Elizabeth Sensible says she has gained confidence as a aggressive bodybuilder. She continues to be an advocate for ladies and victims of sexual violence after she was kidnapped when she was 14.
Kim Raff for NPR
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Kim Raff for NPR
The primary time Elizabeth Sensible stepped on stage at a bodybuilding competitors, she was terrified.
She says her smile froze. Her palms shook. Each motion had been choreographed and practiced again and again, right down to the turns and poses she would hit beneath the intense stage lights.
However there was solely a lot she may do to arrange for the pageantry. In contrast to in coaching, she was carrying outsized costume jewellery, together with a big ring. The blonde hair extensions have been new, too.
Then, as she flipped her hair over her shoulder, the ring snagged one of many extensions.
“I just ended up ripping through the extension and just taking out a chunk of my hair, and then turning around and smiling,” she says, laughing about it now.
On the time, she says, she needed to run offstage.
As a substitute, she saved posing in towering heels because the judges rated the physique she’d spent years attempting to outlive inside.
Sensible elevate weights in her house fitness center with bodybuilding coach and pal, Robyn Maher.
Kim Raff for NPR
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Kim Raff for NPR
For Sensible, bodybuilding is not concerning the trophies. But, 4 competitions and several other medals in, she’s earned one thing she by no means anticipated: confidence in her physique.
“I’m at a point in my life where I want to celebrate it,” Sensible says, “I don’t want to carry shame about my body.”
A traumatic detour
In 2002, Sensible was simply 14 years outdated when a self-proclaimed prophet kidnapped her at knifepoint from her Salt Lake Metropolis bed room whereas she slept beside her youthful sister.
Volunteers head out to seek for Elizabeth Sensible in Salt Lake Metropolis just a few days after she was kidnapped in 2002.
Douglas C. Pizac/AP
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Douglas C. Pizac/AP
For months, the world watched the seek for her unfold. Her face was plastered throughout tv screens and the entrance pages of newspapers. All of the whereas, she was residing within the woods simply miles from her house.
Now, at 38, Sensible remembers the methods she tried to outlive the 9 months she was held captive and repeatedly sexually assaulted. She endured frequent humiliation and psychological manipulation.
Sensible attends a White Home ceremony in 2003, after then-President George W. Bush signed into regulation the Amber Alert bundle which might create a system to assist discover kidnapped kids.
Alex Wong/Getty Pictures/Getty Pictures North America
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Alex Wong/Getty Pictures/Getty Pictures North America
In her newest e book, Detours, Sensible describes trauma as a detour — a path you by no means deliberate for and by no means needed. She’s says she survived captivity partially by holding onto small recollections and moments that reminded her that her life existed outdoors these woods.
“My body was hurt, and it had felt like it had been crushed,” she says. “But it carried me through.”
Disconnecting from the physique
That type of constructive relationship with the physique after trauma can take years — and generally a long time — for survivors to develop, says Robyn Brickel, a licensed therapist in Virginia who makes a speciality of trauma-related problems.
“When early childhood trauma happens, especially sexual trauma, people disconnect from their bodies because it’s unsafe,” Brickel says. “That’s how they survive.”
Throughout the abuse, some victims mentally depart their our bodies, focusing as an alternative on small particulars within the room, she says.
“Lots of trauma survivors will tell you, ‘I know exactly how many light bulbs there were in the chandelier,’ how many cracks were in the ceiling, the pattern on the wallpaper” whereas the abuse was occurring, she says. “Because that’s where they are.”
She says the physique turns into one thing to flee moderately than inhabit. For a lot of survivors, that disconnection would not disappear as soon as the abuse ends.
Brickel says survivors typically wrestle with feeling disgrace, confusion and betrayal linked to the physique.
“Lots of survivors believe their bodies betrayed them,” she says.
Sensible says she understands that feeling.
Raised in a conservative Mormon house, the place modesty and purity have been closely emphasised, Sensible says she struggled with profound disgrace after the abuse. She spent a lot of her time taking part in the harp, prevented boys and had few shut associates.
