Lisa Jones: It’s crazy how capable our bodies are

It’s crazy how capable our bodies are. Yet despite all that our bodies do for us, we somehow seize nearly every opportunity we get to tear it down by not loving ourselves and our bodies enough.

Imagine completing an Ironman triathlon – your body is put under tremendous pressure as you complete a 3.86km swim, a 180.25km cycle, and followed by a 42.2km run. In Lisa Samantha Jones’ case, she didn’t just complete an Ironman triathlon in 2012 – she clocked the best timing in the 40-44 age group at the age of 40 at the Ironman UK.

“A friend said to me that they were going to run a half marathon and said ‘Do you want to do it?’ and I went ‘No, I bike.’ But then I thought ‘Why not? I’m fit. I might as well try something else’ and I got really caught up in running and running faster. I could run quite well since I was fit and it just escalated,” she commented.

Yet despite her amazing sporting accomplishments – not without injuries such as a strained left groin and a slipped disc – the first thing the 44-year-old British did when she saw a less-than-flattering picture of herself running during Run for Hope was to criticise her body and think of deleting it.

Fortunately, she came to her senses and realised that her body is incredible for being able to get through so many triathlons. She said, “I love my body – all bits of it that don’t jiggle and all the bits that do. The lopsidedness I have when I run so that you can tell it’s me and the determined look I have on my face in many pictures when I don’t spot the damn camera. Whether you run or not, it’s not the point – the point is to love yourself.

Growing up, she was often called Lisa Jones ‘Bag of Bones’ because she was real skinny, but Lisa didn’t let it get to her. She only started feeling more conscious of her body when it started changing due to puberty and she was working at a pub at 18.

“I remember very clearly going shopping with my mum once and trying clothes on and going ‘Yea, but…’ and my mother went ‘Honey you’re a woman now. You have hips and boobs.’ And I went ‘But I don’t want them!’ All of a sudden, I just wondered what was going on with my body. I hadn’t thought about it before.

Throughout her life, Lisa has always had an unhealthy obsession with sugar as she grew up in a household where sweets and chocolates were always around her. She only realised how bad her problem with sugar was when she left the UK in 2001 and had gained a total of 12kg to hit 71kg after consuming one too many sugary treats along with a lack of exercise. Lisa controlled her diet and picked up a regular exercise routine again, but although she managed to lose some weight, her sugar cravings were very hard to control.

“I started opening up about it and I actually wrote a sugar blog, explaining my worst day. I told a few people; I had a friend who told me to make sure I get some sweetness in each of my meals so I’m satisfying that sweet craving. I then noticed that my sweet binge usually occurs when I was lonely, stressed and upset. Once I recognised the emotional connection I had with sugar, I managed my sugar cravings a lot better. I’d ask myself ‘What are you missing? What do you need?’ Phone your friends up. Talk to someone. Do something other than that self-sabotage. Now I can have some and not finish the whole lot.”

Two years ago, Lisa moved to Singapore to work as a Pilates and Movement Trainer at The Moving Body. As a fitness instructor, there is an incredible amount of pressure on her to look the part even though she’s extremely fit, as highlighted through her Ironman triathlon feats.

“From a career perspective, because it’s part of my profession, my physique is important as people typically wouldn’t want to train with someone who doesn’t look physically decent. BUT the fact that we put so much sway on body image and judge people by it disgusts me. So it’s a catch 22 for what I do versus how we view it,” Lisa remarked.

Today, after being in a much better place, Lisa just hopes that everyone will be able to love themselves more by treating themselves and their bodies better, by listening to their inner voice.

“Look back and understand where your belief came from about yourself because for me, once I started to understand and think ‘Why do I have this view about myself?’ I could sort of unravel and speak to the voices inside my head that said ‘You’ve got a bit of this or that, or you don’t look like them’. Once I could hear myself and my own self-talk, then I could start turning it around. So listen to how you talk to yourself, and think to yourself, would you talk to your friend like that? Because if you wouldn’t, why are you talking to yourself like that?”

We chat more with Lisa…

Name: Lisa Samantha Jones
Age: 44
Occupation: Pilates/Movement Trainer & Educator
Nationality: British
Height: 168cm

 

What was your first running competition? 

