USA TODAY US Edition

Carrie Underwood expands her healthy-living empire

- Morgan Hines

The first-time author shares her philosophy, “The Fit52 Life,” in a new book and app.

Carrie Underwood, the seven-time Grammy award-winning singer and songwriter who came to fame as the winner of “American Idol” in 2005, has written her first book. ❚ But it’s not about music. It’s focused on one of the multifacet­ed star’s other passions: fitness and healthy living.

In “Find Your Path: Honor Your Body, Fuel Your Soul, and Get Strong with the Fit52 Life,” Underwood (with help from her writing partner, Eve Adamson) shares her fitness philosophy, called “Fit52.”

While Underwood juggles her careers as a country singer, businesswo­man and designer with motherhood, she also maintains a healthful lifestyle. That doesn’t mean being perfect every day, she tells USA TODAY.

The book “looks at health as an overall balanced approach to things and being good,” Underwood says. “It’s more about what your week looks like instead of trying so hard to be super-strict every single day.”

To do this, she had to find her path and stick to it. Now, she wants to help others do the same. The book’s launch coincides with the debut of Underwood’s app, fit52. And the Underwood fitness empire goes beyond her two newest endeavors – she also has a line of fitness apparel, CALIA, which she created with Dick’s Sporting Goods.

“It all started with a love for health and fitness and has blossomed into lots of things,” she says. “I live and breathe and sleep and eat all of this,” she adds, noting that she’s dressed head-to-toe in CALIA at that very moment.

In the book, Underwood shares healthful food options, recipes and journaling practices in addition to her Fit52 workout program, which involves picking from a deck of cards to determine exercises.

“In the book, we tell people about exercises and give everyone the tools that they need. We mapped out different paths for people to choose – can be beginner, intermedia­te, advanced.” The fit52 app is an extension of the book, she says. It’s engineered to make

fitness fun, almost like a game. The app is free to download, and subscriber­s are eligible for a two-week trial period. Monthly subscripti­ons cost $7.99, quarterly subscripti­ons cost $19.99 and annual subscripti­ons cost $51.99; subscripti­ons are billed at the end of the trial period.

In the book, Underwood also shares her own journey to healthful living.

“I was always lucky to be able to go play outside as a kid,” she says. “But you know, I’m from a small town kind of in the South in the middle of the country, and health really wasn’t a priority,”

When she was in her early 20s, she started to feel her metabolism shift.

“I hadn’t really started paying attention to nutrition,” she explains. “It got to a point where I didn’t feel good.”

Then she made some changes and began zoning in on nutrition and exercise. She feels lucky she was able to turn it around – she called it a “reset” to her life.

Now, she’s staying on that path. “I remember what that felt like to feel slow and tired, and I don’t want to go back,” she says.

She dealt with the pressures of the spotlight too, and was focused on her weight – it seemed like a numbers game. She eventually shifted her mindset from what clothes she could fit into to focusing on nutrition and what made her feel better.

She made sure her goals would allow her “to operate this machine called ‘the body’ in a way that I felt good about.”

Focusing on healthy living in a bigpicture way has helped her enjoy life. “I still feel good in what I have on, even if I eat half a pizza when I’m watching the Super Bowl,” she adds.

Her biggest tip?

“Just keep going,” she says. “It shouldn’t be a chore, which is why we tried to make the app fun and keep you on your toes.”

Small steps can make a really big difference.

“I feel like it’s all about practical choices, nothing in the book or in the app or anything is weird or unattainab­le, it’s practical,” Underwood says.

 ?? LARRY MCCORMACK/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Carrie Underwood performs at the CMA Awards at Bridgeston­e Arena on Nov. 13, 2019 in Nashville, Tenn.
LARRY MCCORMACK/USA TODAY NETWORK Carrie Underwood performs at the CMA Awards at Bridgeston­e Arena on Nov. 13, 2019 in Nashville, Tenn.
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