Muscle Memory digital Dec/Jan 2019 | Page 57

RECENTLY MUSCLE MEMORY HAD A CHANCE TO SIT DOWN AND CHAT WITH ADOLPH TO LEARN A LITTLE BIT ABOUT HAS PAST AND FUTURE GOALS. MM: IN 2017 YOU WON YOUR IFBB PRO CARD, AFTER FINISHING FIRST PLACE IN THE LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION AND SECOND OVERALL AT THE CBBF CANADIAN NATIONALS. CAN YOU TELL US A BIT ABOUT THE HIGHLIGHTS OF YOUR JOURNEY UNTIL THAT POINT? ADOLPH: I think the biggest highlight came in January 2011. I had just started working out and I was in a very dark place. For me go- ing to the gym was kind of like therapy after everything I’d been through. I knew nothing about bodybuilding. I was 28 years old and it helped me take my mind off my problems. It made me feel stronger and more confident. After a few weeks of workouts I was at the gym and someone I didn’t know asked if I was a bodybuilder. I replied “No” and he said I should train to be a professional bodybuilder because I have an amazing physique. At the time I didn’t really take him seriously and laughed at the idea but then other people started telling me the same thing. A few months later I met Fedel Clarke who is an IFBB Pro bodybuilder. He told me about the OPA Natural Provincial show coming up and he thought I should compete in it. He volun- teered to help prep me and that September I won the overall. MM: YOU RECENTLY MADE YOUR PRO DEBUT AT THE 2018 TORONTO PRO SUPERSHOW IFBB CHAMPIONSHIPS WHERE YOU PLACED 5TH.WERE YOU SATISFIED WITH YOUR PLACING? AND ALSO TELL US A BIT ABOUT YOUR CONTEST PREP. ADOLPH: No I wasn’t happy at all. I was very disappointed. I’m not used to finishing out of the top three. I felt like I was going to win the show and I still think I was one of the best bodybuilders on stage but the judges had a different opinion. I really felt that I deserved to be in the top three. As for my prep and dieting, I don’t prep long. A lot of people say that’s not possible. I usually prep for six weeks. The average bodybuilder preps for at least 16 weeks. My fat percentage in the off-season is very low. I’m always ready to compete. I have good genetics. When I prep too long, I lose muscle. MM: WHEN YOU FINALLY MADE IT TO NORTH AMERICA YOU ARRIVED AND LIVED IN CHICAGO. TELL US ABOUT SOME OF YOUR EARLY EXPERI- ENCES AND THE CHALLENGES OF ACCLIMATING TO AMERICAN CUSTOMS AND CULTURE. ADOLPH: My oldest brother was sponsored by his wife to travel to the US. Later through a study program he sponsored me to come to the United States. I arrived at JFK airport where my brother and his wife picked me up. When I got off the plane and saw the city I felt like I was dreaming. It was so different than Africa. Everything seemed abundant. My first meal was a McDon- ald’s cheeseburger, fries and a coke. It was the best food I had ever tasted in my life. The following week I traveled to my campus in Chicago. I’d been staying at the campus residence until Thanksgiving when I met a special couple, Ron and Joe Gilley. After sharing one meal with them they invited me to stay with them at their home and for two years treated me like their own son. After high school, I was accepted into St. Mary’s University in Minnesota where I graduated with a degree in IT. The most challenging thing about being a refugee was money. I didn’t have any. I had to work two jobs while attending university. I worked as a home health aide and as a courier. MM: AFTER YOU GRADUATED FROM UNIVER- SITY YOU DECIDED TO MOVE TO CANADA AND LIVE IN TORONTO. WHY TORONTO? MUSCLEMEMORYMAG.COM 55