Categories
Culture

PICK: Women’s Empowerment Day

Power flow: Sabrina Feggans admits she failed gym class sophomore year. Fifteen years later and 50 pounds overweight, she decided it was time for a change. She hit the gym, got fit, and is now helping others through Beyond Fitness With Sabrina, where H.I.I.T. and Tabata workouts focus on community, empowerment, and self-love. Feggans is paying it forward on Women’s Empowerment Day, with a wide range of movement and wellness activities, plus motivational guest speakers and cancer survivors telling their stories in honor of program member TQ Evans, who lost her battle with the disease.

Saturday 7/31, Pay what you can, 7am-noon. Center at Belvedere, 540 Belvedere Rd., thebeyondfitnesswithsabrina.com. 

Categories
Culture

Pick: Fly at home

Don’t let social distancing deny you the benefits of feeling strong and present in your own body. FlyDog Yoga is offering three to four live classes a day, plus on-demand Power Vinyasa, Yin, Flow, Barre, Power Sculpt, Yoga Nidra, Meditation, and more. In addition, studio co-owner Brad Whiteman, an Army veteran who learned to manage his injuries through yoga, remains committed to “sharing the positive physical and mental benefits” of regular practice with service members, veterans, and first responders through a free livestream class on Wednesdays at 6:30pm.

Ongoing. Other classes $7-29.99. Flydogyoga.com/livestream.

Categories
Living

Insane workout creates community

I was driven to Insanity by my wife. “I don’t know,” she said in all seriousness, “there’s just something about it that I think you might like.” I thought she knew me better. Exactly which part of a high-intensity workout was I going to enjoy? Don’t get me wrong; I’ve never had anything against people who exercise regularly, and many of my friends do, although none of them are my best friends. This, combined with my general lack of self-discipline and inability to stick with things, resigned me to the fact that this would be yet one more failed attempt at self-improvement. Tori said, “I think you’re really going to like the instructor.”

Insanity, a maximum interval training regimen developed by fitness guru Shaun T., is offered at the Boar’s Head Inn Sports Club five times a week. I had joined the club in the hope that because my office door is less than a three-minute walk away, I would surely go regularly. Alas, it served largely as an expensive steam room, summertime lounge pool and an ever-present reminder of my deeply flawed self.

Then I tried Insanity—and met Micah Spry.

Immediately on entering the training room you notice the surprising range of age and athleticism of the participants, from those in their 50s or 60s to enviably fit undergrads and even a high school student or two. All of these different people are chatting away and greeting one another with hugs. Everyone seems strangely happy to be there. Suddenly—with a blast of dance beats and a bullhorn—the most athletic person I have ever seen explodes through the door with a big grin, literally bouncing from person to person, greeting each one by name, and giving him or her a spirited high five (I mean, who high fives?). When he reaches what has since become my perennial spot in the back right corner of the room, he looks me directly in the eye and says, “I’m glad you’re here.”

The aptly named Micah Spry grew up in rural Manning, South Carolina, the only child of Ruth Spry, a single mom who worked in the local Campbell’s Soup factory and raised him with the help of extended family and his godmother, Laura. His physical gifts quickly became apparent, but it was not until his junior year in high school that he ever formally competed.

“I used to just run all the time. I kind of had this Forrest Gump thing going,” Spry recalls. “So, one day my friend Bill Johnson said, ‘Dude, you’re fast. You should go out for track.’ I didn’t really know what I was doing. Basically my thing was to be out in front with everyone else behind me. That was my goal.”

Spry’s strategy worked with stunning results, as he rose from obscurity to become the South Carolina state champion in both the long jump and 100 meters, which he could run in 10.4 seconds. Usain Bolt won Olympic Gold in Rio last summer by running little more than a half second faster, with a time of 9.81 seconds.

Spry received a full athletic scholarship to Shaw University, a small school in North Carolina. A series of injuries hampered his college track career, so he turned his attention fully to his studies, majoring in therapeutic recreation and physical education. After graduation, Spry returned to South Carolina, but finding few opportunities there, he joined the Army in 2001 at the age of 27.

“My mom couldn’t understand why I would sign up when I already had a degree. But I figured that I’d spend a few years in Germany, or maybe South Korea, and then get out.” But everything changed on September 11, 2001—Spry’s 28th birthday—and before long, he was on a plane to Afghanistan.

Spry returned to the U.S. in 2007, after serving two tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. After a month back home he told his mom he was moving to Charlottesville, where his cousins, George and Gary, owned a catering business. Once here, Spry began to realize he was carrying more baggage than he thought.

