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View Full Version : Man Loses 140 Pounds to Join Marines


Vegas
11-17-2008, 09:16 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,453631,00.html

Army and Navy recruiters took one look at 330-pound Ulysses Milana and told him to forget about joining. "You've got to lose weight," Milana remembers them saying.

But Marine recruiters were willing to work with him as he began his weight-loss journey in December 2007.

Now, 11 months later, Milana is 140 pounds lighter as he leaves Monday for Parris Island, S.C., to begin boot camp.

It wasn't easy, Milana said, but he managed to slim down through exercise, healthier eating habits and forgoing an occasional beer after work. The 23-year-old said he even refused a beer at his going-away party Saturday night.

Milana said he always wanted to follow in his family's footsteps by serving his country. His wife, Latoya, also comes from a military family.

Much of his weight-loss motivation came from Latoya, a nurse, who helped him reduce his calorie intake when he began his effort in earnest last December.

"It was really difficult for him at first. He always said, 'I'm gonna lose weight.' But I never took him seriously," Latoya told the Sun Journal newspaper. "Then, when he started to do it, I told him he needed to cut his portion sizes way down."

Marine recruiters also worked with him, helping to develop a workout regimen.

"You can sit there and preach and preach, but if you're not willing to help, then it doesn't lead you to success," Staff Sgt. George Monteith said. "If I say, 'Go lose weight and I'll see you in a year,' then what kind of help have I offered to make that happen?"

A former culinary student, Milana said it was a challenge to give up favorites like pizza and hot wings, but cracking open a cold beer after work was perhaps the toughest guilty pleasure to abandon.

"It was really hard. You see all your friends drinking beer, and you're like, 'Oh, man, I want one,"' he said. But his determination kept him on track, and he would head for the gym or don a head lamp and go out for a run.

Iron Jaw
11-18-2008, 03:40 PM
It sounds like he wants the job pretty bad. Anyway, it's good that he lost the flab before entering on duty. Bootcamp can be pretty rough for the fat-bodies.

When I joined in the 70's, it wasn't hard to simply join and get sent to bootcamp, but for the fat-bodies who got there, it was a living nightmare. Many who couldn't hack it initially were sent to PCP (Physical Conditioning Platoon) where all they did was workout all day, while maintaining a strict, watched diet. After they were done with PCP (some were in the platoon for months) they returned to day #1 with a regular platoon and went through the 12-week basic training program. Now the program itself has plenty of PT (Physical Training) and IT (the "disciplinary" training), but PCP was designed just for those out of shape (the overweight, the underweight - those who couldn't do one pullup, etc.). We picked up a PCP grad our first week. The day he was sent to bootcamp he weighed 270 at 5-8. At the time my platoon picked him up, he weighed in at 160 and was in good overall shape.