Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Helping Pittsburgh­ers stay in shape for free

19 Neighbors How Western Pennsylvan­ians are helping, hoping and coping during the COVID-19 pandemic

- By Dan Gigler

Chris Edmonds says Pittsburgh saved his life. He came here 26 years ago as a high school junior, seeking refuge from the unforgivin­g streets of East Point, Ga., just outside of Atlanta. His mother, a Pittsburgh native raising him alone, sent him back to her hometown to live with his aunt on Highland Avenue in Turtle Creek. It changed the trajectory of his life.

On his first day at Woodland Hills High School, he encountere­d legendary Wolverines coach George Novak, who coaxed him onto the football field, beginning a journey that would take him to big-time college football at West Virginia University and culminate in two seasons in the NFL.

Now, at 42, he goes back to that same field, the Wolvarena, and local gyms to teach fitness and nutrition free of charge to folks chronicall­y underserve­d in both areas — and just maybe change the trajectory of their lives, too. That he continues to do so during this pandemic only heightens the importance of his mission.

At 6-foot-3 and 260 pounds, with shoulders like boulders, biceps like bowling balls and a thick beard flecked with gray, Mr. Edmonds’ presence belies the affable, upbeat nature of the founder of the Athletic Trauma Unit. He creates a genuine community with his workouts, which sometimes attract hundreds of people. But they started with just him and two others.

In 2006, he had played a few years with the Cincinnati Bengals and a little time in NFL Europe. Then the 29year-old hung up his helmet.

“I felt good about walking away from it, with my knees and my shoulders and my head intact,” Mr. Edmonds said. “I wanted to get on with some different ventures in life — something that was mine, something that I could say, ‘I did that.’

“I had in my mind that I was always going to come back. I felt indebted to the Woodland Hills community.”

He worked as a juvenile correction­al officer until June 2014. At another crossroads, he delved into his true passion — fitness — but also with a specific mission: giving people advice to get in shape when they don’t have a gym or the means to pay for it.

“I didn’t want people to have to pay me,” he said. “I felt like the gripe within the community was they didn’t want to go to the gym because they were far away — in Monroevill­e, in Murrysvill­e or way Downtown.”

The concept of food deserts — areas with residents of lower income and reduced mobility who have limited access to affordable and nutritious food — has gained increasing awareness in recent years. So too have “fitness deserts.” Neighborho­ods such as Braddock, Rankin and Turtle Creek are like the overlappin­g part of a Venn diagram for both types of deserts.

Mr. Edmonds became a certified personal trainer, then eliminated the need for a gym from the equation. His workout was designed around the principles of body resistance movements, so all participan­ts need is themselves and gravity. No weights, no machines, no ropes, no kettlebell­s or box jumps.

He hosted his first workout at the Wolvarena in 2014.

“Two people showed up the first day. Within a few weeks, there were 10. By the end of the summer, we’d have 50 to 100 people. It really caught hold.”

Anyone from kids to seniors can participat­e and go at their own pace, although Mr. Edmonds will push them with positivity. After a workout, a friend remarked, “Man, this is like, traumatic. We put ourselves through some real trauma — athletic trauma.”

The name Athletic Trauma Unit — ATU for short — was born.

Mr. Edmonds does private athletic training as a separate business, but to continue the mission of free workouts, he started a 501(c) (3) charitable organizati­on that relies on donations. He’s also started a food truck to promote healthy eating.

“I’m not a nutritioni­st, but the whole intention of the food truck is teaching people healthy eating by showing them, ‘This tastes good. I’ll give you the recipe, and you can make it at home without a lot of salt and sauce. You can help your family be more healthy so we can build a healthier community.’ ”

He’s led turkey drives at Thanksgivi­ng, and his Athletic Trauma Unit participat­es in the Pittsburgh PostGazett­e’s Goodfellow­s fund, which helps Toys for Tots provide toys to families in need during the holiday season. To donate, send your tax-deductible donation to Post-Gazette Goodfellow­s, Box 590, Pittsburgh, PA 15230 or donate online at post-gazette.com/goodfellow­s. The Post-Gazette acknowledg­es every contributi­on in the newspaper.

Mr. Edmonds has not let the pandemic get in the way of his mission, even if that means mandatory masks, temperatur­e checks, limiting class attendees and scheduling more frequent workouts with fewer people. He started a YouTube channel for workouts and moved his classes to Zoom in response to the most recent state restrictio­ns.

“I don’t care if it’s one person or 100, we’re going to work out,” he said. “That person might be dealing with mental health or family issues, so I approach everyone the same. I struggle too, just like everyone else. Taking away some of these different barriers can be helping someone save their own life.

“I’ve seen people meet in these classes and get married and have kids. One person met another and ended up donating their kidney to them. A friend lost 250 pounds and got a grant to have excess skin removed because he did it naturally. A woman with a prosthetic got a grant for a running leg. We have a 93-year-old woman who comes here.”

Candace Foster, an accountant from Homewood, has been coming since the beginning. The 53-year-old single mother of three has precious little time to work out, and gyms weren’t for her. With ATU, she found not only an avenue to fitness, but a genuine community of friends who work out together and have dinner and socialize together, too.

“I knew from the first workout that this was it,” she said. “It was all levels, ages, men and women, all in different places in life with one thing in common: We wanted to get or stay fit and maintain health and wellness.

“Now it’s this big whole network,” Ms. Foster continued. “We’re just regular people. No one comes to work out thinking they can’t measure up. We all finish together and make sure no one is left behind. He really has an impact, and it helps during these dark times.”

These dark times make exercise difficult, especially when you add snow into the mix. Mr. Edmonds says that right now, it’s not as important what you do, but that like the Nike slogan says, you just do it. Every day.

“We’re all human beings. It’s like anything. It’s a force of habit. If you take yourself off of the things that you do every day, it can lead to different issues.”

Besides, Mr. Edmonds said, “No one wants to get COVID handles.”

 ?? Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette ?? Chris Edmonds, center, teaches a fitness class on Dec. 11 at Greater Valley Community Services in Braddock. In response to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, Mr. Edmonds’ nonprofit, Athletic Trauma Unit, offers workouts via Zoom and a YouTube channel.
Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette Chris Edmonds, center, teaches a fitness class on Dec. 11 at Greater Valley Community Services in Braddock. In response to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, Mr. Edmonds’ nonprofit, Athletic Trauma Unit, offers workouts via Zoom and a YouTube channel.
 ?? Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette ?? Chris Edmonds leads a workout group in a set of pushups on Dec. 11 at Greater Valley Community Services in Braddock.
Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette Chris Edmonds leads a workout group in a set of pushups on Dec. 11 at Greater Valley Community Services in Braddock.

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