[Wasagdu] former instructor at TSE

Becky Frankeberger b.butterfly at comcast.net
Mon Dec 14 17:46:56 UTC 2015


Debby, do you know her?

 

Former Stoughton resident wins at international bodybuilding competition

Sun, 12/13/2015 - 

By: Kate Newton 

 

Photos submitted. Jessica Nelipovich was awarded first place in her class at
the competition, and represented both the U.S. and her current home of New
Zealand.

 

Jessica Nelipovich and her boyfriend, Shane Blows, recently purchased a gym
- aptly named "The Gym" - in Motueka, New Zealand.

 

Moving overseas, running a business and competing internationally as an
athlete each qualify as major lifestyle changes that could satisfy even the
healthiest of ambitions.

 

If that's the case, former Stoughton resident Jessica Nelipovich is in the
best shape of her life - in more ways than one - by accomplishing all three.


 

The latest of those accomplishments came in 2010, when, after admiring the
fitness of friends at her gym who were involved in bodybuilding, Nelipovich
told one in passing that she would "love to be the kind of person who could
do that." Her friend responded that, in fact, she could - instilling enough
confidence for Nelipovich begin training for what she initially thought
would be a one-time thing. 

 

Five years later, she's not only still competing, but recently won first
place in her class at the 2015 National Amateur Body-Builders' Association
(NABBA) International Universe Bodybuilding Championships, held in the
Philippines from Nov. 13-16. 

 

Making changes

 

After graduating from Stoughton High School in 1994, Nelipovich worked as a
guide dog mobility instructor at the Seeing Eye in New Jersey before
exploring job opportunities outside the U.S. She used a method about as 21st
century as it gets: Googling her job title with the keyword 'overseas,'
Nelipovich told the Hub in a phone interview.

 

The first result was for the Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind, and
after being offered a job there, Nelipovich moved to New Zealand in July
2007. While she was there initially on a two-year work visa, she chose to
make it her permanent home.

 

And while her journey toward becoming a competitive body-builder is a recent
one, Nelipovich said her perspective toward health and fitness changed in
her twenties after hearing that the habits formed during a person's thirties
dictate their behavior for the rest of their lives. 

 

At the time, she had been smoking a pack a day and not eating well, a stark
contrast from the healthy and fit lifestyle she had been raised with.

 

"I remember thinking, I don't want to go into my thirties and beyond with
this lifestyle, this isn't good! So I've been thinking about how I age for
the last 15 years, and I think in my twenties all my friends thought I was a
bit loopy," Nelipovich said. "But now as time goes by, I think the biggest
credit goes to my parents, who wanted us to see them doing the right things
. and looking after their mental health and physical health."

 

Nelipovich's parents have faced their own significant health challenges: her
father experienced a total loss of vision when she was growing up (they had
guide dogs at home, which gave her "early exposure" to the industry) and her
mother, who still resides in Stoughton, suffered a heart attack last year.

 

Nelipovich returned to the U.S. for five weeks to oversee her mom's recovery
as she did her cardiac rehabilitation at Stoughton Hospital. More than a
year later, her mom has no "ongoing complications," which Nelipovich said
she credits both to her mom's toughness and the "incredible" team that
treated her.

 

"In a small town like Stoughton, to have that level of service available,
was really impressive to me," Nelipovich said, adding that the experience
had a "huge impact" on how she pursues a healthy lifestyle. 

 

While her siblings were immediately supportive (her eldest brother is a
non-competitive bodybuilder and former pro-baseball player), Nelipovich said
her parents were initially skeptical when she began her training, but have
gotten more excited as she's "progressed over the years."

 

"Having won at this level, I think it legitimizes it for the rest of my
family," Nelipovich said.

 

A lifestyle of 'discipline'

 

After starting to train and compete as an amateur bodybuilder, Nelipovich
said she quickly realized that the sport is "shrouded in some mystery and
misperception," the subject of stereotypes that even she was initially wary
of.

 

The notion that her female peers would be "catty and hyper-competitive" was
disproved immediately ("Everyone I've come in contact with has been nothing
but supportive and empowering," she said) along with the belief that
bodybuilders train non-stop and rely on unhealthy eating habits to maintain
their fit physiques.

 

"For most people it's a huge departure from how they live their day-to-day
life, and so I think that's what most people get caught up in, the
discipline that's required," she said. "When you approach something with
baby steps, which is what I did, it happens gradually and it's a fairly
painless transition."

 

And if Nelipovich spends a lot of time in the gym, that's because it has
quite literally become her livelihood. She and her boyfriend, Shane Blows, a
lifelong athlete and paracyclist who also competes internationally, own
their own gym, and while Nelipovich follows a strict diet around the clock,
she weight trains just four days a week.

 

"The reality is, 80 percent of how your body looks on the outside happens in
the kitchen. I don't live in the gym - OK, I spend a lot more time in the
gym now because I own one, but usually I'm behind the desk doing paperwork,"
she said with a laugh. 

 

The competition

 

At the NABBA international championships last month, Nelipovich traveled to
the Philippines as a member of Team New Zealand, but was able to represent
the U.S. during the opening ceremony as well.

 

She's competed in the "Figure Tall" class for the past four years, where
sheer muscle size is less emphasized and competitors are judged more on
their muscle definition and symmetry. And while she had aimed for two years
to place first in her class at an international competition, Nelipovich said
the win defied all expectations.

 

"It was amazing just to make the team, and I went into it saying, if I get a
top three placing, I'll be over the moon," Nelipovich said. "So to actually
win my class . I still kind of can't believe it."

 

Nelipovich plans to compete at the local and regional level in New Zealand
next year, and will likely participate in nationals and even the
international competition again if she's eligible and her schedule allows.

 

And while the goal is always to "get on stage in better condition than the
previous time," Nelipovich is willing to admit that she still has much to
learn when it comes to making the best possible choices for her body, and
soon will begin studying to become a certified nutritionist.

 

"I need to know more for me, and the more I learn the more I realize, wow, I
really don't know that much," Nelipovich said. "And I want to know as much
as possible."

Source:

http://www.connectstoughton.com/articles/2015/12/13/former-stoughton-residen
t-wins-international-bodybuilding-competition

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