“I had a lot to deal with when I got back, but in many ways I didn’t acknowledge what was going on,” he says. “I came to understand that I was dealing with PTSD, but I didn’t really know it and hadn’t heard much about it, so I wasn’t running to the V.A. But I started finding myself doing things that I knew weren’t quite right. It was affecting my relationships, my work, my behavior.” Eventually Spry sought and received help for PTSD, and became deeply involved in the Wounded Warrior Project.

He came to the Boar’s Head as a facility attendant, stocking towels and doing general locker room maintenance. Soon he was working with kids in the rec room, and the staff was impressed not only by his physical gifts but also by his enthusiasm and remarkable interpersonal skills. He was invited to obtain certification in a new exercise regimen called Insanity, and there he found his calling. Insanity is designed to bring the heart rate up for intense short periods, followed immediately by a quick recovery. Divided into four “blocks,” the workout alternately focuses on plyometrics, strength and stability, agility and coordination, and abs and core. There’s a science behind it, but if you talk to anyone in the class, the conversation moves quickly from the workout itself to the sense of community in the room.

“It’s changed my life, and it’s all a testament to Micah,” says Nellie Crowder, a dentist who has faithfully attended the class for nearly a year. “It’s like you can’t imagine yourself not doing it—it hurts so good, I guess you could say.” Crowder has even shortened vacations so she doesn’t miss a class.

Spry laughs when asked if he is aware of the impact he has on others: “I tend to downplay it, but yes, I do realize I’m helping people. When people show up to class that’s my evidence that I’m making a difference. And when I hear people telling me that they’re planning vacations, kids’ activities, etc. around the class? That’s something I never would have expected.”

Spry spends his evenings prepping and planning for classes, and even sets his own curfew—he wants to make sure his students “get 110 percent” from him.

“And really, I think I get as much or more from them than they get from me,” he says. “Insanity keeps me sane, I guess you could say.”

Contact Jon Lohman at living@c-ville.com.

Categories
News

Cheer leader: 48-year-old tries out to be a Saintsation

One local woman proved that age is only a number when she auditioned for the New Orleans Saints’ official cheerleading team, the Saintsations, April 17.

A personal trainer at ACAC and a New Orleans native, 48-year-old Gina Ostarly spent last Sunday performing a choreographed dance routine on the Saints’ practice field at its team headquarters in Metairie, Louisiana. Though she was cut before the final auditions, she’s thankful for what she calls an empowering experience.

“I think it’s important to never leave this world with regret,” Ostarly says. “There are so many things that we don’t do just because we’re scared of failing.”

Auditioning is a five-step process, and after registering and attending optional workshops, each woman gathered last week for the preliminary tryouts. Ostarly says roughly 100 Saintsation hopefuls tried out for the team, which is fewer than the 200 who usually come out. Cuts were made during the first day of auditions, and the list of ladies who were selected to move on was posted by the end of the night.

“I was, of course, disappointed that I didn’t get to go on,” Ostarly says, adding that she’s considering trying out again next year, even if just for the same positive experience. For this audition, she hired a personal dance coach last November to help her prepare. After all, she hadn’t cheered or had any formal dance training since she graduated from high school 30 years ago.

Making the Saintsations is about more than just pom-poms and dance progressions, Ostarly says. All candidates who are selected to move past the preliminaries must go through a lengthy interview process with business leaders from the greater New Orleans region and complete a written football knowledge test as part of the semifinal auditions.

So, although Ostarly says loving football is in her blood, she made flash cards to help her memorize each NFL conference, division and team. She was also prepared to list which teams won the past five Super Bowls and where each Super Bowl was located, how many players are on the field at one time and their various positions, coaches’ names and key players.

If selected for a final audition, the cheerleaders perform a routine in small groups and are evaluated on technical skills, overall dance performance and speaking skills. Before a candidate introduces herself at the preliminaries, she has already turned in an application that consists of a résumé, personal essay, letters of recommendation and references.

“It’s been time-consuming,” Ostarly says. In her personal essay, she wrote about her passion for football and the city of New Orleans, and said that though her cheerleading experience is limited, as a personal trainer she cheers on her clients in every session.

If Ostarly had made the team, she would have been the oldest cheerleader in NFL history, to her knowledge. However, she says a 68-year-old woman was also auditioning, and a 40-year-old has cheered for the Saintsations in the past. Most NFL cheerleaders are between 18 and 25 years old, she says. And though Ostarly didn’t make the team this time, she says she doesn’t regret the experience.

“There’s never anything to lose,” Ostarly says. “Whether you succeed or you fail, it’s all about the process and you’re going to come out a better person.”