Christina Gambino didn’t realize until recently that she has trained her entire life to be an “American Ninja Warrior,” from NBC’s hit obstacle course television series.
The 30-year-old from Boca Raton has studied Brazilian jiu-jitsu, ballet and gymnastics — strength, balance and agility. But it was the hurdles Gambino overcame outside the gym that best prepared her for the physical and emotional intensity of “American Ninja Warrior” her father’s death and a debilitating arm injury.
“I’ve been comfortable being uncomfortable my entire life. That’s what being a ‘ninja warrior’ is all about,” said Gambino, while training with a dance client at a Riviera Beach gym on Tuesday, the day after she appeared on an episode of the NBC series.
The show challenges contestants to a grueling obstacle course for the prize of glory — being able to say you competed and completed the course, a feat few have done but many have tried.
Gambino — a graduate of St. Andrew’s School in Boca Raton and former Florida Atlantic University student — lost three rounds into the obstacle course. She fell during a “ring hop” obstacle, where contestants hang from a ring and shuffle it from hook-to-hook using only their arms.
Gambino’s loss and brief 2-minute appearance on the 90-minute episode hasn’t dampened her spirit though.
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“I think I realize more and more how amazing it is the things I can do,” she said.Gambino credits her success to God and her father, a karate teacher and real estate mogul who died in a Lexington, Va., plane crash when Gambino was 12. Gambino’s father, Jack, was piloting a plane from New York to Boca Raton in 2000 when it crashed in Lexington because of bad weather, according to media reports at the time. He and friend, John Kabelka, of Boca Raton, died in the crash.
One might think mastering jiu-jitsu, ballet and gymnastics would be all the preparation an athlete needs to be an “American Ninja Warrior,” but Gambino tried and failed once before.
“I was humbled by that first fall,” she said. “It’s coming back from failures and not being discouraged by failures that make you excel as a person.”
She studied the successful contestants and practiced at gyms across the nation dedicated to “American Ninja Warrior” obstacles.
Then, a few months before she was set to again perform in front of a live audience, she pinched a nerve in her wrist, leaving her right hand virtually immobile.
Two months before her performance on the show, she could barely feed herself using her right arm.
“I practiced pulling a soup spoon to my mouth,” she said. “It was a struggle.”
She slowly regained movement in her hand and, before she fully recovered, took her second shot at “American Ninja Warrior.”
“I couldn’t miss my chance,” she said. But after a second and third round of obstacles involving her arms, she fell into the water below the course.
Even after a second loss, Gambino repeats a mantra printed on the back of a T-shirt she wore Tuesday: “Be Strong and Courageous.”
“I needed strength and courage to fall and get back up and try again,” she said.
And will she try again on the “American Ninja Warrior” obstacle course?
“You better believe it,” she said.
Follow Delray Beach reporter Lulu Ramadan on Twitter at @luluramadan.