Betty Lou Sweeney, who couldn't stand up from a chair on her own, would eat six donuts in under an hour and regularly consumed ice cream bars, fried chicken, and potatoes heavy with butter.
But with the help of a personal trainer, the registered nurse from Wisconsin lost 115lbs. She told the Huffington Post: 'I never eat sweets these days because when I did I found I craved them for almost a month... I don't miss them and can be at a party and not even feel tempted anymore.'
'I'd lose weight, and then gain it back, plus more. It had become a vicious cycle for me. I must have tried every diet out there, and they all worked, I just couldn't keep the weight off.'
Raised as an orphan, Mrs Sweeney lived in 12 different foster homes before she was adopted at age 15. 'In that time, I had been abused many times,' she explained. 'My friends were [my] animals, and food.'
She added that she never felt attractive and was often teased as being a 'loser'.
'I never liked myself, except for those times when I had gotten down to a size 10 or 12. I could never maintain it, so it did nothing for my self-esteem,' she said.
At age 69, in 2009, she was hospitalized for a bladder infection which went to the sac that surrounds the heart. In treatment, her kidneys shut down as a result of the medication, and she put on 30lbs of water weight overnight.
'My doctors told my husband that they almost lost me. I felt my family deserved better than this,' she said.
So she asked a dietitian at her work to suggest an eating plan that would usually be given to a newly-diagnosed diabetic.
'I wasn't diabetic yet, but knew I needed to keep my blood sugars stable,' she said.
'On that day, I changed the foods I ate, the way I cooked them and my portion sizes. I got down to about 210 pounds.'
After an Anytime Fitness center opened near her home, she joined lost another 10lbs. But because the weight was coming off at a slow pace, she decided to enlist the help of a trainer.
Now, she is able to do a pull-up for the first time in her life, 20 push-ups and sit-ups, as well as run more than three miles regularly.
In 2011, she set a Guinness World Record for the longest time in an abdominal plank, at 36 minutes and 58 seconds. The previous world record was 33 minutes and 40 seconds
She added: 'Shortly after, a man broke my record, but I believe I still hold it for women.
'I feel younger than I have in years. I have pushed through several injuries, including a dislocated shoulder, a fractured left hand, a pulled calf and, most recently, a torn hamstring.'
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