Tag: Bodybuilding

  • Danial Bawany – From “Fat And Lazy” To Bodybuilding Champion

    Danial Bawany – From “Fat And Lazy” To Bodybuilding Champion

     

    In primary school, he was teased for being “fat” and “lazy”.

    He was also made fun of for his “elephant thighs”.

    Mr Danial Bawany vowed never to let that happen again.

    Now, not only is he a Manhunt Singapore 2016 finalist, he also recently clinched a gold medal in the 50th Asian Bodybuilding and Sports Physique Championship in Bhutan from Sept 2 to 8.

    The 22-year-old freelance personal trainer beat 19 other men in the Men’s Physique over 170cm category.

    Mr Danial Bawany with his trophy and medal. PHOTO COURTESY OF DANIAL BAWANY

    It’s a far cry from his days in primary school when he would always be benched during hockey games because he was unfit.

    THEN AND NOW: Mr Danial Bawany at 15 years old.PHOTO COURTESY OF DANIAL BAWANY

    “Whenever my team won, my school mates would tell me that I did not deserve it because I was rarely on the pitch,” he said.

    When he was 14, he started exercising with a dumbbell.

    At the age of 17, he started training and eating properly.

    Wanting to be able to run faster, jump higher and lift heavy objects led him to pick up powerlifting when he was 20.

    His efforts paid off – from being 80kg with a body fat percentage of 25 per cent in primary school, his weight now fluctuates between 90 and 95kg, with a body fat level of between eight and 12 per cent.

    In April this year, his performance at a local bodybuilding competition, Physique War, impressed Mr Pradip Subramanian, 31, the president and director of the World Bodybuilding and Physique Federation Singapore.

    THEN AND NOW: Mr Danial Bawany at the 50th Asian Bodybuilding and Physique Federation Championship (above). PHOTO COURTESY OF DANIAL BAWANY

    “He has the potential and the talent and I knew that he would place among the top-three (for the competition in Bhutan),” said Mr Pradip.

    For four months before the competition, Mr Bawany trained six times a week, with each session lasting about 90 minutes.

    Having to follow a strict diet, he could only have foods that were high in carbohydrates once a week.

    “I had mood swings due to minimal energy and low carbohydrate intake,” he said. “Because of that, the people around me suffered.”

    Three weeks before the competition, he had to give up carbohydrates altogether.

    Though he did not end up placing among the top-three at the Manhunt finals last month, Mr Bawany continued training hard for the competititon in Bhutan.

    When he got there, the sight of the other competitors from 28 participating countries made him nervous.

    “Being the youngest and competing against those whom I had been looking up to was nerve wracking. But I wanted to make Singapore proud too,” he said.

    VICTORIOUS

    Through the support of his family and friends, he did just that – emerging victorious.

    Since last year, he has participated in six competitions, from powerlifting and bodybuilding contests to a pageant (Manhunt Singapore 2016).

    Mr Bawany intends to go for the World Bodybuilding and Physique Sports Championships next year in Mongolia.

    He said: “Receiving heartfelt messages from strangers saying that you have inspired them, fires me up to be a better athlete each and every day.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Singapore Female Bodybuilder Champion And Hubby Often Mistaken as Gay Couple

    Singapore Female Bodybuilder Champion And Hubby Often Mistaken as Gay Couple

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    “Are you a man in a bikini?”

    “What’s your ‘ladyboy’ name?”

    Bodybuilder Doreen Yeo doesn’t feel angry when she receives such questions.

    The 27-year-old does, however, get embarrassed, and can only bravely smile and walk away.

    When she’s with her husband Mohamad Haris, they’ve been mistaken for a gay couple, and are often subjected to looks of disgust. They are so used to it that they aren’t bothered anymore, but Haris, 29, won’t hesitate to defend his wife if he has to.

    “It’s ok if people are curious about her physique, and want to take photos with her, but some give offensive looks like she’s committing a crime. Sometimes I don’t tell her if I see people giving us weird looks,” said Haris, who works as a personal trainer just like Yeo.

    Yeo added, “He’s with me most of the time and when people criticise me, he won’t be able to take it. He has seen the hardship I went through as a bodybuilder and thus knows what I have gone through.”

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    Poor self-image

    Yeo’s buff physique may have earned her the gold medal in the open bodybuilding category at the 12th Southeast Asian Bodybuilding Championships in June, but she was not the most athletic person when growing up.

    In fact, at 14, she was exempted from all fitness tests and classes due to a car accident which left her with a torn knee ligament and slipped discs in the neck and back.

    By the time Yeo entered university, she was mocked for being too skinny: at her height of 1.64m, she weighed just a petite 45kg.

    Then there was the pressure from her mechanical engineering course – but thankfully, she found her place of solace.

    “I was studying all the time and I needed another channel to release stress. That was how I found the gym. I went to the one in school and started going every day, each time I had a break,” she shared.

    She started reading up and bought protein powder to aid her workouts, putting on 8kg of muscle within a year, while her waistline remained unchanged.

    “In university, students dress well but I was skinny, weak and didn’t have much friends, so I wanted to be different,” Yeo explained. “I wanted to become strong and toned. The desire to improve my poor self-image was what kick-started my passion for working out in the gym.”

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    Dealing with negativity

    It was a poster for Muscle & Fitness War, a bodybuilding competition organised by NUS Health & Fitness Club, that gave her the idea to go into bodybuilding.

    Fired up with the determination to compete and stand on stage one day, Yeo kept training even though she received nothing but negativity all around.

    Her friends thought she was crazy, her colleagues at work said she wasn’t good enough and other gym-goers would ridicule her training methods.

    Undeterred, Yeo continued to train while balancing her work schedule.

    She became a trainer at True Fitness – where she met her husband – then a master trainer at Celebrity Fitness, before stepping out on her own as a freelancer this February.

    Source: https://sg.sports.yahoo.com/blogs/fit-to-post-sports/singapore-bodybuilder-triumphs-over-public-scorn–image-issues-091034283.html

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