Notes
Kevin: My
name is Kevin Mathis and I'm the founder of Fit Mix. For those of you that don’t
know Fit Mix is a fitness membership that gives users access to a large network
of gyms, yoga studios, CrossFit boxes and more across New Mexico. Fit Mix was
really created to give people the freedom of choice when it comes to working
out and really make it easier to try new exercises. For some time, I've been
wanting to create a podcast that complimented the network. With that, let me
introduce you to the host of future episodes, Sarah Yingling. Welcome to the
podcast, Sarah.
Sara: Hi, Kevin.
Thanks for having me.
Kevin: So when I
was thinking about creating this podcast and trying to figure out the best
person to host, you're the first person that came to mind. You have a passion
for health and fitness that I've never seen in anybody before. I do have to
know, though, why did you say yes when I asked you?
Sara: It just
seemed, you know, like the perfect thing. Being a former TV reporter, I feel
like, you know, this is kind of my niche speaking to people, interviewing
people kind of right up my alley. So I was like, you know, why not? And we have
some extra downtime. So the perfect combination, perfect storm.
Kevin: Totally
agree. It's clear to anybody that knows you that you are passionate about
health and fitness. Where did that start?
Sara: I'm very
passionate. I don't know, honestly. Like, I've always been a very active person
and always involved in sports. My parents got me into soccer when I was five.
Got me into skiing when I was five. I grew up playing sports. And then once I
got into high school, I was playing volleyball, soccer and doing indoor track.
So I was always like keeping my time busy with playing three sports and all our
sport throughout the year. Every season. And then after that, college decided
to go the soccer rout, played soccer for two years at IUP, which is the Indiana
University of Pennsylvania, located outside of Pittsburgh. But I had to give
that up due to too many concussions. Any idea how many I had, Kevin?
Kevin: I'm going
to guess seven.
Sara: People
always say seven.That's really funny, but I kind of close first saying my
family and I, we're going with twelve.
Kevin: My first
guest was really eleven, but it felt too high.
Sara: Yeah. So I
played goalie almost my entire life. Well now have I would say half my life I
started out playing outside it and then center med but I got recruited in
college to play goalie. But for some reason they ended up taking me out of the
goalie position and moving me to center midfielder. And so that game I went up
for a head ball and this girl and I ended up hitting heads.I fell down,
blackout woke up to everyone around me being put on a stretcher. So a spark
notes version of that. Basically was a vegetable for two weeks.
Kevin: No way.
Sara: Yeah.
Decided it's probably the best route to avoid contact sports from here on out.
Kevin: So is that
I'm assuming that was the last concussion. Did the first ones happen the same
way?
Sara: Yeah.
Growing up in club soccer I played on this national traveling team as a goalie.
Was just getting kicked in the head a lot. Yeah. Fun times. And then going out
for headers and stuff that. So I even wore one of those goofy head gear things.
I don't know if you've ever seen those. They kind of look like scrum caps that
you wear in rugby, but it doesn't cover the top your head, it just covers the
front of your head and then your lobes and then the back of your head. So even
wearing that stupid thing for that last game when I got hit in the head and
still got a concussion, I'm like, yeah, this is my sign that I need to stop.
Kevin: When you
got out of sports. What did you decide to do after?
Sara: Yeah. I was
like, I need to, probably focus on schooling. And so I was like, I'm going to
transfer to Duquesne University. And so that's actually in downtown Pittsburgh
where they have a dedicated broadcast journalism program. So I went there.
Focus on that. But the same time, I was like, I need a competitive outlet. And
so my mom and I were like, what is a non-contact sport that I can do? And she
was like, what about crew? And I'm like, I've literally never been in a boat,
but sure. So I tried out for the crew team and I made it. And so I did crew for
the remaining two years of my college career, which is so cool. I think crew is
probably the most underrated sport. I mean, if you don't know about it,
obviously if you don't grow up near rivers or like any kind of body of water.
