In Pursuit of the Body Beautiful…

Hi Kids.

Something different today….

b1On our recent RYL weekend, one of our program participants was the very lovely Loretta Watson (see pictures). Loretta is one of Australia’s elite “Figure” competitors and I thought it might be interesting for her and I (and you) to have a casual chat about her habit. You know – the one where she stands on a stage in front of a big crowd, under bright lights wearing a postage stamp. Yep, that one. She does look kinda amazing though doesn’t she? I’m guessing there’s not a lot of baked cheesecake on the pre-contest menu which could be something of a psychological barrier for a potential Body Shaper like me. Stop it. Not that I wouldn’t look awesome on stage in a bikini and heels (shut up), but for the time being, I think will leave the idea as just that; an idea. Not one you want to think about too much.

Here’s our chat. That’s me in orange (no shit Sherlock).

1. So Loretta, tell us a little about body-shaping the sport (is it a sport?)  Yes, I believe it to be a sport – although others may argue otherwise – in that there is no equipment, no skill or tactics involved and the judging criteria is not black and white.  Body shaping is actually called Ms Figure in the competition (oops, my bad), so it is more commonly known as “figure”.  There are two divisions in female competition – “physique” where the girls are the more muscular (bigger) and “figure” which is me – which means having muscle and being as lean as the physique girls, without compromising the female shape – aiming for a “V-taper” shape, being wide shoulders, narrow waist, and strong, shapely bum and legs. In other words, a strong athletic female body. We are judged on symmetry (top to bottom, left to right), muscularity, condition (how lean we are) and on-stage presentation. Our posing style as well as the fact that we wear stripper shoes(!) on stage (er… is it hot in here?) also distinguishes us from the physique division. We are generally judged in height classes (short, medium, tall), and girls from 18 right up into their 60′s compete.

2. What do you enjoy about being a “Figure” competitor? Firstly, that I control the whole process. My results depend on what I put in my mouth, whether I decide to do cardio at midnight if necessary, how hard I train whether I’m hungry, injured, grumpy, tired, happy… or it’s rainy and cold. It’s easy to make excuses not to do it, but at the end of the day, I am on stage by myself and my results are purely from my efforts, good or bad (plus the photos stay on record forever… so there’s an incentive!).  Good point. When they are good, it is an amazing feeling. I also love the athletes I meet, train with and learn from. Their champion attitudes are positive and catching, and make me mentally stronger and more focused every day – which I can then apply to all areas of my life. I love challenging myself to always improve and the discipline involved. I love competition day and being on stage in the heat of the competition – it’s a very exciting feeling. But the best part is getting my hair, nails and make-up done, putting on a sparkly bikini, and being a princess for a day! A princess with a six-pack and some freaky legs.

b33. What’s the (potential) down side to your sport?  Depending on your personality type and emotional state, I could see (and have seen) how it could become an obsession and be quite unhealthy in terms of seeing yourself as only your body. Another consideration is that it is possible to disrupt normal bodily functions with severe dieting and dehydration, if it is not monitored carefully.

4. How long have you been training (seriously) with weights?  6 years, since 2003.

5. How often do you lift weights and for how long each session? 6 days per week, 45mins – 1 hour.  The type of training I do demands efficiency because the intensity is high.  If I did any longer, I would be over-training, and not maximising my gains.  I always train with a purpose and know exactly what I will be doing that day, so that I don’t waste time or energy.  A training diary is a must!

6. What kind of cardio stuff do you do and how often?  Off season (that is, anything outside roughly 20 weeks from competition) I rely on the intensity of my weight training to boost my metabolism as well as my eating (lots of green veggies) to keep me lean, and I do not structure any cardio into my training (but I sneak in 1-2 boxing sessions a week). This is because cardio utilises the calories and recovery time that I need to grow (more muscle). Depending on how far over my contest weight I am, I will generally start cardio (20 minute treadmill walk 3-4 times per week) about 16 weeks from competition and gradually increase this over the next 16 weeks to roughly 30 mins twice per day. 

