If you’re looking for some kind of goal to set, to get you started on an exercise program, to stay on track with your existing program, or to take your fitness to the next level… set your sights on one of the Women’s Tri-Fitness competitions!
Sure you can strive to lose a crazy amount of body fat and set a goal or a reward to compete in a figure competition or a bikini contest. And much respect to the ladies who can endure this rigorous training and diet to get there, BUT… what do you do when you’re on stage? You stand there, in a bikini and very high heels, and you pose and you are judged on your appearance. Nobody cares how strong you are, whether you can jump, or pull yourself up, or run. So long as you look athletic, that’s your ticket into the show. I’ve began preparing for one of these figure competitions twice before, but besides becoming ill both times too close to the competition date, it always felt uncomfortable that I was putting myself out there as a woman to be judged on my appearance. That part just doesn’t seem right… so rather than try, try again on this front, I explored other options.
With the women’s tri-fitness competition, not only do you look great because your body simply becomes a product of your training or your “sport”, you get to do stuff and show all the hard work you’ve put in during that training. As the name implies, there are three parts to this competition - a fitness routine, a fitness skills challenge, an obstacle course and a grace/physique round.
The fitness routine is a choreographed routine set to music, where you can show off your strength, endurance, flexibility and presentation and use any other skills you might have - dance, gymnastics or cheerleading, martial arts, etc.
The skills challenge, next on the list, is harder than it sounds! It consist of 50 box jumps for time, bench pressing 60% of your weight for reps, and a timed shuttle run.
The obstacle course is my holy grail, and my goal is to compete by my 35th birthday just to dominate this beast. It comprises 12 “stations”: a 10-foot wall, a running grid, ascending and descending monkey bars, a balance beam, a 15-foot cargo net, a shuttle run, two hurdles, a steeple chase jump over water, a sprint, and over-and-under bars.
I went to the training camp a few years ago in Tampa, and I have to admit the obstacle course is my favorite part, and quite possibly the most challenging, since I didn’t really have a varied athletic background growing up. In fact, except for sprinting and monkey bars, it was the first time I’d jumped hurdles, climbed walls or any of that!


The final, optional, round is the grace and physique round, where… yeah… you stand on stage and wear a bikini and high heels and are judged on your grace and physical appearance. Wait a minute, Ivonne! Didn’t you just say…? I know what I said, but in the Women’s Tri-Fitness, by the time you get to this event, you’ve more than proven what that beautiful, athletic body can do! You can go up on that stage, confident that you’ve trained hard not to simply stand up there and hope the judges agree that you look good.
Their next big competition is in July 2009 - the Tri-Fitness World Challenge in Las Vegas! Check out the website and register early!