Amazon.com Review
Judy Molnar was always the tallest kid in the class and always played sports, mainly basketball and volleyball. By college, she was 6'1", 180 pounds, and very fit. Yet her coach saw her as "a large woman with a weight problem" and tried to put her on a 1,200 calorie diet to get her to an impossible 150 pounds. The result was that Molnar became scale-obsessed and started to hate training and working out. She quit sports, took a sedentary job after college, and ate herself up to a weight more than the 350 pounds her scale registered.
You Don't Have to Be Thin to Win is the story of her "journey from the couch to the course" to reclaim her health, and her "personal recipe of goal setting, education, enthusiasm, and a fair bit of sweat." She shares excerpts from her journal about her triumphs, setbacks, and day-to-day efforts toward fitness. Her lifestyle completely changed--her fitness training became the center, and a few years after making her change, she was racing and doing triathlons. She dropped 130 pounds, went "from doughnut junkie to healthy and fit," and became Rosie O'Donnell's Chub Club coach. After telling her personal story, she helps you move more and eat better with motivational strategies, tips for getting in shape, descriptions of a few different activities and how to start, and nutritional facts. This book is so motivating that you're likely to get up from the couch and read it on the treadmill.
--Joan Price
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From the Inside Flap
Read by the Author
Three cassettes / approx. 5 hours
In 1996, Judy Molnar didn't own a bicycle or a bathing suit. She was 6'1", weighed 330 pounds and wore a size 26. After seeing the phrase "morbidly obese" written on her chart at her doctor's office, she realized that this was no longer about a dress size - this was about life and death.
Over the course of the next two and a half years, Judy lost 130 pounds and began participating in triathlons to build her confidence and stay in shape.
Rosie O'Donnell heard about Judy's story when Judy participated in the 1998 Iron Man Triathlon. She related to Judy's "big girl" predicament and was inspired by her simple philosophy of eating less and moving more and her amazing commitment to healthy living. Rosie created a position for Judy on her show as the Official Coach of the Chub Club because she recognized that Judy is a real life role model to whom everyone can relate. Currently, the men and women who participate in Judy's complete workout program, which strives for health and fitness--not thinness.
You Don't Have to Be Thin to Win illustrates this program, relays Judy's exceptional message, and shares moving examples of Chub Club success stories. This Audiobook will help everyone feel and look better--inside and out.