Heraldnet.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2009 11:03 am
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
The Buzz
Let's talk turkey
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Thanksgiving tradition evolves as families evolve
Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Turkey gets attention, but don't forget the pie
Latest gallery

Opening Day at Stevens Pass
November 19. 2009 (10 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Tuesday


Father guilty of manslaughter in girl's death
Snohomish County budget passes, with a caveat
Soldier with ties to Marysville killed in Afgha...
Monday


Economy may silence Everett Symphony's season
Inmates with mental illness bring extra costs t...
Help with heating bills late to arrive this year
Sunday


Nurse seeks help healing hidden wounds of wars
Count drags on long after the election's over
Groups work to help those in uniform
Saturday


Nearly 30 kids adopted during annual event in S...
Gold Bar couple admit animal cruelty in puppy m...
Arlington area man's arrest in alleged burglar'...
Friday


Nearly 2,000 turn out for Stevens Pass opening day
Victim of alleged burglary now a suspect in kil...
Shelter asks for diaper donations during holida...
Thursday


Safety long a concern for road involved in fata...
State budget's $2 billion hole will require dee...
County considers building for disaster response...
Wednesday


Jury will decide accident or murder in girl's s...
Marysville rejects idea of a much later start f...
Flu’s full force shocks an Edmonds man an...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Kevin Nortz / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Winifred Pristell, 70, trains at Columbia City Fitness Center last month. The retired barber holds two world records in weightlifting.
Kevin Nortz / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Winifred Pristell, 70, trains at Columbia City Fitness Center last month.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Monday, February 2, 2009

The Everett great-grandma they call "Heavy Metal"

SEATTLE -- It's 5:30 in the morning, 29 degrees, still dark out, and Winifred Pristell is waiting inside her blue 1988 Toyota station wagon with the engine off.

She's put nearly 300,000 miles on the car, which she drives three days a week from her Everett apartment to her gym in Seattle's Rainier Valley.

"Goin' strong for an old gal like that," Pristell, 70, says in a voice that hints of a Southern past.

One could say the same about her.

This great-grandma they call "Heavy Metal" is a competitive weightlifter with two world records and aspirations for more.

On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, Pristell rises at 3:30 a.m., gets ready and by a quarter to five, she's miles ahead of thousands of Snohomish County daily commuters traveling south on I-5.

Her personal trainer is Andrew "Bull" Stewart, a former powerlifting world champion who owns Columbia City Fitness Center.

Pristell is a woman of faith, but she'd sooner miss church than a training session with Bull.

"I love to worship God, but I can do that in my house on Sunday," Pristell says.

So on a dozen days every month, she rises before the roosters crow, beats the rat race to Seattle, swings east toward Lake Washington, then south along Rainier Avenue S.

She passes miles of strip malls, auto shops and ethnic groceries until she reaches a few tree-lined blocks with brick crosswalks, fancy coffee shops and her gym.

The fitness center doesn't open until 6, but Pristell typically arrives a half-hour early. Early enough to see drunks still hanging around from the night before and people in suits on their way to steel-and-glass office towers downtown.

"Winifred is special," said Stewart, a big man with a big heart who charges his personal training in cups of coffee from the old lady. "She has no limitations. Mentally, physically, she just has a spirit about her, an attitude that she can do anything."

Born in Baton Rouge, La., and raised in Seattle, Pristell never completely shook the Southern accent that kids made fun of in grade school.

Stewart, who came up working on farms in Mississippi, said he feels connected to Pristell because of their Southern roots. He sees Pristell as a mother figure and pays her entrance fees, hotel rooms and airfare for competitions. Pristell says she loves Stewart like a son.

A retired barber who owned a few shops in Seattle's Central District long ago, Pristell is blessed with the gift of gab.

She freely hands out thank-you-kindlys and kudos like they're going out of style. Yet she also can be blunt, like on a recent day at the gym when she told a teenage boy who works there that he is too fat. She's not trying to be mean, she says. Sometimes she just says things without thinking first.

Even so, with her infectious smile and joshing nature, Pristell is more honey than vinegar. She has nicknames for the gym regulars. There's PeterPeter, Loverboy, Blue Eyes, Goodman, Moneyman, The Detectives and so on.

