Fitness trainer in trainingIn February 2010,
Cherie Hart Steffen weighed 230 pounds and had a BMI of 40. Her size-20
clothing was starting to get tight when she realized she needed to make a
change.
Three years later, Steffen has lost 85 pounds and is a certified personal trainer with the National Academy of Sports Medicine. LaVerne Hart was a model and didn't seem to know how to deal with her youngest daughter's weight, Steffen says. Shortly before Hart died in June 2009, she made Steffen promise to lose the extra pounds. These photos, taken on Steffen's birthday in 2010, 2011 and 2012, show her dramatic weight loss.
Three years later, Steffen has lost 85 pounds and is a certified personal trainer with the National Academy of Sports Medicine. LaVerne Hart was a model and didn't seem to know how to deal with her youngest daughter's weight, Steffen says. Shortly before Hart died in June 2009, she made Steffen promise to lose the extra pounds. These photos, taken on Steffen's birthday in 2010, 2011 and 2012, show her dramatic weight loss.
Steffen ran her
first 5K race in May 2012. She lost most of the 85 pounds by jogging on
the treadmill. "In 2012 all I remember doing was running ... running,
running, running," she says with a laugh.
Steffen and her
husband, Mark, have been married for nearly six years. "He loves it,"
Steffen says of her transformation. "Every day he's like, 'Wow.'"
For now, Steffen is
a leasing consultant at an apartment community, but she hopes to
eventually pick up enough clients to work full time as a personal
trainer.
Cherie Hart Steffen turned toward her professor in the hall of their community college.
"What?" she asked, sure she had misheard.
"Precious -- you know, from the movie," he repeated.
The students around them started laughing. Steffen could only stare in disbelief. He had just compared her to Gabourey Sidibe's obese character in the 2009 film.
"It was like ... someone hit me with a frying pan on my head," she remembers.
Her mind flashed back to
just six months before, when she had gotten a life-changing call. It was
June 2009. Her mother -- her best friend in the world -- was dying.
Steffen drove all night in hopes of seeing her one last time.
LaVerne Hart managed to
give her youngest daughter just two pieces of advice before succumbing
to the cancer that had spread throughout her body.
"Save money. Lose weight," Steffen recites, her mother's words forever etched into her brain.
Steffen hadn't listened
immediately. A herniated disk in her lower back had prevented her from
working out; grief had made her turn to comfort food. In the months
since her mother's death she had gained 30 to 40 pounds. But that moment
with her professor was the last straw.
"This is it," she thought, as the crowd around her dissipated. "Let's do this."
A model's daughter
Steffen's older sisters
were naturally thin. They took after their mother, who had been a model.
Steffen did not. She grew up "husky" and steadily gained weight
throughout her teenage years.
She and her mother
fought constantly over her size. Hart would push her daughter to lose
weight, but continued to buy junk food for the whole family.
"Bless her heart, she
didn't know how to really deal with it," Steffen remembers. "I'm eating
what everyone else is eating. ... None of her other children looked like
me."
In desperation, Steffen
tried everything from crash diets to extreme exercise to battle the
bulge. At one point, she was eating fewer than 500 calories a day. She
would lose weight for a short time and then put it right back on when
real life won out.
Shopping was miserable.
"They don't really make large clothing that's attractive," she says.
"Everything just looks like a tarp." She longingly watched as her
friends tried on cute clothes and went on dates. Her first kiss was
postponed until college.
Eventually she carried 230 pounds on her 5-foot-3-inch frame.
Slow and steady
The humiliating
"Precious" incident took place in January 2010. That night, Steffen got
on her treadmill at home and walked for 10 minutes. It was rough, but
she promised herself she'd do it again the next day. She was going to
take the weight off no matter how long it took.
Every day she walked
just a little bit longer, a little bit farther. By year's end, she had
lost 30 pounds and worked her way up to a jog. She still hadn't
exercised outside her house, fearing embarrassment.
She would be graduating
soon with a degree in criminal justice, and thought she might make a
good police officer. She started training for the fitness test, but a
stress fracture in her tibia prevented her from attending tryouts at the
academy.
Depression crept in.
Steffen thought about what she really wanted to do. She realized she was
happy with her new health routine. Could she work in the fitness
industry? She did some research and came across the National Academy of
Sports Medicine's certified personal training program.
What to look for in a personal trainer:
1) Evaluate their education. Research their certification and make sure it's from a reputable source like NASM.
2) Make sure their advanced specialization, like nutrition or bodybuilding, fits your goal.
3) Interact with them -- a personality match will help with motivation.
1) Evaluate their education. Research their certification and make sure it's from a reputable source like NASM.
2) Make sure their advanced specialization, like nutrition or bodybuilding, fits your goal.
3) Interact with them -- a personality match will help with motivation.
Personal training is a booming job field, says academy spokesman David Van Daff.
"Everyone is aware
there's an (obesity) crisis, an epidemic," he says. "People are trying a
variety of different methods to improve their fitness levels, but
they're not achieving success independently. They're recognizing they
need a coach, a motivator, who will hold them accountable."
Personal trainers
provide clients with programs to achieve their goals, Van Daff says,
whether that's weight loss, muscle building or overall fitness. The
National Academy of Sports Medicine certification teaches everything
from basic anatomy to kinesiology to motivational techniques.
Van Daff loves to see people who have lost a significant amount of weight become trainers.
"It's helpful for
somebody in this industry if they can relate to their clients from a
personal perspective," he says. "If you have a personal trainer who
knows what it's like to be 20 or 30 pounds overweight ... it helps in
gaining (the client's) confidence."
Steffen passed her
certification exam on her way to losing another 30 to 40 pounds. She
designated 2012 as the year of running: She ran her first 5K in May and
her first half marathon later that year. Toward the end of the year, she
finally joined a gym and began to lift weights.
"(I thought) I look good in my clothes, but do I look good naked?" she says with a laugh.
Now she hits the gym five to six days a week to weight train and run. She also has cleaned up her eating habits.
Steffen eats six small
meals a day that almost always include protein, whether it's chicken,
tuna, Greek yogurt or fish. She has a gallon of water on her desk at
work. ("I'm constantly going to the bathroom," she says.) She's given up
French fries and French bread, possibly her two biggest diet downfalls,
although she gives herself permission to splurge during one meal a
week.
All her hard work has paid off. Steffen has lost 85 pounds and inspires others on her blog,
Moving on
About a year ago,
Steffen ran into her old college professor, the one who had called her
"Precious." She hadn't seen him since her graduation.
Like a scene from a
movie, Steffen dropped an orange and it rolled across the floor. Her
professor picked it up as a million sentences ran through her head.
"I had dreamed of this moment," she says. "I thought I was going to walk into his office and be like, 'Look at me now.'"
Instead she simply said, "Thank you."
"If he hadn't said that, none of this would have happened," she explains. "He still has no clue."
For now, Steffen is
working as a leasing consultant at an apartment complex. But she's
studying to be a fitness nutrition specialist with the National Academy
of Sports Medicine and hopes to eventually get enough clients to be a
personal trainer full time.
She also has her eye on a
few bikini competitions, perhaps as a nod to her mother's modeling
career. She imagines Hart would flip out if she saw her daughter now,
and would immediately want to go shopping.
"She would love that I
listened to her and took her advice," Steffen says. "She would be really
proud of me because I did it the right way.
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