Dr. Doug Myhre
Lean and Mean Fitness Challenge Runner-up The Runner-up Who Learned to
Embrace Loss — Weight Loss, That Is!
When Dr. Doug Myhre informed his friends
and family that he was going to take part in
One On One,s Lean and Mean Challenge, they
"rolled their eyes at me and said "You don't
have any fat," recalls Dr. Doug. Indeed, Dr.
Doug is the first to admit that his fitness goal
has never been to get thinner. In fact, he
rarely engaged in cardio believing that it
would simply make him lose more weight.
"I was the six-foot, 150-pound, pimply-faced
teenager trying desperately to gain weight,"
he admits.
A practicing family doctor for the last 30 years
and current Associate Dean for Distributed
Learning and Rural Initiatives at the University
of Calgary, 54-year-old Dr. Myhre is a busy
man. A divorced father of two grown
daughters, he cites his working relationship
with his ex-wife as "one of the greatest
accomplishments" of his life. He can now cite
the fact that he was able to shave his body fat
from 13.6 per cent to 10.5 per cent (a 22.7 per
cent change from where he started) in 12
weeks as another accomplishment.
Dr. Myhre has been a client of One On One
for a couple of years. "I kept driving by the
studio on 17th Avenue and finally just
stopped one day," says Dr. Myhre. "I knew I
needed someone I could trust to help me deal
with my desire to gain weight without hurting
myself. I don't bounce back like others
because I have arthritis in my spine."
Working with physical trainer Codrut
Curteanu has provided Dr. Myhre with what
he needed, an anchor to his week. "If I didn’t
have that anchor, my workouts would be the
first thing to go in my busy schedule. Codrut
gets as excited about my results as I do. He
pushes me but has the human skills to know
when to back off," says Dr. Myhre.
Initially, Dr. Myhre wanted no part in the Lean
and Mean Challenge, but "Codrut insisted that
a lean, more defined body makes your chest
and arms look bigger," laughs Dr. Myhre.
Having just read a book about integrity, Dr.
Myhre also embraced this challenge as a way
of staying true and committed to himself.
Dr. Myhre’s workout consisted of meeting his
personal trainer once a week and lifting
weights four times or more a week. Instead of
no cardio, he made sure to get in at least
three hours a week, which he often broke
down into 30-minute increments.
"When I started working out four days a week
and added cardio, things started to change.
I'm not happy about the weight loss, but I
sure am happy with the look!"
Having lost the title by one percentage point,
Dr. Myhre is stoic. "I endured a couple of
setbacks. I got a shoulder injury and my
three-year relationship ended during the
Challenge," he admits. "But Codrut helped me
to work around my injuries, provided a soft
touch when needed, and when I had to travel,
he helped me to develop a modified workout
program that I could do even in the worst of
hotel fitness rooms."
Dr. Myhre was also surprised by his increased
fitness level and the "natural energy" he
suddenly seemed to have. Cutting down on
coffee and wine and adding healthy snacks
into his diet enabled him to be more mindful
of his eating habits.
His new goal is to stay at his current level for
a year, and Dr. Myhre admits that if he
somehow skips a cardio workout now, he
misses it.
"My daughter says "grandpas don't have abs
like this," laughs Dr. Myhre. "So I guess I
won't be a grandpa anytime soon!" |