Former rodeo athlete says bodybuilding helped him recover from brain injury
Dave Potter purchased gym in 100 Mile House, B.C., to help others achieve fitness goals
Dave Potter was working at a Kamloops country bar when his friends convinced him to try rodeo. Falling in love with the sport, he became a bareback rider and bull rider.
"I was pretty consistently damaged," he said. "It wasn't debilitating until the final one, the brain injury."
A run-of-the-mill incident in rodeo changed his life forever.
He was bucked off a horse, and suffered a brain injury that caused him to get dizzy when he walked for more than five minutes, making it tough to live the life he wanted.
"One minute you feel like everything is getting better, the next minute, it's a complete switch and you're dizzy, back to the depression again."
"There was so many times I wanted to check out. You go through depression, suicidal tendencies. A roller coaster of emotions for a year and a half."
When his doctor told him some of the damage might be permanent, Potter wouldn't accept the diagnosis.
He left the clinic and headed straight to the gym.
Potter got into bodybuilding, which had been an interest of his since adolescence. He said he saw Arnold Schwarzenegger in a magazine when he was 12, but never had the opportunity to pursue it.
Potter used nutrition and fitness to manage the dizziness that came along with his brain injury.
"The bodybuilding really fit in after my brain injury," he said.
Now, Potter is the proud owner of a gym in his hometown of 100 Mile House, B.C., and he's preparing for a bodybuilding competition later this spring.
He made some changes to the previous facility — he's selling supplements and is offering coaching and meal plans for clients, who include some of his old rodeo buddies in Williams Lake.
With files from Brady Strachan and Tara Copeland