7. How long until your next comp? 13 weeks.

8. Can you tell us exactly what you will eat today (Wednesday, June 24, 2009)? Yes, but it will take a while… 5:00am Protein shake + supplements; 5:30am ½ cup rolled oats in water + ½ banana; 6:00am Pre workout protein shake + supplements; 7:15am Post workout protein shake + supplements; 7:45am 100gms chicken, 100gms brown rice; 8:15am Meal replacement shake + 50gm sweet potato; 9:45am 100gms chicken, 100gms brown rice; 12:15pm 150gms chicken, 50gms brown rice, 200gms green beans + supplements; 2:45pm same as 12:15pm; 5:15pm same as 12:15pm;  8:00pm 150gms steak, 200gms green beans or broccoli; 9:30pm Weight gainer protein + supplements… Bed. Okay it official; I don’t wanna be a Figure girl. Er, boy.

b49. How do you keep sane, balanced and emotionally healthy being in a sport where you’re judged on your physical appearance? How do you know I am all of that???! Good point. Weirdo.  I was worried about that at the beginning when I was deciding whether or not to compete.  I didn’t know if I could deal with people criticising me and my body. It can be seen as a very personal attack if you’re not emotionally strong enough.  I was very lucky to have a great team of people helping me at first, who really knew what they were doing and kept me grounded.  From there I developed a healthy attitude toward the whole process and now I just concentrate on getting the job done. If I’ve made the improvements I want to, then win or lose, I know I’ve done what I set out to do.  I also stay away from people who may have a more obsessive outlook.  I try to maintain a variety of interests.  And I apply the lessons learned from my training to other areas of my life so it balances out – to grow both physically and mentally requires pain, but if you are consistent, focused and positive, it will happen.

10. Do some people lose the plot and step from healthy to unhealthy (physically and emotionally)?  I’ve seen people faint on stage, lose normal bodily functions (especially females), destroy their metabolisms so that even looking at a carbohydrate puts on 5kg, dehydration, emotional ups and downs, relationship break ups, self-obsession and a whole bunch more, but I guess that anything in the extreme can be unhealthy. That’s why I approach the whole process as intelligently and methodically as possible; it keeps me grounded. I think many athletes are predisposed to be a little obsessive as times but my sport is not my life; it’s a one part. A fun part, but a part nonetheless. Wise words Grasshopper.

11. You’ve seen my arse and legs (at RYL), would I make a good body-shaper?  Haven’t seen you in a bikini and stilettos yet, so am going to reserve judgment – great guns though. I bet you say that to all the middle-aged meatheads you know.

12. Okay, give your sponsors a plug. My wonderful sponsor is Johnny (you have a Johnny too?) at AST Sports Science.  He provides me with all my supplements including protein, creatine, glutamine, thermogenics, fats, weight gainer (weight gainer?) and lots of competition support.  It’s a superior product, I used it long before I was sponsored, and has got me my results to date. Well, it must do something ’cause you look awesome.

Thanks for taking the time Loretta and enjoy your up-coming comp. Thankyou, I will. Want some cheesecake? Idiot. That hurts.

If you have a comment…. or perhaps a question for Loretta, you know what to do. Enjoy your Thursday. 

:) x

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{ 18 comments… read them below or add one }

Tina June 25, 2009 at 2:02 am

Hey Craig… and Loretta !!
Well, I guess there’s no way I’ll ever be up there on that stage, since I don’t wear makeup, stilettos or even a bikini… and most notably… I don’t eat chicken… or steak. Reckon I could do it just on the green veggies ?!!! Oh well, my grandkids probably wouldn’t approve anyway !!
{{HUGS}}
Tina

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Sue Heintze June 25, 2009 at 5:36 am

Loretta looks great, congratulations and my goodness that’s a lot of eating! Being a figure competitor myself, there is something however that I don’t really agree with! Loretta says:

Yes, I believe it to be a sport – although others may argue otherwise – in that there is no equipment, no skill or tactics involved and the judging criteria is not black and white.