It was in 2000 – the London Marathon which I finished in 5 hours 15 mins which is slow in comparison to now. My parents watched me and I remember them asking ‘Would you ever run a marathon again?’ I went ‘NO! Never!’ But obviously I went on to do the Sundown Marathon in 2009 and I’ve done two Ironmans.

What’s your current personal best?

3 hours 48 mins at the 2009 Sundown Marathon. My best Ironman was 3 hours 58 mins (for the marathon only). The whole race was 11 hours 51 mins.

Could you tell us more about your body image struggles?

When you work in a profession that you’re up at the front teaching lessons or Pilates, there is this certain look that people expect. So it was always the case of ‘Do I look good enough? Do I look like the part? Am I a role model to people? Am I not?’

I tried lots of diets and different ways to eat throughout the years – vegetarian, vegan, paleo, blood type. I tried most of them just to see if something sat with me. I had massive issues with sugar for quite a lot of years; as in serious, serious binges which are emotionally-related, not necessarily anything else.

The worst binge was in 2012 when I moved back home with my parents. I remember eating so much during the day. I woke up at 4am feeling violently ill, slept on the sofa and had sweats on all the time. I was disgusted with myself and I said the next day to my mum, ‘I think I have a real serious problem with this’.

I grew up in a household where chocolate is the thing you do to come together to have love, to say well done. A dessert was the treat you got after you finished your meal, so sugar was a big reward thing. The ability to eat one cube of chocolate is not in my mentality – it’s the bar. If the bar is 250g, I’ll eat the 250g.

Currently do you still struggle with your body image?

I want to say no, but sometimes I look at people and I find myself comparing myself to them. It’s not that I want a six-pack but I look at them and go, ‘I could get that!’ and just as quickly go, ‘Do I really want to look like that?’ I’m learning to love my body, whatever shape it is, and appreciate what I can do from an athletic perspective.

When you do triathlons and you’re good at them, you’re hanging around a lot of fit people and you can’t help but compare, because you look at someone and they look like this and that, and you go, ‘Do I look like that? Do I look fit? Do I belong here?’ Even if you can do the times, you still question whether you belong for your physical look, but I’ve learnt to look past that.

 

What does body image mean to you?

I think as long as someone is fit and healthy, and has a good attitude towards themselves and the way they move and the food that they eat, that’s way more important regardless of anything else. I do believe that you can still be what the world would say as ‘a little bit on the large side’ and be healthy, which would be better than looking good and have a really bad attitude towards yourself.

So body image is not just about your body, it’s also about your mental image of yourself.

Has anyone made comments about your body that have set you back?

As an athlete, I’ve gotten people saying, ‘Yeah if you lean down a bit…’. My mum is always going ‘You have to stay slim when you grow older’, since I was a kid and my dad was also criticising women for always letting themselves grow big and overweight, so there was always a little bit of a stigma in my family about being overweight.

 

What do you think of Rock The Naked Truth?

I think it’s a great thing to get women out there talking about how they view themselves because what I’ve realised is that most of us, not just women, have image problems and I put most of that down to social media which touts women as these perfect bodies. I think it’s amazing as it’s a space that people can talk in safety.

Is there any message you want to spread to others out there?

Don’t judge each other! Women tend to judge each other. If your immediate reaction is to look at someone and pass criticism, change it. Find a compliment to say about that person instead, because the more we do it to each other, the worse it gets.

ROCKstar of the Month (May 2016): Kerrin Kua

When Kerrin Kua first wrote in to share her story on our portal, she requested to be anonymous because she wasn’t ready to tell the world about her struggles. However, Rock The Naked Truth and our various initiatives have allowed her to fight the inner battle better and give her the confidence to recover from her eating disorder and body image issues.

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Instead of the usual interview we do with our ROCKstar of the Month awardee, we decided to let Kerrin tell her story in her own words.


I just completed my very first marathon today, all 42.195km of it, without stopping other than for hydration. 42.195km might not mean a lot to seasoned runners. In fact, 42.195km doesn’t mean that much to me either; because in comparison to how far I have come since the launch of Rock The Naked Truth (RTNT), this distance is minute.

Six months ago, I sent my story in and requested for it to be Anonymous because I wanted to attend the official launch and see what RTNT has to offer and if someone can finally help me. I did not want my friends to know how screwed up I have been, so I’ve always been hiding behind the screen as a shield.

