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Last modified: Tuesday, July 3, 2007 12:58
PM PDT
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| FITNESS TRAINING. The Mary Meyer
Life Fitness program helps people with weight loss and gets
their bodies into shape, with clinics in various places,
including a "boot camp," above, in Magnolia. Photo by Amber
Trillo. |
Life Fitness program hailed
By Mia Steere
The Mary Meyer Life Fitness program has touched
many lives, two right here in West Seattle.
Sharon Best had a
history of struggling with her weight. In the past, she carried as
much as 192 pounds on her 5-foot, 4-inch frame. After trying
different diets, Best decided to try something different:
exercise.
After hiring local personal trainer Annette Herrick
in 2004, Best increased her activity level - but not her dieting.
Dissatisfied with her progress - she was tightening up, but losing
little weight - she was finally motivated to make a change from her
"very poor, McDonald's-laden diet" when she was diagnosed with
nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.
To combat the disease, Best
started on the "Fat Flush Plan," which she said "basically
encourages all the healthy foods and strongly discourages bad fats,
white potatoes or flour, sugar and alcohol." By combining this diet
with thrice-weekly workouts with Herrick, Best lost 60 pounds - and
resolved to push herself harder.
In 2006, after successfully
climbing Mount Rainier with the aid of John Colver, a "great guy who
is a mountain guide," Best decided she wanted to overcome a
life-long fear of water. She began to train for the Danskin race, a
women-only triathlon. This is where Best met Mary Meyer, founder of
Mary Meyer Life Fitness.
Since Best was not familiar with
water - "I really could not swim at all," she says - she began
attending the Mary Meyer Life Fitness drop-in classes for beginning
adult swimmers. "I went there every Sunday, like clockwork," Best
says.
In the beginning, Best simply worked on overcoming her
intense fear of the water. She had anxiety just from the smell of
chlorine and had trouble learning to breathe, because she couldn't
exhale under water.
"Ed Artis, the coach, was very good, very
accepting of people's fears," she said.
It took Best several
months to decide she needed more one-on-one training. She began
meeting Artis on Thursdays, individually. With his coaching, she
moved from barely being able to swim in a pool to being able to
complete, freestyle, a full half-mile in open water.
Best
also attended the Mary Meyer Life Fitness triathlon clinics and
open-water swim clinics. She feels that each one was "excellent,
especially the group swimming." Best appreciated the positive
attitudes of Mary and the other coaches, which was passed on to the
participants.
"Thanks to Mary and her coaches, I went from
feeling debilitating fear before even getting into the pool, to
finishing the Danskin half-mile in open water in about 21 minutes,"
says Best. "I still feel that conquering that fear is my greatest
triumph in many years."
Today, Best says she is "still trim,"
and will climb Mount Baker and go on a two-week sea kayaking trip
this year. She plans on swimming at the Colman Pool this summer when
not training for other things, and adds, "Every time I go, I'll be
thanking Mary Meyer and her crew."
A love of
triathlons
West Seattle resident Ericka Dunham knows how to
swim. She had been a competitive swimmer in high school, but didn't
keep up with it. Recognizing her need for motivation, her trainer -
who doesn't coach swimming or biking - suggested that she
participate in the Danskin triathlon, and directed Dunham to the
Mary Meyer Life Fitness program. This was in 2003.
Dunham
began attending the Mary Meyer Life Fitness open-water
clinics.
"I discovered that I loved doing (triathlons), so
the next season (2004), I was back."
That year, Dunham
attended the triathlon clinics and offered to be a "floater" coach
for the open-water clinics.
"I literally floated on a giant
paddleboard and helped out swimmers who tired or got a little
panicky," says Dunham. She also completed the Danskin for a second
time, as well as another sprint triathlon.
In 2005, Dunham
"upped the ante," and completed four triathlons: two sprints, an
Olympic and a half-Ironman. She continued to volunteer at the Mary
Meyer Life Fitness clinics, and began to assist with
coaching.
Dunham had not ridden a bike much since she was
younger and lacked confidence. With the help of Mary Meyer Life
Fitness coaching, she overcame this fear. Her knees were in "awful
shape," and Dunham was advised to quit running. Not wishing to give
up entirely, Dunham completed the 206-mile Seattle-to-Portland bike
ride in 2006 - in one day.
Although Dunham admits that she
has not kept all of the extra weight off, she says, "I still have
great confidence." She attributes this confidence to Mary Meyer Life
Fitness, the coaches and training she experienced through the
program.
"I am not petite, but I put on a swimsuit every
Sunday and get in the pool with a big group of people," says Dunham.
"(Mary Meyer's) confidence in me gives me confidence in
myself."
Mary Meyer started her program gradually, beginning
as a personal trainer in 1992 and adding a few clinics for triathlon
training. In 2000, the program "blew up," and she began receiving
attention from the Danskin coordinators, as well as other
triathlons. Currently, she has expanded to giving lectures at
REI.
Although she endeavors to get people in shape
physically, mental health is equally - if not more - of a priority
to Meyer.
"The head is so important for competing, at the
beginning of a workout, etc.," says Meyer. "You gotta believe you
have the athlete within you."
Mary Meyer Life Fitness offers
swim and personal training as well as triathlon coaching. Various
clinics are held at the Queen Anne, Mercer Island and Green Lake
pools as well as Madrona and Seward parks in the summer. A "boot
camp" workout is offered on Monday and Wednesday nights in Magnolia.
For a complete listing of the programs available, as well as times
and locations, visit the Mary Meyer Life Fitness Web site at
www.marymeyerlifefitness.com.
Mia Steere is a student in the
University of Washington Department of Communication News Laboratory
and may be reached via wseditor@robinsonnews.com |