In my opinion, there is great skill involved! Certainly in presenting yourself in the best light – posing to show your best features and hide your flaws is an absolute art and not many perfect it, and as a spectator (not to mention a judge) it is easy to see who can pose and who can’t. It can be the difference between winning/placing and not. Someone can have a great physique but can’t pose and it is a really unprofessional look.

But I wholeheartedly agree with the judging not being black and white, which is why you can’t take the end result too seriously. It’s best to be in competition with yourself – aim to present a better package on stage than the previous show. That way you can’t be disappointed!

Have a great comp prep Loretta!

Sue

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Suza June 25, 2009 at 8:36 am

Hey, buddy! … and Craig, of course. Thanks for this – was most interesting to find out a bit more about your sport .. and those pics are sensational! Love to spend more time talking with you at RYL II .. and since you’ll be in the midst of competing at that stage, I’m sure that in Advanced Towel Training you’ll not only cause me pain, but probably kill me! (Craig, make sure Jules is nearby for that one.)

But seriously, you’re a major inspiration to this wanna-be athlete and all the very best for your upcoming comp and your preparation. (( ))

Suz (Sydney)

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Natalie June 25, 2009 at 8:42 am

Wow I really admire your commitment and dedication Loretta. Congratulations on finding a sport you enjoy and obviously excell at.

A dietry intake like yours seems totally crazy to me. You’ve got fantastic results on the outside but I wonder if the external appearance of strength and health indicates how healthy you are on the inside. I’d love to hear what a nutritionalist would say about this type of nutritional intake.

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Nicole June 25, 2009 at 8:56 am

Wow. Thats full on. What a tremendous amount of discipline required. I admire these girls a great deal. I’m a regular reader of some blogs for some girls who compete and I find their attitude, persistence and commitment very inspiring. Knowing what they do in a single day to keep their bodies lean makes my training and nutrition program a walk in the park !!!

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Jules S June 25, 2009 at 9:00 am

“My results depend on what I put in my mouth, whether I decide to do cardio at midnight if necessary, how hard I train whether I’m hungry, injured, grumpy, tired, happy… or it’s rainy and cold.”

I like that. Nothing wrong with cardio at midnight, hey? There should be more 24 hr gyms for all the paramedics (and other shift workers) of this world.

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Craig June 25, 2009 at 9:24 am

You and me both Tina :)

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Craig June 25, 2009 at 9:26 am

Hi Sue – I agree, I think Loretta sold herself short – there’s a bunch of skill required to present yourself on stage… and she does a great job… :)

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Jules S June 25, 2009 at 9:26 am

Suz – the likes of Loretta (and you) inspire me too. But I realised just then that we really need to be our own primary source of inspiration if we want to create AMAZING in our world. One thing that inspires me to be an age-group triathlete is the whole competing-against-myself thing. You can be amongst a field of 1000+ others, yet at the end of the day, it’s all about YOU and no one else (unless you’re a pro and aiming on a win or a place). No one can ride the last 80km for you on the bike, nor run the last 20km of the marathon for you. You have to do both of those and have not only the physical strength but also the mental strength… and its the preparation in the preceeding months (not days!) that will either help you or hinder you on ‘race day.’ One of my favourite Craig Harper articles was called something like ‘Train hard Play hard.’

I recently thought of that ‘table’ analogy that Craig talks about in relation to our beliefs about who we are, what we are capable of etc. It might take a lot of hard work to knock down some of the legs of the table (my table must has a million legs! Aww stop that talk) but when we do, it’s the best feeling. I’m getting there with some of them.

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Craig June 25, 2009 at 9:36 am

Hi Natalie – I agree that by some standards it’s a completely weird-arse diet… however, if we were to compare Lorettas food intake – in terms of overall nutritional value, sugar content, saturated fats, cholesterol, the processing factor, fibre, salt, preservatives, additives and food coloring – to the typical Australian diet… I think she might come out somewhere near the healthier end of the scale… :)

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Kathryn June 25, 2009 at 10:49 am

Thanks so much Craig & Loretta.

