A former editor-in-chief of Hello! magazine shares her journey from burnout to physical transformation after completing a grueling Hyrox fitness race at age 50.
Overcoming Burnout and Rediscovering Energy
Burnout struck gradually after 15 years in a high-pressure role. Constant stress and poor sleep left her wired yet exhausted, frayed at the edges. A breaking point came in a London hotel room, overwhelmed by demands after a major event. Unanswered calls from her young children aged eight and six amplified the guilt, prompting a doctor’s note for six weeks off.
Returning home to her husband and boys brought relief mixed with uncertainty. Without her job title, she focused on school runs, gentle exercise, and family evenings. Gradually, her nervous system settled, sleep improved, and energy returned. Reflecting on her career in royal and showbiz news, she realized it no longer excited her. Part-time work followed, fueling plans for reinvention.
Entering the World of Hyrox
A friend’s unconventional 50th birthday gift—an entry into a Hyrox race in London—sparked unexpected change. Previously no sporty type, she had to look up Hyrox, preferring stylish trainers over intense workouts. Yet, entering her 50s ignited a drive for strength, both physical and mental, to counter midriff wobble and arm flab.
Hyrox, launched in 2017, has exploded globally, spanning 85 cities in 30 countries with 650,000 participants last year. This indoor event features eight 1km runs alternated with brutal functional workouts: SkiErg pulls, sled pushes and pulls, 80 burpees with chest-to-floor jumps, 1km rows, farmer’s carries with 16kg kettlebells, sandbag lunges, and 100 wall balls thrown at a target. Competitors race against the clock amid elite athletes.
Competing in the Open Doubles category at London’s Olympia with her personal trainer friend allowed shared efforts, providing motivation beyond career challenges. Her sons, now 12 and 10, cheered her on, impressed more by Hyrox than past magazine editions.
Five Weeks of Intense Training
Training began early this year after retraining as a life coach, boosting her mental state. A chest infection sidelined January, but determination prevailed. Three weekly sessions built leg strength, toned muscles, and revealed waist abs. Muscle gains countered perimenopausal estrogen decline.
She transformed into an early-riser gym enthusiast, mastering terms like splits, deltoids, quads, glutes, hamstrings, and obliques—the diagonal waist muscles creating a sculpted V-shape. Pride overshadowed time investment guilt, enhancing confidence and family admiration.
Race Day Triumph
Nerves peaked amid military-style equipment, strict marshals, booming music, and crowds. After a banana-fueled warmup, her female pairs wave started through smoke. Steady rhythm emerged post-initial runs, though burpees induced nausea. Beyoncé’s “Run The World (Girls)” energized the 5km mark. Burning thighs during lunges and painful wall balls tested limits, but thoughts of proud sons pushed her through.
Crossing the finish line in 1 hour 26 minutes with her partner marked a proud milestone. Legs like jelly, heart pounding, she grinned—impossible just years prior.
Lasting Transformation
No weight loss occurred, yet her waist tightened, arms sculpted, and strength surpassed her 30s. Now “the Mum Who Can Do Anything” to her boys, this Hyrox completion capped career reinvention, burnout recovery, and a strong start to her sixth decade. Physical change proved reinvention possible at any age.