You don't have access to it, but like it is so cool. The practices were crazy
because we would have to be up at 4:00 or 5:00 a.m., like it's still dark and
you're rolling down the Monongahela River in downtown Pittsburgh with like the
skyline lit up. It was incredible. And then the needs that we would have were
so awesome because we would travel all up and down the East Coast, obviously,
to all the other schools with a rowing team. It was just a totally different
experience than any other sport I've ever played.
Kevin: When tried
out for a crew, where there people that didn't make the team.
Sara: Yeah.
Kevin: So you had
never done crew before and you just made the team?
Sara: Well, they
had kind of had like an A in a B team. You know, I started out obviously on the
B team, but then once I got better, I started moving to like the other boat. So
it's like eight, four and two. So few times I did races in a two person boat,
which is really hard. Mostly other times I was in an eight person boat. And after
that, this is kind of like ironic and it makes no sense probably to a lot of
people. But all my friends who went to University of Pittsburgh played on the
rugby team. And there's a club team there called the Pittsburgh Angels. And I
ended up playing rugby.
Kevin: Let me
guess, you tried out and you made it.
Sara: Yeah.
Kevin: So you
said, "I don't want to get any more concussions, let me go do rugby."
Sara: Yeah, let's
go play rugby where they actually tackle you. I don't know. I didn't tell my parents
until like a few games in, but I was wearing the scrum cap and in a mouth
guard. But I played sevens mostly because sevens I wouldn't get tackled as much
because I'll just run around all the people. But yeah, I would just avoid the
really big scary girls.
Kevin: Well,
seeing as you had all those concussions, you were probably extra motivated to
not get hit. So that how they help you.
Sara: Yea and
then I would also avoid tackling, which is probably not the best when people
would run by you. I was like, nah, I'll just pretend to try.
Kevin: When did
that end or when did you have to just move over to working out?
Sara: I want to
say a year into playing rugby is when I finally discovered CrossFit and kind of
realized hey I'm actually kind of good at this. And I wanted to start taking it
kind of seriously, like I mean, seriously in the sense that I want to start
competing locally. At Local competitions on the East Coast or just in like the
mid-Atlantic region, basically. So started out at like this smaller CrossFit
gym in the south side of Pittsburgh called CrossFit. Athletics. Spent a good
amount of time there. And then eventually moved to another gym called CrossFit
Mount Lebanon, where the CrossFit Games athlete and Anna Tunnicliffe and her
husband were the owners. So I was like, wow, I want to know actually make it to
regionals, because back then it was regionals. You had to qualify for the open.
And then if you were at the top 20 or something in your region, you would make
it to the regionals and then top five would make it to the CrossFit games. So I
was like I really want tomake it on a team that would be so awesome. So I moved
to that gym. And I want to say we like at one point had a shot of making it to
the regionals. But our coach wouldn't let us go because he said we weren't
experienced enough and he didn't want us to embarrass ourselves.
Kevin: Oh, no.
Sara: Yeah.
Kevin: What a
boost of confidence.
Sara: Right? So
there was my dream of going to regionals. Just down the drain. I was like my
only chance. Come on!
Kevin: Is that
still a goal of yours or has that kind of passed?
Sara: It was like
when I first moved out here to New Mexico, I joined Cross Fit Albuquerque,
which has a lot of good athletes. And in Whitney Cappellucci who has made it to
the games and regionals and everything. I was a member there. with other really
good girls and guys. But I don't think we were all really ever quite on the
same page. So the dream of make it on a team out here to didn't happen either.
Kevin: But yeah,
I mean, you went for it. You might have gotten it, but your coach said, no,
that's OK.
Kevin: In today's
world, what's a day in the life for you?
Sara: So still pretty
passionate about CrossFit. Just not in the sense that like I am. Look, I don't
have like a specific goal really anymore, whereas I did a few years ago. My
only goal really is to just look good and be able to eat a lot of carbs.
Because I love carbs. But also, I'm just a competitive person and I need an
outlet. And so like everyday I feel like you're given a chance to be the best
version of yourself if that's competing with yourself every day or if it's
trying to compete like with members in your box. I feel like CrossFit gives you
that opportunity to have a competitive outlet. So I just like I just enjoy just
doing those workouts and. Trying to be like the best version of myself every
day. I don't like pushing myself physically, mentally. I just feel better. At
the end of day or after a workout like, yeah, it sucks in the moment. If you've
done CrossFit, you'll know the pain of some of the workouts and how you feel
immediately after. But honestly, I wouldn't trade that feeling for anything
else because it's like a sense of accomplishment.