Don’t we love learning about the interesting lives of others? They inspire and amaze us. Yours is of no exception. It took me back to the time it took to prepare for the Murray River Marathon. Preparation is so important for personal success. I wish you all the best in your preparation Loretta and for the competition.

It was lovely to meet you at RYL Loretta – and Craig the guitar music for “Blackbird” is on its way.

A fabulous post!

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Kate June 25, 2009 at 3:00 pm

Far out Loretta is amazing. The discipline to achieve those results is almost unhuman..but god its great to see people do it.

I am by no means a figure competitor something I have honestly fantasiseed about and think many women do however like anything the strength, work and sheer determination is well I am breathless … you are beautiful Loretta.

I also thank you for your honesty in sharing your diet as many are not this honest! And it was very interesting about no cardio .. Obviously this produces great physcial results .. but I would go crazy without the mental stimulas from cardio but then again I DONT have the results you do…WOW… your amazing!

Go smash them!

Kate

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Kate June 25, 2009 at 3:08 pm

Hi Moderator can you plesae remove my last comment and add this one in stead?

Oh Okay i have a couple of selfish questions…

Do you train people? what state are you in? Is it possible to still get amazing results if you need to eat one choc a day?;)

PS – I dont think Loretta’s diet is strange at all it is what I aspire to be able to live.. from experience test on me showed

When I was a vegan – internal tests showed body eating calcium from bones, Vegetarian, results showed low protein, iron, and b vitamins (and yes I ate lentils)

Since weight training, less cardio and more protein from Chicken, egg whites and glutein free last test results showed a body of a 21 year old, flexibilty – excellent, bone denisty excellent, balance of vitamins great the only thing was I needed 2 kilos off… Although everyone is different.

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Loretta June 25, 2009 at 3:28 pm

Hey everyone, it’s Loretta (yes the one who likes to dance around on stage in a postage stamp… :-) )

Just wanted to say thanks so much for all of your kind words and support.

But, seriously, I draw much inspiration from all of you as well, reading your honest comments and sharing your personal journeys… being in shape is pretty cool, but getting the head stuff sorted out is even better…everyone on this blog blows me away, not to mention the big man himself, Craig. Thanks for having me on Craig… put that cheesecake on ice for me until October ;-)

Suz, advanced towel training 101 – you’re on! Jules…triathlon.. well if that’s not awesome I don’t know what is… :-) RYL 2 is going to be amazing… can’t wait..!

Hi Kate, yes I am a personal trainer, not just for competitors, but for everybody..I am in Vic. (email physiquebd@optusnet.com.au). If you live interstate Kate, we can do stuff over the phone or by email. And yes, 1 chocolate a day is ok.. but the question is… can you stop at 1???! ;-)

Thanks again everyone… stay focused and keep attacking…!

Loretta x

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Tania June 25, 2009 at 3:52 pm

What an amazing regime. Loretta deserves congratulations for her commitment and great results.

As one of the others commented it makes our ‘everyday’ diet/exercise plans seem very very easy and I wonder why we all say we don’t have time :)

Also, as a completely straight heterosexual woman can I say what a fantastic butt she has? :P

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kathtoms June 25, 2009 at 8:33 pm

Good call Tania, most (boh sexes) would kill for an ars#e and legs like that… I would;)

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Jane June 26, 2009 at 7:52 am

Hi Loretta… and Craig…
oh my goodness… from a room buddies perspective I had NO IDEA… you are so taught and terrific..
you just looked like a ‘regular’ in shape beautiful woman! I mean that as a compliment ;)
you haven’t lost your beautiful shape and womanliness in the sport you have chosen… you certainly have the symmetry
amazing what you can do, have done with your body!
I know you will compete being the best you can…. I think you have already won… just getting out there!!

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Stacy May July 2, 2009 at 8:23 am

Loretta you look smokin’ hot. I tell everyone here that your my personal trainner and everyone is so jealous, and then i tell them that when i get enough money im gonna fly you over here forever. and if they wanna look like us they cant eat any cherrios (or whatever you aussies call them) hot or cold haha :) Good Luck for the comps xoxo

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