Doing justice to a tough workout
Personal trainer Bryant Johnson hears it all the time: Four more years.
That’s how long fans of his client, 84-year-old Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, tell him he has to keep her healthy so that a one-term U.S. President Donald Trump doesn’t get to name the liberal justice’s replacement on the Supreme Court.
Johnson’s response: Why just four years? Why not 14?
Interest in the workout of the Supreme Court’s oldest justice and in the man behind it has resulted in a newly released workout book written by Johnson: The RBG Workout: How She Stays Strong ... and You Can Too!
Johnson said he hopes the book will show people that “you’re never too old to do something.”
Ginsburg started working out with Johnson in 1999 after being treated for colorectal cancer. Ginsburg says her husband told her she looked “like a survivor of a concentration camp” and needed to do something to rebuild her strength.
That’s when a judge referred her to Johnson, the records manager at a U.S. federal court who is also an Army reservist and trainer. Their twice-a-week workouts helped Ginsburg regain her strength after her first bout with cancer and again after she was treated for pancreatic cancer in 2009.
“Early on she saw the benefits of exercise,” said Johnson, who has also trained two other liberal justices — Elena Kagan and Stephen Breyer.
Johnson says what he does won’t necessarily make anyone live longer, but it will improve their quality of life. He calls Ginsburg “awesome.”
Ginsburg has called Johnson a “very important part of my life.”
The idea for a book came about after Politico Magazine wrote a piece this past February titled I Did Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’s Workout. It Nearly Broke Me.
In the piece, Johnson, 53, took reporter Ben Schreckinger through it. An editor at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt wrote Johnson after it ran. Would he help with a book? He ran the idea by Ginsburg and she agreed, even writing the book’s foreword. Schreckinger helped Johnson write the text.
The result is an approximately 120-page volume that walks readers through Ginsburg ’s hour-long workout with illustrations of the justice doing each exercise. Some illustrations show her in one regular workout sweatshirt, which reads “SUPER DIVA!”