Kevin: For those
of us who like carbs more than working out and struggle with their journey.
What advice do you have for them?
Sara: So I don't
know if this probably sounds really cliche, but it's not motivation all the
time because you're not always motivated to workout. There's been countless
days where I would much rather sit on a couch and eat Ben and Jerry's than go
for a run or go do a workout. But I'm disciplined enough to know that the pros
of working out and eating healthy outweigh the quote, pros of not doing that
that day or eating unhealthy or skipping a workout. Like I was saying, the
feeling that you get the endorphins obviously that you get from working out and
eating healthy totally outweigh those that you would get from sitting on a
couch or eating something that just makes you feel crappy. So it's just like, I
don't know. I've just always been a disciplined person in that regard where I
just I just know that the benefits of it outweigh those of the other option.
Kevin: Yeah, that
makes sense. And sometimes the truth is what it is.
Sara: I think a
lot of like athletes will say that like no matter what modality you're in, I'm
sure you know, the U.S. women's team, soccer team. They don't always want to go
to practice, but they know that in the end, the reward of putting in the work,
the time and effort into practice completely outweighs that of maybe skipping
that run that they have to do or skipping that weight workout. They have to do
work, skipping that practice. The end result, or just like even the immediate,
immediate gratification completely outweighs that. And I think you just keep
that in your mind during all of it. Just remember that it's not don't look for
an immediate satisfaction. If you put in the work, you'll see the results. I'm
excited about that, too. I think people see me and they see my physical
appearance and they think it happened overnight when like a I'm not going to
lie, I was like super chunky in college, like freshman. Fifteen was a big
thing. Like so much so that I literally had frat guys, call me Miss Piggy, like
I was Miss Piggy on the soccer team. And that like superficially motivated me,
but also is like, well, I don't want to be unhealthy either. I don't want to
feel slow on the field, you know, or anything like that. So it's like this is
taking years to get to this point. It's a constant drive and work to eat for my
body like what it needs. Not starving myself, giving my body the fuel it needs
and then obviously putting in the work in the gym everyday.
Kevin: That makes
sense. to switch gears on you because it's been all about fitness and health.
It's something that people don't know about you that's not related to fitness
Sara: I feel like
this is like the toughest question. I love reality TV and I know that people
say it's mind numbing and a waste of time, but sometimes I just want to zone
out and not think about anything and watch people with train wrecks of a life
or people who live more glamorous lives than I do and I want to live
vicariously through them.
Kevin: Or both at
the same time. Ok, so then this last section is gonna be rapid fire questions.
I'm going to ask you the question and you have to answer it without thinking
about it.
Sara: Oh man!
Kevin: Okay, so are
you ready?
Sara: Sure.
Kevin: All right.
Two hours straight of hot yoga or 100 burpees?
Sara: 100
Burpees.
Kevin: What's
your stance on toilet paper? Does the flap go over or under?
Sara: Over.
Kevin: Favorite
time to workout?
Sara: Morning.
Kevin: If you had
any superpower, what would it be?
Sara: Teleporting
myself places.
Kevin: 50 ring
dips or 50 pull-ups?
Sara: 50 pull-ups
Kevin: If you
were arrested without an explanation, what would your friends and family assume
you had done?
Sara: Public
indecency.
Kevin: What's
your go to cheat meal?
Sara: Donuts!
Kevin: If you
could time travel, where would you go?
Sara: I mean, I
love like. World War 2 era. Or World War 1.
Kevin: And then
last but not least, what is your favorite workout?
Sara: CrossFit!
Kevin: All right,
that's it. So that's the end of the rapid fire questions. And actually, it's
the end of the podcast altogether. So thanks for agreeing to be the host going
forward. And I can't wait to see what you create. Thanks Sarah.
Sara: Thanks Kevin.