honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, April 27, 2006

FITNESS PROFILE | JOHN OLKOWSKI
Acing it all

By Michael Tsai
Advertiser Staff Writer

John Olkowski plays tennis, runs and swims to keep fit. He also eats healthful food and even grows some of it himself.

JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

spacer spacer

STAYING FIT

Workout habits: He runs two miles twice a week, often pushing his son in a stroller; lifts weights in a home gym twice a week; swims in pool at home once a week for 20 to 30 minutes.

Why I started working out: "I had always been active, but during medical school and at the beginning of my residence, I had no time. During my residency, I just made the time. I joined a health club. I'd go after clinic hours and spend an hour on the stair-stepper, or lift weights for an hour. I got fanatical about it."

Diet: "My diet is usually pretty good — lots of greens and salads. I really push that at home. I grow greens at home: arugula, kale, Swiss chard. I also read labels for fat content and try to avoid processed food, foods with a label on it. We eat a lot of chicken and some fish. We'll have red meat once in a while. I also drink a multivitamin fiber drink."

Biggest motivator: "My little boy."

Advice for people in the same boat: "It's just maintaining a healthy balance with your workouts. Make it not drudgery but a fun part of your day. The same goes with food. Make it a healthy part of your life. When you eat well, it makes it easy to avoid fast food and burgers."

spacer spacer

John Olkowski plays tennis at the Oahu Club in Hawai'i Kai to help keep himself fit.

JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

spacer spacer

John Olkowski

Age: 46

Occupation: Ophthalmologist

Home: Hawai'i Kai

Height: 5-feet-10

Weight: 154 pounds

Stays in shape by: Running, swimming, weight training, tennis (once a week)

Sports fantasy: Increase swimming distance to two miles

Interesting fact: Olkowski once ran the Kïlauea Volcano Wilderness Run 10K, then climbed to the Red Hill Cabin at Mauna Loa on the same day. He reached the summit the next day.

spacer spacer

At 46, ophthalmologist John Olkowski has an active life, but relaxing and playing with his 2-year-old son are part of his fitness style.

JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

spacer spacer

As John Olkowski figures it, if he just follows family tradition, he should be in great shape for many years to come.

Three of his grandparents lived into their 90s. His father is 82 and can still be seen pushing a mower through his two-acre plot in Bridgewater, N.J. The patriarch would still be climbing trees to cut down branches, Olkowski says, if his boys weren't so opposed to it.

Olkowski's mother prefers to do her training indoors, walking for an hour and a half a day at a nearby mall.

"I have longevity in my family," Olkowski says. "My dad still has so much energy. He just go-go-goes. I'd like to keep going until I'm 80, 90, 100."

Yet Olkowski's fine health is as much about nurturing good habits as it is about the winner's hand that nature dealt. He maintains a vigorous and varied workout schedule, grows his own vegetables and fruit, and gets his seven or eight hours of sleep as many nights as his busy schedule will allow.

For Olkowski, an ophthalmologist, it's discipline without drudgery, an easy-to-swallow trade-off for being able to "feel good on a daily basis."

Olkowski grew up in Bridgewater and attended graduate and medical school at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. He spent a year of residency at Tufts University in Boston — "the coldest winter I ever spent" — before moving to Hawai'i in 1990.

"I'd visited a few times, and I loved the climate and the people; I loved the feel of it out here," he says.

Before starting his own practice seven years ago, Olkowski worked for Kaiser Permanente, where he met his wife, an emergency-room doctor who had trained in Detroit.

Olkowski's wife knew the new love of her life was a healthy guy, but it might not have hit home until after they were married.

"I was sauteeing Swiss chard for breakfast," Olkowski explains. "She looked at it and said, 'What the heck is that?'"

Olkowski credits "39 years of being a bachelor" with honing his culinary skills, developing in him a feel for food that is often best realized through improvisation.

The doctor has been known to dazzle his wife with gourmet meals cobbled together from whatever disparate ingredients the refrigerator or cupboard might bear.

The only problem, Olkowski says, is that such moments of creativity are usually impossible to duplicate.

"It bothers (my wife) ... that I can't reproduce some of these dishes," he says, laughing.

The Olkowskis have a 2-year-old son, and while the arrival of their child has required a few tweaks in the couple's schedule, they've found that the boy has only enhanced their resolve to stay fit and enjoy life as a family. (Because of the nature of his wife's work, Olkowski asked that her name and the name of their son not be used in this article.)

Olkowski bought his wife a tennis-ball machine, which allows her to hit while he watches their son, and vice versa. They also take regular hikes up Mariner's Ridge or the Makapu'u Lighthouse Trail with their son strapped to Olkowski's back and the family dogs in tow.

Olkowski, who runs and swims regularly, says his son also likes to join him when he does his weekly weight training. Sometimes Olkowski will do push-ups with his son on his back; other times, his son will take command of Mom's light hand-held weights for a few curls.

Olkowski's hand-me-down lessons on healthy living also include good diet and a healthy dose of creative relaxation. He and his son plant fruits and vegetables together, and collaborate on oil paintings (Olkowski has studied art and dreams of taking a sabbatical to Tuscany to cook and paint).

Even Olkowski's vices are not totally unhealthy. He prefers green tea over coffee because of the mellower caffeine effect, and, taking into account recent studies on antioxidants, his fondness for red wine and dark chocolate falls somewhere short of sinful.

As an eye doctor, of course, Olkowski is adamant about proper sun protection. He recommends sunglasses with 100 percent ultraviolet protection or newly developed sports lenses.

"I want to stay healthy for my little boy, and for myself," Olkowski says.

Good health, after all, is all in the family.

Reach Michael Tsai at mtsai@honoluluadvertiser.com.