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experiencelifemag.com
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Life, Interrupted
A dozen years ago, Jodi Ring suffered two brain aneurysms that could easily
have left her dead. Instead, they led her to get on her bike and ride.
By Erin Peterson |
July-August 2008 |
Back to Basics
A Healthy Plan
Passing It On
Success Summary
Jodi Ring has few memories of the day in January 1996
that changed her life, but she does remember this: One moment, she was walking
in the Dallas airport with her husband and daughter on a layover while homeward
bound from a New Zealand vacation. The next, she was in the intensive-care
unit of the Zale Lipshy University Hospital. Ring, 50, had been felled by two
brain aneurysms, a cataclysmic event from which few people survive, let alone
make a full recovery. Thanks to the quick intervention of skilled emergency-room
doctors and neurosurgeons, she was lucky enough to do both. Three weeks in
the ICU and three months of at-home recovery gave Ring, a fifth-grade teacher
from Plymouth, Mich., time to reconsider her priorities. Her health and her
family were at the top of her list. Her time was a gift, and she was determined
to use it wisely.
Back to Basics
Doctors said there was no way that Ring, then a trim and
healthy 38-year-old, could have predicted — or prevented — the aneurysms. Though
she suffered minor memory loss and temporary mood swings, Ring realized how
lucky she was to walk away nearly unscathed. “Many people get
depressed after something like this,” she says. “But it was different for me. I
was so grateful for life. I wanted to taste every bit of it.” Her doctor, an
athlete, encouraged Ring to get active. Two months into her recovery, she and
her husband, Howard, decided to buy a tandem bicycle, which they dubbed “The
Celebration of Life” bike. It allowed Jodi to work out with Howard, an avid
cyclist, without worrying about slowing him down. And it meant he would be close
by in case a seizure — a possible side effect of an aneurysm — occurred. The
bike signified a marked change in Jodi’s activity level, which previously had
included the occasional volleyball game and keeping up with her
students. Ring and her husband started with short rides along trails in local
parks and gradually built up to 50 miles in a single trip. By the following
year, 1997, the two decided they were ready for a bigger challenge and signed up
for the West Shoreline Tour, a seven-day bicycle trip along Lake Michigan where
cyclists ride more than 60 miles a day. They worked together diligently to
build Jodi’s endurance, joining a local cycling club for Tuesday-night rides and
going with friends on longer routes. “My confidence was building, and my
body wasn’t hurting,” Jodi says. “I knew I was ready for the next level.”
And she was: The seven-day ride turned out to be both a thrilling and inspiring
experience, one that expanded Ring’s sense of her own athletic potential. “I
never thought I would be able to cycle like that,” she says. For Howard, the
physical benefits were just a small part of what they gained from their many
hours on the bike. “It’s something we get to experience together,” he says.
“It’s given us one more thing to share.”
A Healthy Plan
For five years,
Ring’s recovery seemed right on track. She’d had no further seizures, she’d
added significant physical activity to her daily life, and she was spending more
time with her husband and daughter. But in 2001 she opted to add a second
medication designed to prevent a different type of seizure her doctor was
concerned about. While the pills did the job, they also slowed down her
metabolism and increased her appetite. As a result, she began gaining weight at
the rate of about 10 pounds a year. “My doctor asked whether I wanted to
reduce the dosage, but the medicine was preventing seizures, so I was nervous to
change something that was working,” Jodi recalls. At first, the extra weight
wasn’t a problem: Jodi had only 100 pounds stretched on her 5-foot-6-inch
frame and could afford to gain. As one year led to another, however, the pounds
began to add up. In 2007, at a routine doctor’s exam, she was stunned by the
changes: “When I stepped on the scale, I weighed 169 pounds, which was more than
I had weighed when I was nine months pregnant.” She realized she needed to
do more than just ride her bike if she wanted to halt and reverse the effects of
her medication. So she stepped up her activity, taking more cycling and
barbell-strength classes at her Life Time Fitness club in Canton,
Mich. Connie Scaparo, group-fitness department head at the Canton club and
one of Jodi’s instructors, says she stood out from the very beginning. “Jodi
never says ‘I can’t,’” says Scaparo. “She takes small steps every day to be
successful.” Ring also began paying closer attention to the information on
her heart-rate monitor (which she’d been using since 2006) and increasing the
duration and intensity of her activities. Toughest of all, she gave up
sugared soda, the one major vice in her otherwise healthy diet. The incremental
changes had an impact. Over the course of the next year, she lost 25
pounds. Jodi has since worked hard to maintain her weight. She blocks out
time in her schedule for workouts, particularly during the holidays, when she
knows she’ll indulge in rich foods. She’s also grown to appreciate simple
pleasures and motivations. She especially looks forward to the tiny electronic
trophy symbol she receives on her heart-rate monitor when she achieves her
weekly goals. Little changes, practiced consistently, have helped Ring tackle
larger challenges.