Pristell wasn't always in such great shape and spirits.

At 47, the 5-foot-5-inch-tall woman was dangerously obese, weighing 235 pounds -- a body mass index of about 40. A body mass index of 25 is considered overweight; obesity starts at 30.

Since then, she's dropped five dress sizes and is a comparatively svelte 180 pounds.

The weight just crept up on her, she says. She was working long hours, eating poorly and drinking and smoking too much.

One day while taking a bath, Pristell remembers feeling as though she was dying.

She asked daughter, Cynthia, if she would walk with her.

"I couldn't walk but a block that first time," she said.

Every morning the two walked together, a little farther each day. Within a year, Pristell was up to three miles, five days a week, she said.

That's about the point she walked into a gym for the first time in her life. She tried aerobic exercises, stationary bikes, and other machines and contraptions.

Years would pass before she tried free weights and more than a decade before she began lifting weights competitively at the age of 60.

At 68, Pristell set world records for her age in bench press, 176.2 pounds, and in dead lift, 270 pounds, for her age group and weight class, according to World Association of Bench Pressers & Deadlifters.

She's set scores of other state and national records.

"She's pretty proud of it, and I would be too, at that age," says Giovanni Rogano, 20, who serves Pristell coffee with cream and sugar at Tutta Bella, a cafe up the street from her gym.

Rogano has three autographed photos of Pristell from various competitions. She calls the trim Italian man "my boyfriend who makes the world's best coffee."

Carol Downing, a 19-year veteran in the Everett city clerk's office, also has autographed photos of the senior weightlifter.

She describes Pristell as a "happy soul."

Soon after Pristell moved into the Broadway Plaza Apartments a few blocks from Everett City Hall, she came in to apply for a job, which she didn't get.

But on that day, Pristell complimented Downing's smile and has since stopped by every few weeks to chat and to share handwritten short stories that she hopes someday to have published.

She has arthritis in her hands, feet and back. Her fingers are stiff and gnarled and she can't make a fist with her left hand. One of her doctors recommended against continuing strength training. She's not willing to give it up just yet.

"We are all dealing with something. If you let whatever you're dealing with control your life, you have no quality of life," she said. "When you really cut down to it, a lot of people are worse off than I am. I see it all the time."

In March at a state powerlifting championship in Olympia, she will attempt to shatter her own record and deadlift 300 pounds.

"Sometimes they call me a freak," Pristell said. "That's OK. I like being called a freak sometimes. It's kind of unheard of, a person being my age doing what I can do. For me, the older I'm getting, the stronger I'm becoming."

David Chircop: 425-339-3429 or dchircop@heraldnet.com.




READER COMMENTS
Be the first to comment.
You must be a registered user and verify your e-mail address to post comments to blogs or articles on HeraldNet.

To register, click here. To read other terms and conditions, click hereLog out

1. Early morning gunfire wounds 2 in Everett
2. Father guilty of manslaughter in girl's death
3. ZZ Top fans get Everett buzzing
4. Crash devastating for toddler
5. Snohomish County budget passes, with a caveat
6. Fall 2009 Wesco All-League Teams
7. Laundry fire sparks concerns over smoke detectors
8. Two people injured in Highway 9 collision
9. Northrop: Boeing's 767 ‘no longer commercially viable'
10. Lynnwood police seek hit-and-run driver
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Holiday Lightings & Santa Sightings
Ruling in the pool
Archbishop Murphy takes title
A season of performing arts
Budget numbers have official fuming
Wildcats move on to 2A semifinals
Holiday Bazaars & Fairs Calendar
Edmonds’ Westgate Chapel serves up hospitality for holiday
Mavericks fall
The Enterprise Online Newspaper


20% Off Dinner
Up to $75 Value!

$5 Off
Stylecut

FREE 6 lb. Pad w/
30yd Carpet Purchase

$1 off French Dip
$4.99 Burger Basket

$2 OFF
at Box Office

$5 OFF
Lunch or Dinner

25% off Bath & Groom
New Customers

Oil - Snohomish County
Low Prices - Fill Now!

Lube, Oil & Filter
Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE

15% Off
All Repairs!
TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes

ADVERTISEMENT