A Centenarian Who Broke World Records

Tom Lane

Tom Lane broke records as one of the nation’s oldest Masters swimmers. He exercised every single day, shot golf regularly, but his favorite physical activity, and the one which won him gold medals in Masters divisions, was swimming. a former patent lawyer, Tom Lane set Masters records in the backstroke, breaststroke, and freestyle in three age groups. He went on record stating that his life’s philosophy was, ‘If you can’t beat ’em, outlive ’em.’”

Tom Lane proved to younger people that old age was never an excuse to become lazy and sedentary. He went on record saying that for many people, retirement is when an active life can begin. He didn’t even allow blindness to stop him. When glaucoma robbed him of his sight at the age of 92, he began to have problems with turning at the end of laps in the pool, and would bump his head on the edge of the pool. Instead of quitting, he attached a sponge to his forehead to cushion the blow when he reached the edge..

Tom Lane died at the age of 103 from complications of pneumonia in his home in San Diego in August of 1997, but not before leaving an inspiring legacy and breaking world records in Masters swimming.

Bravo!

IFBB Bikini Ranks

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In my last seven posts, I provided lists of all the ladies who earned IFBB Professional Status by competing onstage in the Bikini Division in NPC events and at the IFBB North American. Here are the totals for each year:

2009: 36
2010: 34
2011: 35
2012: 54
2013: 72
2014: 79
2015: 72 *NOTE: There will be 12 more ladies joining this group in late November after NPC Nationals takes place.
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That’s a total of 382 IFBB Bikini Pros who won their status on a bodybuilding stage in the seven years since the Bikini Division was established. However, there are plenty of IFBB Bikini Pros who got their Pro Cards in another division, then crossed over after they went pro. Sonia Gonzalez, who holds the esteemed title of the first Miss Bikini Olympia, won her Pro Card as a figure competitor, and even competed on the Olympia stage in 2009 as a Figure Pro. The following year, she returned to the Olympia stage and made history. Natalia Melo is another very prominent Bikini Pro who attained her Pro Status by a different means. Let’s also not forget the international IFBB Bikini Pros who have competed in Pro events.

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The IFBB Bikini Pro Ranks have grown dramatically as a result of the increase in the number of Pro Cards offered at national events. There are now twice as many cards handed out as there were in the early days of this division. However, the sheer number of competitors who funnel through national amateur events each year continues to make the designation of IFBB Bikini Pro a highly desirable and honorable title to have.

It truly is an honor to be part of this incredible group of top bodybuilding athletes!

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2015

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition.

So far, 72 Ladies have won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division this year:

Jayde Taylor
Ashley Evertz
Maranda Davis
Karene Gonzalez
Tayler Jordan
Kerryne Brown
Chanan Siglock
Cassandra Marshall
Katrina Freds
Marites Miller
Dianet Pereda
Tiffany Heugly
Osiris Prieto
Liz Benda
Maybelline Cordero-Higa
Geri Berger
Raquel Long-Merlini
Stella Roberts
Pamela John
Marjorie Proffitt
Jancie Murphy
Dana Tracy
Sharon Bondurant
LUCY HUANG
CARLY SHERRY KUBANYI
ROBYN MAHER
JULIANA HALLORAN
TRINA SIMONE
JAZZMEN CANALES
ADRIENNE OCHOA DODOBARA
CAROLINE COSTA
JULIE LIPORACE
BETH QUICK
PAULINA TRAN
RACHEAL TUCK
CORI BAKER
ASHLEY GAINES
LORIE FORMAN
HEIDI CARLSEN
THAIS SERRANO
ANH SOUZA
LORIE FORMAN
JESSICA SCHIEFER
LAUREN IRICK
SARAH STORRS
LEXA MENDENHALL
JESSICA WILSON
AMBER CALLAHAN
ASHLEY KIYONAGA
SAMANTHA GRIMES
HEATHER QUINN
TAYLOR RHODENBAUGH
ELIZABETH MARTINEZ
ASHLEY PUIDA
TIFANNY URREA
KATHERINE ALCANTARA
YORKANIS FRANCIS
SHINDA OBEY
VENESSA SANTANA
ASHLEY WIENS
LORI ALEX
ELISANGELA ANGELL
ELISA TAVARA
AMARYLIS DELGADO
DEBORAH WRIGHT
ANA ACEVEDO
BARBARA LUDWIG
CORY OTT
NANCY MCKOUREN
IDIANETTE ORTIZ
ANGELICA QUINN
PAIGE HABERMEHL

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2014

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition.