Passing It On
Jodi and Howard continue to cycle more than 1,000 miles
every year, and they now have seven Shoreline tours under their belts. She also
maintains her group-fitness workouts, which she plans to continue for years to
come. And Ring is sharing her passion for fitness with her students,
emphasizing that health and education are often more similar than kids
realize. “As a teacher, I try to show kids that you need to set goals no
matter what you’re doing, whether it’s exercise or schoolwork,” she says. “You
work, you practice, you do your homework. And when you complete that ride, it’s
a little like getting an A-plus paper. Both achievements can give you a
wonderful feeling.” Erin Peterson is a Minneapolis-based freelance
writer.
Success Summary
Meet: Jodi Ring, 50, a fifth-grade teacher from Plymouth, Mich. Big
achievements: Surviving two brain aneurysms; maintaining a healthy weight
despite metabolism-slowing medications; completing multiple multiday cycling
events. Big inspiration: Achieving goals she never thought possible. “If you
would have asked me in my 20s if I could bike 1,000 miles a year, I wouldn’t
have taken it seriously. I just turned 50, and I did it.” What worked:
Finding people to keep her accountable. “Every Monday my students ask
me: ‘Did you earn your heart-rate trophy?’ I’ve earned it every time.” What
didn’t: Accepting her weight gain as normal for too long. “At first, gaining
weight seemed to be healthy, but then it got to be too much, too fast. I started
to lose control.” Words of Wisdom: No more excuses. “It’s easy to say you’re
too tired or you’ve got too much work to do. Make a goal. And then achieve it.”
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Life, Interrupted
A dozen years ago, Jodi Ring suffered two brain aneurysms that could easily
have left her dead. Instead, they led her to get on her bike and ride.
By Erin Peterson | Success Stories Department, July-August 2008 |
Back to Basics
A Healthy Plan
Passing It On
Success Summary
Jodi Ring has few memories of the day in January 1996
that changed her life, but she does remember this: One moment, she was walking
in the Dallas airport with her husband and daughter on a layover while homeward
bound from a New Zealand vacation. The next, she was in the intensive-care
unit of the Zale Lipshy University Hospital. Ring, 50, had been felled by two
brain aneurysms, a cataclysmic event from which few people survive, let alone
make a full recovery. Thanks to the quick intervention of skilled emergency-room
doctors and neurosurgeons, she was lucky enough to do both. Three weeks in
the ICU and three months of at-home recovery gave Ring, a fifth-grade teacher
from Plymouth, Mich., time to reconsider her priorities. Her health and her
family were at the top of her list. Her time was a gift, and she was determined
to use it wisely.
Back to Basics (Back to Top)
Doctors said there was no way that Ring, then a trim and
healthy 38-year-old, could have predicted — or prevented — the aneurysms. Though
she suffered minor memory loss and temporary mood swings, Ring realized how
lucky she was to walk away nearly unscathed. “Many people get
depressed after something like this,” she says. “But it was different for me. I
was so grateful for life. I wanted to taste every bit of it.” Her doctor, an
athlete, encouraged Ring to get active. Two months into her recovery, she and
her husband, Howard, decided to buy a tandem bicycle, which they dubbed “The
Celebration of Life” bike. It allowed Jodi to work out with Howard, an avid
cyclist, without worrying about slowing him down. And it meant he would be close
by in case a seizure — a possible side effect of an aneurysm — occurred. The
bike signified a marked change in Jodi’s activity level, which previously had
included the occasional volleyball game and keeping up with her
students. Ring and her husband started with short rides along trails in local
parks and gradually built up to 50 miles in a single trip. By the following
year, 1997, the two decided they were ready for a bigger challenge and signed up
for the West Shoreline Tour, a seven-day bicycle trip along Lake Michigan where
cyclists ride more than 60 miles a day. They worked together diligently to
build Jodi’s endurance, joining a local cycling club for Tuesday-night rides and
going with friends on longer routes. “My confidence was building, and my
body wasn’t hurting,” Jodi says. “I knew I was ready for the next level.”