At the launch, I listened to others share their struggles and how they managed to overcome them and it began to occur to me that maybe, maybe there is hope for me; that recovery not is not a myth because here in front of me are real people who have recovered and are happy being who they are now. Right there and then, I committed myself to recovery (like serious I will do it, not just saying and wishing I can), so I put my hand up when the chance came, took the mike and shared my story in the middle of Bugis Junction in public for all to hear. That was not just a sharing; that was my commitment to everyone, especially myself, towards recovery. That was also my cry for help to anyone who was willing to give me a hand.

Since that day, I have attended ROCKrunners and many other activities held by RTNT. I started sharing my story at the sharing sessions of these events but after a while, I stopped. I stopped because there was no longer a story of struggle to share, but a journey of progress that I was making with all my friends, one that we all share together.

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The people I have met at ROCKrunners are truly the most amazing people because despite our differences, we are able to bond and work through pain (damn you, burpees!) together because we always, always work as one, as a team. We never judge, never compete and we are always there for each other during the workouts. We grew stronger, faster, braver together and with the progress I was making, I was more in control of my impulses and my eating disorder. Gradually, I became more confident and happy.

I was becoming a living example myself and I wanted to do more. I started sharing my eating disorder recovery journey openly with my friends on social media and whenever I had the chance, I talked openly about it as well because I want to raise awareness that recovery is possible and that no one has to be alone in recovery.

I was in a good place until I started to compare myself with other girls doing the Kayla Itsines Bikini Body Guide workouts. I could not live with the fact that others seem to be making better progress – losing weight, gaining abs, achieving my dream of slimmer legs. Me? I was getting heavier, bigger (no longer skinny like I was with an eating disorder) and my legs were getting bigger. It was pretty much a nightmare because I felt less and less comfortable with my legs, I started feeling jealous of some girls and their growing number of fans on Instagram, of people calling them inspirations, of the way they looked and how I was just not like them.

I felt inadequate, lousy and fat. I wanted to give up on exercising and slip back into my bulimia because I could not see the point of working out when I was only getting “fatter”. The idea of going back to where I used to be (skinny with an eating disorder) was very appealing because it seemed easy – I just have to eat, puke and post skinny pictures of myself, bask in comments of people calling me skinny and I wouldn’t feel so terrible anymore.

Before - KerrinBefore

I was caught between the two voices in my head, but the determined and right version told me that turning back was not an option and that I am open enough to seek support. This same determination made me reach out to Cheryl (founder of RTNT) whenever I felt lousy and lost control. I will share how I feel with her, going on and on about how negative I felt inside. She was always there to listen and always had her own ways to offer a different perspective, one which of course made more sense than my own. She’s always the one I go to to help me stay rooted on track.

Clearly, comparison is not healthy. If something doesn’t work, don’t do it. Find others that will help you get to where you want to be – physically and more importantly, mentally. ROCKrunners is where I found my people, the encouraging ones who are so positive, determined and most importantly, welcoming and free of judgement.

RTNT has made recovery possible for me because they gave me the courage to do things I never thought I was capable of – coming out to share my story, making effort towards recovery, getting other likeminded people to join us and today, finishing a marathon. And with each achievement, I become more confident to go for another and I also find myself wanting to spread the good vibes to as many as I can too. I never thought I could inspire others but now, I can. 

While I am not fully recovered and there is more work to be done, I am happy with where I am now. I am a work in progress. Recovery is not easy, but it is possible. You can learn to love yourself. You just have to want to and allow others to help you along the way.

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ROCKstar of the Month is a monthly award given to an inspiring individual who advocates a positive mindset and living an active lifestyle (see full requirements below). As ROCKstar of the Month for May 2016, Kerrin receives an outfit from Lululemon Athletica as seen in the photos here.

Requirements to be a ROCKstar of the Month awardee:

  • SUPPORT – Believes strongly in the movement and advocates the right mindset
  • INFLUENCE – Displays ability to be a positive influence to those around him/her
  • ENTHUSIASM – Regularly attends Rock The Naked Truth events
  • LEADS BY EXAMPLE – Demonstrates desire to improve lifestyle aligned with the movement
  • CONTRIBUTION – Does his/her part to give back to the movement

Photos by Nicographicc