79 Ladies won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division in 2014:

Lauren Hoskins
Queenie Benito
Whitney Wiser
Brittany Taylor
Angelika Perez
Ashlee Adams
Meghan Duncan
Kenea Yancey
Tanya Rachan
Brynn Gonzales
Andreanna Calhoun
Brianna Krause
Lea Beaumont
Angela Okon
Laurin Conlin
Chassidy Smothers
Jaclyn Strell
Jennifer Ronzitti
Kristina Olson
Cristina Ortiz
Kate Abate
Melissa Brizic
Ruby Perey
Cristy Zevely
Jennifer Friedrichs
Rosie Gavilanes
Barbie Delgado
Jennifer Peoples
Kelly Jean Bornstein
Emma Fernandez
Ha Nguyen
Nicole Ankney
Kim Estess
Kristen Moffett
Enjoli Enriquez
Ashlee Rhodes
Christie Cash
Breena Martinez
Michele Messina
Jamie Del Angel
Candice Perfect
Ruth Jean
Jamie Adams
Jessica Lynn
Jessica Gutierrez
Candice Chamberland
Jessica Lyda
Michelle Silva
Jessica Pimentel
Yvette Garcia
Joana Tesareski
Sarah Brown
Joni Ortiz
Catherine Radulic
Jeri Rease
Harriet Davis
Colleen Garman
Lovey Paiva
Michelle Ackerman
Jazmeen Hernandez
Ivory Crofoot
Alexandra Roane
Mariana Fernandes
Taylor Anderson
Cat Textoris
Susan Waters
Annie Parker
Angel Denman
Theresa Orsini
Nina Cash
Karen Brunette
Magdalena Coffman
Nana Kim
Andrea Beam
Sheiryll Ray
Bethany Transue
Nicole Markovic
Casey Samsel
Shandy Ortiz

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2013

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition. I couldn’t help but highlight my name on this particular list, since I am thrilled beyond measure that I am on it!

72 Ladies won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division in 2013:

Katherine Williams
Jennifer Stevens
Lindsey Waters
Yarishna Ayala Otero
Nissan Weaver
Yasmine Ali
Hope Howard
Chaundra Bagwell
Liana Hamilton
Sana Shah
Caroline Silva
Kamilah Powell
Ashriel Osgood
Michelle Johnson
Lindsay Oxford
Maria Chase
Stacey Naito
Amira Lamb
Callie Bundy
Asia Mendoza
Michelle Minks
Jessica Chuckran
Denita Clark
Stephanie Mahoe
Angeles Burke
Cara Ovis
Karey Grabow
Ashley Pfaff
Tamara Haddad
Jenee Leger
Camile Periat
Deborah Goodman
Rania Dibacco
Marissa Rivero
Hunnika Villa
Kelly Lopez
Lindsey Wells
Sherry Cleckler
Mary Dent
Monica Long
Tonya Boardman
Lezley Lockhart
Mylien Nguyen
Rosemary Valenzuela
Joanne Holden
Michelle Capraru
Antanique Landry
Lisa Schimkat
Lisa Asuncion
Amy Updike
Caryn Paolini
Jade Carroll
Janet Layug
Alexa Hotaling
Marcela Cabral
Samantha Karr
Anne Marie Caravalho
Lisette Howard
Crystal Nelson
Ajia Maximillian
Shernika Speights
Jessica James
Michelle Mein
Terri Krevits
Lisa Perry
Jessica Landry
Lisa Kelly
Kat Ciresi
Cheryl Band
Ronda Porter
Jennifer Burger
Barbara Gonzalez

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2012

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition.