And she was: The seven-day ride turned out to be both a thrilling and inspiring
experience, one that expanded Ring’s sense of her own athletic potential. “I
never thought I would be able to cycle like that,” she says. For Howard, the
physical benefits were just a small part of what they gained from their many
hours on the bike. “It’s something we get to experience together,” he says.
“It’s given us one more thing to share.”
A Healthy Plan (Back to Top)
For five years,
Ring’s recovery seemed right on track. She’d had no further seizures, she’d
added significant physical activity to her daily life, and she was spending more
time with her husband and daughter. But in 2001 she opted to add a second
medication designed to prevent a different type of seizure her doctor was
concerned about. While the pills did the job, they also slowed down her
metabolism and increased her appetite. As a result, she began gaining weight at
the rate of about 10 pounds a year. “My doctor asked whether I wanted to
reduce the dosage, but the medicine was preventing seizures, so I was nervous to
change something that was working,” Jodi recalls. At first, the extra weight
wasn’t a problem: Jodi had only 100 pounds stretched on her 5-foot-6-inch
frame and could afford to gain. As one year led to another, however, the pounds
began to add up. In 2007, at a routine doctor’s exam, she was stunned by the
changes: “When I stepped on the scale, I weighed 169 pounds, which was more than
I had weighed when I was nine months pregnant.” She realized she needed to
do more than just ride her bike if she wanted to halt and reverse the effects of
her medication. So she stepped up her activity, taking more cycling and
barbell-strength classes at her Life Time Fitness club in Canton,
Mich. Connie Scaparo, group-fitness department head at the Canton club and
one of Jodi’s instructors, says she stood out from the very beginning. “Jodi
never says ‘I can’t,’” says Scaparo. “She takes small steps every day to be
successful.” Ring also began paying closer attention to the information on
her heart-rate monitor (which she’d been using since 2006) and increasing the
duration and intensity of her activities. Toughest of all, she gave up
sugared soda, the one major vice in her otherwise healthy diet. The incremental
changes had an impact. Over the course of the next year, she lost 25
pounds. Jodi has since worked hard to maintain her weight. She blocks out
time in her schedule for workouts, particularly during the holidays, when she
knows she’ll indulge in rich foods. She’s also grown to appreciate simple
pleasures and motivations. She especially looks forward to the tiny electronic
trophy symbol she receives on her heart-rate monitor when she achieves her
weekly goals. Little changes, practiced consistently, have helped Ring tackle
larger challenges.
Passing It On (Back to Top)
Jodi and Howard continue to cycle more than 1,000 miles
every year, and they now have seven Shoreline tours under their belts. She also
maintains her group-fitness workouts, which she plans to continue for years to
come. And Ring is sharing her passion for fitness with her students,
emphasizing that health and education are often more similar than kids
realize. “As a teacher, I try to show kids that you need to set goals no
matter what you’re doing, whether it’s exercise or schoolwork,” she says. “You
work, you practice, you do your homework. And when you complete that ride, it’s
a little like getting an A-plus paper. Both achievements can give you a
wonderful feeling.” Erin Peterson is a Minneapolis-based freelance
writer.
Success Summary (Back to Top)
Meet: Jodi Ring, 50, a fifth-grade teacher from Plymouth, Mich. Big
achievements: Surviving two brain aneurysms; maintaining a healthy weight
despite metabolism-slowing medications; completing multiple multiday cycling
events. Big inspiration: Achieving goals she never thought possible. “If you
would have asked me in my 20s if I could bike 1,000 miles a year, I wouldn’t
have taken it seriously. I just turned 50, and I did it.” What worked:
Finding people to keep her accountable. “Every Monday my students ask
me: ‘Did you earn your heart-rate trophy?’ I’ve earned it every time.” What
didn’t: Accepting her weight gain as normal for too long. “At first, gaining
weight seemed to be healthy, but then it got to be too much, too fast. I started
to lose control.” Words of Wisdom: No more excuses. “It’s easy to say you’re
too tired or you’ve got too much work to do. Make a goal. And then achieve it.”
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