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From chain-smoker to fitness cheerleader

It has been 32 years since an over-weight, chain-smoking office dweller would run before dawn because he was too embarrassed to be seen huffing and puffing around the neighbourhood.

It has been 32 years since an over-weight, chain-smoking office dweller would run before dawn because he was too embarrassed to be seen huffing and puffing around the neighbourhood.

Today that same guy has opened 118 stores selling not only the gear runners need and want, but also a healthy lifestyle including learn-to-run programs.

John StantonThis ragged-breath to riches story is the tale of John Stanton, founder of The Running Room.

On his recent trip to Victoria, I caught up to the marathoner and Ironman (which was easy because he was standing still) to talk about his passion to improve the quality of people鈥檚 lives through being active.

Now a youthful 65 and a grandfather of four children aged four to seven, his focus is on the entire family.

His recently published book Running Room鈥檚 Book on Family Fitness, co-authored with education athletics consultant Don Zabloski, offers practical tips as well as motivation to get kids moving and make healthier food choices.

He marvels at the fact that one-third of children in Canada aged five to 17 are overweight or obese while playgrounds, better engineered and designed than ever before, stand empty.

empty playground

Kids today are either inactive or scheduled into highly organized sports that can be downright unaffordable for a family with more than one child.

聽鈥淚t鈥檚 gotten to the point that if you have two kids in hockey and one is half interested you don鈥檛 encourage them because it鈥檚 so expensive,鈥 Stanton says.

His book isn鈥檛 about convincing families to run or selling them a pricey food supplement. In fact, it鈥檚 rather common sense.

The sections on healthy eating draw from the Canada Food Guide and the activities are 鈥榓 return to play.鈥 This is unstructured, active living 鈥 whether it鈥檚 bringing a ball to the neighborhood park, or walking together to the art gallery.

So why does Canada need this book?

Because sometimes we need someone to remind us of the obvious - to point us to our own backyards, beyond the tip of our noses, iPads, game consoles and color-coded calendar on the fridge.

When鈥檚 the last time you saw the kids on your street or in a park play 鈥榢ick the can鈥 or 鈥楻ed Rover鈥.

As Stanton points out, this doesn鈥檛 require government funding or pricey equipment that your son or daughter grows out of in six months.

鈥淲e need a return to family gathering, what鈥檚 missing today is that we are all busy, we鈥檝e lost the social interaction as a family.鈥

What I like about the book is that there are practical tips and useful suggestions to help people be creative about activities, no matter what their fitness levels.

Stanton says one of the reasons his stores鈥 learn-to-run programs succeed is because the social, group atmosphere helps people overcome their fear of embarrassment by being with others who are also starting something new.

The same idea can work with motivating family members who might have lapsed from being active, to becoming role models for their children while having fun together.

Both start with making an effort, one step at a time.

Book cover