For years, after she was again house, she says she felt strain to change into what she describes as “the most innocent of victims,” she says. “I had to always do the right thing, always say the right thing.”
By the point she was rescued in 2003, 9 months after she was kidnapped, thousands and thousands of individuals already knew her title and face. In contrast to many survivors, Sensible needed to heal whereas within the public eye.
Sensible trains 5 or 6 days every week, often 45 minutes at a time.
Kim Raff for NPR
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Kim Raff for NPR
In the present day, Sensible says, she sees herself otherwise.
“I can be an advocate for women and children,” Sensible says. “But I also can step on stage in a bikini and strut around and strike a pose. And that’s OK.”
To Brickel, that shift — from invisibility to visibility — is important.
“Trauma survivors will [often] make themselves as unattractive as possible to not get attention,” she says. “They want to disappear. Be invisible.”
Sensible competes within the Wasatch Warrior bodybuilding competitors in Salt Lake Metropolis, Utah.
Mitchell Gilbert
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Mitchell Gilbert
‘There is not any end line’
Sensible says her relationship with train has modified dramatically through the years.
After she was rescued, she says she often ran however did not keep it up. She ultimately grew to become a marathon runner, although recurring knee ache compelled her to cease.
“I always need a goal and I need a deadline,” she says.
Bodybuilding provided each. So, she began power coaching a few 12 months and a half in the past.
Now she trains at the very least 5 days every week, for about 45 minutes at a time. She tracks her meals rigorously, counts macros and walks roughly 10,000 steps a day, typically on an incline treadmill.
Mounting analysis reveals weight lifting might assist some trauma survivors reconnect with their our bodies in wholesome methods. In accordance with a research printed final 12 months in Frontiers in Psychology, resistance coaching was linked to lowered post-traumatic stress dysfunction signs and improved emotional well-being. And a 2023 research printed in the identical journal discovered that many trauma survivors described weight lifting as empowering — saying it helped them rebuild confidence, regain a way of management and really feel safer in their very own our bodies once more.
Nonetheless, Brickel says bodily coaching and trauma restoration do not at all times intersect in wholesome methods. For some survivors, train turns into one other type of disconnecting moderately than therapeutic — much like how some use medicine, self-harm, consuming problems or overworking as a option to outrun emotional ache.
The distinction, Brickel says, typically comes right down to intention and emotional consciousness.
“Can I think and feel at the same time?” she says. “Am I running from something, or am I adding to my life?”
That query sits quietly beneath a lot of what Sensible describes. She talks much less about perfection than presence. Much less about punishment than appreciation.
One in all her favourite e book passages comes from Charlotte Brontë’s 1847 novel Jane Eyre. Sensible describes Mr. Rochester telling Jane he may crush the cage round a chicken, however by no means destroy the chicken itself.
Sensible says that metaphor stayed together with her.
Although her physique felt damaged, she says, “it never let my soul be destroyed. It carried me through my kidnapping. It gave me three beautiful children.”
Then she says one thing that also surprises her: “My body is incredible.”
For Brickel, constructive statements like that may symbolize years of emotional work. “We work on that in therapy all the time,” she says.
However she additionally notes that therapeutic is never linear. Some survivors discuss their trauma instantly. Others wait a long time. Some by no means discuss it in any respect.
“There’s no finish line,” Sensible says. “I hope I never stop progressing.”
Sensible is contemplating one other bodybuilding competitors later this 12 months.
Kim Raff for NPR
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Kim Raff for NPR
Nowadays, Sensible says she’s significantly contemplating one other bodybuilding competitors later this 12 months in Nashville — an all-female occasion that acknowledges ladies who’ve survived trauma.
Her face lights up as she talks about it.
Not as a result of she believes trauma disappears, however as a result of she not desires survival to be the one lens by way of which she sees herself.
“We can be lots of things,” she says.
When she would not really feel like strolling outdoors throughout coaching season, Sensible climbs onto her treadmill and watches The Nice British Bake Off whereas dreaming of sweets.
“I want that,” she says, laughing. “I am adding that to my post-show treat list.”
“And I want the whole thing,” she provides. “Not just a slice.”

