible goal in mind - lose weight, increase endurance, build muscle, etc.

However, regardless of the initial training goal I am sure that at some point, like me, you realized that your training program was giving you way more than a faster 5k time, a new deadlift max, or a smaller number on the scale.

Quite often people realize the benefits of their rigorous training plan outside of the gym altogether.  Quite often the grueling workouts, the early mornings, the callused hands... it all adds up to something way more than nice legs and a tight stomach.

"Fashlete of the Month" is about recognizing the influence that your fitness commitment has had on your life outside the gym.  If you have a story you would like to share about yourself or someone else please fee free to submit it for "Fashlete of the Month".  Your story will be shared on this blog and the chosen "Fashlete" will receive a customized gift from Fashletics.

Don't be shy! Be proud of your success and growth and be willing to inspire others!

Email your story to: sarah@fashletics.com
Last Month's Fashlete: Haley Sztykiel

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Fashlete of the Month • November 2010

I am excited to announce the very first Fashlete of the Month!  A while back I asked the Fashletics Facebook fans to write in with their favorite motivational word or phrase. Not only did I get a lot of great suggestions but I got a lot of great stories too. (Thank you everyone!!) This inspired me to start "Fashlete of the Month". Want to nominate someone? Yourself perhaps? Email me your story!

First up we have Haley (who happens to be my little sister and the youngest of  four siblings).  I didn't just chose Haley because she is related to me, I chose her because when she answered the question "what motivates you?" she wrote about something that she barely ever talks about even to her own sister.  Let me tell you a little of what I know about Hales before I turn it over to her: She never complains, she is always smiling, and although (as you will soon read) she has been told over and over again of her physical limitations I have never heard her say "I can't". I know there were a lot of "experts" telling her what she couldn't or wouldn't ever do. With a smile on her face and a spark in her electric blue eyes Hales went on to prove them all wrong. Thanks Hales for letting me share this, I hope you know how proud I am of you. Okay, enough of my babbling... here's Haley.....

Fashlete of the Month: November 2010
Name: Haley Sztykiel
Age: 23
Graduate Student, University of Michigan School of Social Work


Haley's response to the question: What Motivates You?

Before I tell you the quote that motives me, let me do a little explaining. The day I was born, the doctors told my parents “You have a beautiful (I may have added that) baby girl, but you might want to get those legs checked out.” And that is what I have been doing for the last 23 years, getting my legs “checked out.” If you were to see me, it would be obvious that I have a different walking gait then what is considered normal. To this day, doctors have never been able to understand why I walk differently. But, there has always been this underlying idea that something is wrong. Everything from clubfeet, scoliosis, and so many other medical jargon words have been tossed out and ruled out. For most of my life, doctors settled on the name “unknown neuromuscular disorder.” In other words, something was wrong with the nerve firings, and muscles were underdeveloped.

Although doctors didn’t know what was wrong, they always had a plan on how to “fix” my legs. And very few of their ideas involved anything with in my control. I have had surgery to shorten a tendon, to remove a growth plate, and to realign my hip. For a period of time growing up, I slept with electrical stimulation pads on my legs, hoping to spark nerve firings. All of this I am sure beneficial, but nothing changed the way I walked. And throughout this time, I continued to defy this “medical mystery” by pushing the limits of what a doctor told me. “She’ll never walk,” they told my parents. Obviously, not true. “You won’t be strong enough to drive,” doctors told me as I neared my 16th birthday. But after completing all 50-practice hours of my driver’s education training, I got my license. At 16.  I swam competitively starting at 7 and into college, played water polo for a few years, and went to horseback riding camp every summer for 7 years.  I never let “unknown neuromuscular disorder” stop me.

Last year, I moved to Ann Arbor and started graduate school at the University of Michigan. With such a great hospital so close, and it being so long since I had seen a doctor, my parents and I decided to make an appointment with a top neurologist. Like many before him, the doctor had no quick answers. So, he ran a bunch of tests to see the actual speed at which the neurons in my legs fire. Then, “listened” to my muscles, using a needle at different points in my leg. The results were something I had never heard before. Everything was normal. There was nothing wrong with my nerves; they fired at exactly the right speed. And if he were to test my parents, because of my age, I would look better. He couldn’t explain why I walk differently, but he was sure that everything was working the right way. And again, like all doctors, he had an idea for how to make me stronger. But this time, I was in control. His prescription: Exercise. 

He explained that I was the only one that could make me stronger. And if I wanted to see improvements, I could make that happen. I didn’t need to be poked, prodded, or taken into surgery. There was nothing to shorten, lengthen, or remove. I already had everything.  And with that, I entered the world of Crossfit. And even though I am not yet doing sprints, jumping on boxes, or lunging across a room, I’m working on it. But, I can do a solid push up, have already gotten better at air squats, and am proud of my pull-ups.


So what’s my quote that gets me going?
    “Everything you need is already inside.”