54 Ladies won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division in 2012:

Ruth Harrsion
Janelle Saitone-McGuire
Jennifer Elliot
Vida Guera
Lacey Deluca Lieto
Pollianna Moss
Adriana Hill
Brittney Young
Heather Gonyea
Deborah Lee
Michon Leddy
Lynn Sambuco
Kerri Hayes
Kalyn Link
Amy Allen
Aly Garcia
Francesca Yumul
Angela Skeels
Ashley Wade
Crystal Green
Desiree Niemann
Candice Conroy
Joy Grajo
Francine Slobodnik
Jennifer Hohnbaum
Betheny Jordan
Sandi Forsythe
Kelsie Burgin
Courtney King
Ashley Cronley
Nicole Witbeck
Sarah LeBlanc
Marisol Lara
Michelle Ray
Cassandra Dubois
Noy Alexander
Adrienne Crenshaw
Joyce Dabuet
Maureen Dougherty
Monique Gantt
Bianca Berry
Ashley Kaltwasser
Amanda Otero
Alexis Burke
Melissa Sayles
Aniedra Lynn
Sarah Oldakowski
Jessica Renee
Diana Harbort
Sabrina Nicole
Maria Annunziata
Gigi Amurao
Rachelle DeJean
Iveth Carreon
Danielle Carr

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2011

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition.

35 Ladies won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division in 2011:

Lexi Kaufman
Crystal Rose Matthews
Kristie Trasey-Winter
Yeshaira Robles
Sara Moylan
Roya Tehrani
Jennifer Rankin
Casey Trailer
Tawna Eubanks
Taylor Bentson
Skye Taylor
Katie Chung Hua
Michelle Hutton
Lisa Lutz
Heather Nappi
Marisa Lee
Jennifer Chapman
Jessica Arevalo
Candy Agundez
Cecile Palacios
Summer White
Stacey Alexander
Kim DeArcangelis
India Paulino
Diana Graham
Tiffany Boydston
Cristina Liberatore
Amanda Duncan
Candyce Graham
Darcy Coles
Maysa Quy
Brittany Tacy
Brooke Hameier
Narmin Assria
Talia Terese

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2010

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition.

34 Ladies won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division in 2010:

Christy Merritt
Vanessa Prebyl
Brooke Mora
Brandy Leaver
Cathy Miller
Rachel Labender
Theresa Byrne
Alison Rosen
Jessica Jessie
Diana Fields
Michelle Lamb
Beth White
Abigail Burrows
Laura Calderon
Jennifer Andrews
Barbara Bolotte
Jennifer Pimentel
Veronica Byrd
Patricia Valenti
Kelly Gonzalez
Natalie Abrhiem
Nicole Nagrani
Kristal Martin
Jenny Drennan
Chady Dunmore
Juliette Primak
Nicole Moneer
Juliana Daniell
Bianca Binno
Vanessa Campbell
Lindsey Morrison
Zara Pineda-Boorder
Samantha Morris
Angela Leong

IFBB Bikini Pros List 2009

I found myself pondering the numbers of IFBB Bikini Pros since the inception of the division, and decided to tally up the competitors who won IFBB Pro Status in the Bikini division. The lists which I have compiled do NOT include competitors who went pro in another division and crossed over, nor does it factor in the competitors who were awarded IFBB Pro Status through petition.

36 Ladies won their IFBB Pro Cards at NPC/IFBB events in the Bikini Division in 2009:

Kristal Marshall
Amanda Latona
Monique Minton
Marzia Prince
Shelsea Montes
Sonya Vecchiarelli
Stacey Oster-Thompson
Michelle Gullett
Missy Coles
Amanda Procida
Jennifer Celeste
Janet Harding
Jessica Anderson
Leigh Lingham
Shay Monroe
Kat Holmes
Dianna Dahlgren
Tianna Ta
Jamie Baird
Alea Suarez
Michele D’Angona
Dayna Maleton
Jessica Lawrence
Natalie Pennington
Kira Rivera
Khanh Nguyen
Janet Harding
Erica Reder
Melinda Jamiszewski
Trina Goosby
Angela Harrell
Jennifer Dietrick
Julie Costa
Chrisie Marquez
Stefanie Lindsey
Tabitha Klausen

Hindsight is 20/20: Weight Training Then Versus Now

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This article details the five most important things I have learned about training since I began weight lifting over 25 years ago. When I think back on how little I truly knew about the methods and motivation behind working out, I realize that I have come a very, very long way. It was no accident that I obtained an undergraduate degree in exercise science and a medical degree, because I have spent my adult life strongly driven to learn as much about the human body and its potential as I possibly could. However, there is so much warrior spirit and heart that goes into weight lifting, and it can never be taught, only experienced.

