Jenny’s Journey: Transformative
At this year’s Halloween party, people introduced themselves to Jenny like they were meeting for the first time.
They didn’t recognize her from last year.

But here’s what nobody at that party could see—and what Jenny will tell you matters infinitely more than the physical transformation.
Jenny Maguire has moved 17 times in her life. Air Force family. By the time she landed in O’Fallon, she was on five prescription medications and watching life happen from the sidelines.
Then she made a decision. And what happened over the next 365 days changed everything.
The numbers are staggering.
But they’re not the story.
There’s a moment that brought her to tears.
But it’s not what you think.
There’s something she lost 10 years ago that she never thought she’d get back.
But we’re not telling you what it is yet.
Here’s what we can tell you:
Jenny is a mental health therapist who understands transformation differently than most people. And when she talks about “before and after” culture, what she says might completely change how you think about your own journey.
She uses an analogy involving a recovering alcoholic that makes perfect sense—and makes you realize why so many people fail at lasting change.
She has a philosophy about what actually works. And it includes a list of things most people would consider… uncomfortable. Things like being the one who says no when everyone else says yes.
But the thing that surprised her most about her year at Studio Strong?
It wasn’t the workouts. It wasn’t the programming. It wasn’t even the results.
It was something she describes as “things I didn’t expect to have as much of an impact.”
What things? Why did they matter? And what does that mean for you?

And those two daughters of hers?
What they tell Jenny now is the kind of thing that makes everything else—the medications, the energy, the physical transformation—fade into the background.
Want to know what makes Jenny cry? What she thought was gone forever? What her daughters say to her now? And those two words of advice she’d give herself on day one?
Fair warning: You might not recognize yourself a year from now either. In the best possible way.





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