How I Did It

Readers share their amazing personal health and wellness transformations. Read their stories to be inspired — and feel free to share your own!  

Recently in Recovery From Injury Category

Experience Life Magazine

Recovering From a Decades-old Injury

When I was 6, I fell off a tree and impaled myself on an iron fence shattering my pelvis. After a blood transfusion, several surgeries and last rites, I spent the remainder of first grade in the hospital recovering and learning to walk again. Despite a very successful recovery, as I grew and progressed into adolescence, my hip injury resurfaced.

In high-school, I curbed my running on the track team, opted for high jump and joined the swim team. Throughout my 20s I struggled with infection, chronic osteomyelitis and frequent pain. In my 30s, after a ski accident and needing to move progressively towards lower impact sports, I discovered spinning and yoga. I bought a bike and signed up for my first road race.

It has been joy ever since. My hip is healthy and my limp has improved with the strength garnered from both yoga and biking. I am stronger in my 40s than ever before. I spend my mornings at the gym (Life Time Fitness in Beachwood, Ohio, 6 a.m. classes) continuing to enjoy learning new ways to strengthen and push myself.

Experience Life Magazine

Don’t Guess Your Way to Being Fit

While today I have the physique of a fitness model and the mindset of a personal trainer, I didn’t exactly start out that way.

I was like any other young, naive college girl, looking to increase her fitness level so her outward physical appearance matched the unrealistic expectations of the fitness models I envied from the magazines.

And so I went. Head first into the gym, not knowing the difference between a rep, a set and a rest, and exercised like I had never exercised before!

At first, it was satisfying. I felt good after a workout; I got really sweaty, my heart rate was up, I was weight lifting and doing cardio. But my body weight always stayed the same, and I couldn’t see a whole lot of muscle definition in my upper body, let alone any in my legs. I had a flat stomach, but not the blocky look I’d seen in the fitness magazines.

Naturally, I took my lack of results as an indication that I wasn’t working out long enough, so I lengthened the time I spent at the gym. I would be there for 2, 2 1/2 hours. Daily. I never took a rest day. Back then, I thought taking a rest day would erase all the hard work you’d put into working out the day before.

Since increasing the length of my work out sessions, I started to have really strange things happen to me; I’d wake up in the morning to calf cramps from both of my legs, my lower back would be killing me even though I hadn’t worked it and I would find myself feeling overly fatigued regardless of the 12 hours of non-interrupted sleep the night before. I merely wrote these off as side effects of my intense work outs and continued my work outs as usual.

It happened one evening, after I spent an hour running on the treadmill for my typical cardio session. There was a bulge that appeared near my groin area. I had never seen this before, and it felt really tender. It frightened me so bad, I actually stopped going to the gym for a week. My rest period seemed to pay off, however, because the little bulge didn’t come back. I shrugged it off as some sort of temporary injury and went back to the gym as if nothing had happened. Sure enough, two days later, it was back. I tried skipping the gym again to get rid of it, but this time, it wasn’t going away.

I decided it was time to see my doctor about it. After all, I had no idea what this could be! After my visit, I was diagnosed with an inguinal hernia. What the heck is an inguinal hernia?? My doctor told me that an inguinal hernia is when the contents of a body cavity bulge out of the area where they are normally contained. Contrary to popular belief, hernias can occur in women. It happens to men a lot more, simply because of all the time men spend at the gym overexhausting their bodies. This is what had happened to me. It would take surgery to fix, and I couldn’t exercise for three weeks post-op. I needed to take care of my injury, so I decided to go through with the surgery.

During my recovery time I had a lot of time to think. I thought about what could have caused this injury, about how much I worked out, the minimal food I ate, water I didn’t drink, just about everything a person could analyze, I analyzed to death. I realized that what I was trying to accomplish required a lot more than what I was offering. I concluded that if I wanted to achieve what I was setting my mind to, I needed to learn more about what it took to get there. I decided to enlist the help of a teacher, or personal trainer.

I learned so much about the body and muscular development. How our bodies are similar to the way a car works; our bodies need fuel and to be refueled in order to sustain itself and recover from a workout. I learned that different sports require different workout regimens and nutritional intake. The more extreme your fitness goals, the more your workout and diet need to be adjusted to accommodate them.

I didn’t just learn how to have a healthy body; I learned how to have a healthy mind, an important, but often times, neglected muscle in our body.