Lifting Lady Weights versus A Lady Lifting WEIGHTS

I began lifting weights when I was 21 years old, shortly after embarking on a mission to heal from a year-long struggle with anorexia which brought me down to 85 pounds and also sunk my spirits to rock bottom. At that time my main objective was to learn how to lift properly, which fortunately was supported by my undergraduate studies and eventual Bachelor’s degree. I was rail thin and weak, so it took some time before I made real gains in the weight room. I held the same misconception back then that many women have now, in which I had a fear of lifting heavy and getting too muscular as a result. More than 25 years later, I regularly dispel that myth by encouraging women to lift heavy weights and showing them that my physique, which is not overly muscular, is the result of some very heavy lifting over the last several years.

Maintaining a Nice Physique versus Raising The Bar

During the years preceding my journey into competitive bodybuilding, I never pushed myself to the next level because I honestly never saw the point. I was content with the degree of muscle I had built in my 20’s and 30’s and was surrounded by people who weren’t impressed with weight training, so I never set new goals. Since I was blessed with decent genetics which kept me at a low to normal body weight and a moderate amount of muscle mass, I was pretty complacent (though very consistent) about my weight training. Then I went through a dramatic shift in 2009 when I competed in my first NPC bodybuilding contest and had an “aha” moment in which I finally understood the insatiable desire to push on to the next level and continue to set the bar higher and higher. Essentially, I had been bitten by the bodybuilding bug, and it overtook me with a ferocity and intensity that I had never known. I know that if it hadn’t been for that dogged determination which made me hungry for top national placings and an IFBB Pro Card, I might never have become a Pro.

Competitions & Overtraining versus Paying Attention To Pain

Let’s just get one thing straight: ever since I began competing in 2009, I have become accustomed to training like a beast. However, when I began my journey towards obtaining IFBB Professional Status, my purpose was so singular that I was willing to train until I collapsed from complete exhaustion, a tactic which I now realize is pretty stupid since it wreaks major havoc on the body when practiced for many months or years. I now understand that it is NEVER worth overtraining, or training with injuries which won’t heal because the athlete never takes a break from lifting. Overtraining interferes with muscle gains, immune function, sleep cycles, joint health, mood and energy, and can trigger a complete metabolic meltdown if the athlete continues overtraining for an extended period of time. Though my body’s creaks and groans, along with chronic pain issues from rotator cuff tears in my shoulder and severe tendinitis (IT bands, forearms, feet) were what caused me to finally ease up on the intensity of my workouts, I only allowed myself to pull the reins back AFTER I got my Pro Card. Once the beast had been slain, I fully embraced the idea of training smart and listening to my body’s pain cues

Hurry Up Before It’s Too Late versus Improving With Age

Before I began competing, I honestly believed that there was a freshness date stamped on competitors which essentially relegated them to the dinosaur pits by the time they reached 35 or 40. So I became positively giddy when I discovered that there was a masters’ division in bodybuilding and that I could strut my 43-year old booty onstage without risk of embarrassment. I regarded each subsequent contest as a chance to improve with age, thus using my competitions as a means to beat Father Time. Through my competition journey I have also met other bodybuilding and fitness devotees who do an outstanding job of proving that one can never be too old to be in great shape.

Seeing Clients/Patients One-On-One versus Impacting The Masses

If someone had told me back in 2009 (my first year of competing) that I would build a global following in a couple of years, I never would have believed it, especially since I had become so accustomed to working with fitness training clients and medical patients on a one-on-one basis. My passion for fitness became supercharged when I began competing, and I was so enthusiastic about sharing that passion that I turned to websites and social media platforms to demonstrate favorite exercises and contest video footage. Without thinking about it, I had put myself in a position to lead by example, and used my knowledge, educational background and experience to build fan loyalty and inspire and motivate my followers and fans. To this day, I love getting messages from fans who say that it was because of me that they decided to start competing or to pursue another personal passion which gave them joy and also graced them with optimal fitness.

These days, I often refer to embarking on a fitness and wellness regimen as putting the oxygen mask over one’s own face. That was exactly what I did for myself over 25 years ago. By showing others how to do the same thing, I feel completely in line with my life’s purpose, and it’s extremely rewarding.