Fighting to be fit
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Danette Goulet
Before 10-year-old Brittany Miller leaves elementary school, she will
have spent a year on a weight loss program.
The fifth-grader from Newport Beach has already shed an amazing 27
pounds from her still growing 4-foot, 10-inch frame.
In September, Brittany began a workout regimen and nutrition program
at Tuf Productions gym in Newport Beach, she said, because her mother was
worried about her weight.
For the first few years of her life Brittany looked like a twin to her
12-year-old sister Stephanie, who is still a “string bean,” said Liz
Harris, Brittany’s mother.
But at age 3, Brittany began gaining weight for no apparent reason.
She was gaining first five, then, 10, then 15 pounds a year.
“I started getting really concerned about health issues,” Harris said.
“She was 10 years old and 131 pounds. We were dealing with onset of
diabetes and heart problems.”
Harris took her daughter to specialists at the UCI medical center,
where doctors told her that if they did not actively attack Brittany’s
weight, she would have medical problems.
“Brittany was considered obese,” Harris said. “It’s hard to believe
looking at her now.”
GETTING TUF
Having heard about the teen program at her gym, Harris decided to try
sending Brittany there instead of putting her on medication.
And so a regime began for Brittany that includes a healthy diet,
working out with gym owner Jill Balkam a couple times a week, doing her
video at home one to two times a week and keeping a journal of the
process.
“I have her keep a journal because [weight loss] is an emotional thing
as well as a physical thing,” Balkam said.
After seven months, the young girl has lost weight.
“I’m happy about it because all my family members are proud of me for
doing it,” Brittany said. “I feel better. I feel skinnier.”
Fitness is not simply about being thin, the gym instructor said. It is
important for young girls to learn about how their bodies work and good
nutrition.
TEEN FITNESS
When Balkam was faced with the pressure to be as skinny as a super
model in school, she tried the crazy diets and starvation methods that
are so devastatingly harmful to so many girls.
“There’s a lot of information I wish I knew when I was a teen,” she
said. “Just information I wanted to give to them to help them always have
healthy habits.”
That is why she created the Teen Fitness program, which this spring
had a Boot Camp theme that has young Brittany and a gaggle of other young
girls running stairs and doing crunches.
After the group works out, they sit and talk.
It is the talks and the camaraderie they feel with Balkam and each
other that the girls said they like best.
“Jill is awesome -- she is so nice,” said Jessica Slater, 14, a boot
camp grunt from Newport Beach. “It’s so much fun to work out with friends
and just talking about stuff -- anything.”
HEALTHY TALKS
During these post-workout stretching session discussions, Balkam talks
to the girls about nutrition and healthy habits -- what is good for the
body and what is not.
She gives them “homework assignments” in between sessions, such as eat
breakfast everyday or drink at least five glasses of water a day.
They’ve learned about good fats versus fried food and why eating no
fat would actually make them gain weight.
“I think it’s neat because she leaves us with a lesson or a homework
assignment of something to do -- drink water, eat breakfast,” said Mary
Ellen Snelgrove, 14.
Balkam was hoping to create the close knit feel that she attained with
the group, with the idea that by being more of a big sister to the girls
then just another teacher, they would be more comfortable talking to her.
She is also willing to mold the program around what interests a group,
because the goal is to make taking care of their bodies fun.
“The teens we have, they want to do the same things as their moms --
kick boxing and yoga,” she said. “So this is getting them ready for good
habits going into their adult years.”
It is also about creating a healthy self-esteem -- clearly a
metamorphosis Brittany has undergone.
In journal entry she wrote demonstrates that.
“After I started working out with Jill I felt like I was somebody, not
just fat,” she wrote. “When I lost a couple of pounds my mom started to
cry. So did I. Finally my brother and sister stopped calling me names.”
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