Current:Home > Invest58-year-old grandmother of 12 breaks world planking record after holding position for more than 4.5 hours -BeyondProfit Compass
58-year-old grandmother of 12 breaks world planking record after holding position for more than 4.5 hours
View
Date:2025-04-13 03:12:12
There's a new world record for the longest plank ever held by a woman – and it was broken by a grandmother in Canada.
Guinness World Records announced late last month that 58-year-old DonnaJean Wilde, a mother of five and grandmother of 12 in Canada, broke the women's world record for the longest time in an abdominal plank position after holding it for 4 hours, 30 minutes and 11 seconds – 10 minutes longer than the previous record established in 2019. She spent that entire duration with her forearms and toes touching the ground and her body remaining lifted and straight.
Wilde, who is now retired, completed the event at the high school where she previously served as vice principal. She told Guinness that the first two hours were relatively quick, but by the end, there was a bit of a struggle.
"My elbows hurt pretty bad," Wilde said. "I was so worried about losing my form and I think that's why my quads hurt because I was just really tense."
The last hour "was the most challenging," she said, but by "breathing, staying calm and not shaking," in the last 30 minutes, she was able to persevere. Her main motivator was her dozen grandchildren, all of whom attended the record-breaking event.
But breaking a world record doesn't come easy. Wilde spent every day planking for up to three hours, during which time she would watch movies and even study for her master's degree. In preparation for the attempt, she did that three-hour exercise twice a day.
"I realized that I could read and do things when I was planking and fell in love with it," she said.
Wilde has been planking for more than a decade, getting into the activity after she broke her wrist 12 years ago and couldn't run or lift weights while she was in a cast.
And she did it all while dealing with chronic pain in her hands and arms. She suffers from transverse myelitis, a condition in which both sides of a section of the spinal cord become inflamed, sending pain to those areas she relies on to hold a plank. Her husband Randy told Guinness, however, that he believes the pain she regularly experiences ended up being more helpful than hurtful when it comes to breaking a world record.
"That chronic pain and numbness that she deals with every day has helped her to be able to plank through the pain," he said. "...I think the model for someone whose done a world record is officially amazing, but she's been officially amazing her whole life."
After all the time spent training and finally breaking the record, Wilde says the only feeling she's left with is "overwhelming."
"I actually still can't believe it," she said. "It feels like a dream."
- In:
- Health
- Exercise
- Guinness World Records
- Canada
Li Cohen is a social media producer and trending content writer for CBS News.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Hip-hop turns 50: Here's a part of its history that doesn't always make headlines
- With few MDs practicing in rural areas, a different type of doctor is filling the gap
- Lab-grown chicken meat gets green light from federal regulators
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Ophelia Dahl on her Radcliffe Prize and lessons learned from Paul Farmer and her youth
- Supercomputers, Climate Models and 40 Years of the World Climate Research Programme
- How Drag Queen Icon Divine Inspired The Little Mermaid's Ursula
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- How the Harvard Covid-19 Study Became the Center of a Partisan Uproar
Ranking
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Climate Science Discoveries of the Decade: New Risks Scientists Warned About in the 2010s
- How Boulder Taxed its Way to a Climate-Friendlier Future
- Once 'paradise,' parched Colorado valley grapples with arsenic in water
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- New Jersey to Rejoin East Coast Carbon Market, Virginia May Be Next
- Could Exxon’s Climate Risk Disclosure Plan Derail Its Fight to Block State Probes?
- Turning Skiers Into Climate Voters with the Advocacy Potential of the NRA
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
A new nasal spray to reverse fentanyl and other opioid overdoses gets FDA approval
The Texas Legislature approves a ban on gender-affirming care for minors
Fossil Fuel Subsidies Top $450 Billion Annually, Study Says
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Helping a man walk again with implants connecting his brain and spinal cord
Debt limit deal claws back unspent COVID relief money
Hundreds of sea lions and dolphins are turning up dead on the Southern California coast. Experts have identified a likely culprit.