I mean... Everyone has to make a living to stay alive.
She gave the best years of her life to this industry and now, after the physical components are no longer able to be utilize to win major contests with decent money payouts, she needs to continue to make some money and the industry she knows best makes the most sense to her. I don't blame her.
I haven't read much of the first 1-4 pages of this thread, but I think these posts about Monica surface every few months for promotional pitches. Moving forward, I wish her the best of luck. Just goes to show that there is no appreciable retirement outlook for competitors that are well out of their prime in this industry. I think most "professional" bodybuilders need to have secure and reliable primary businesses before they hang their hats on this industry.
Even guys like Ronnie Coleman (a quadriplegic) are still slaving away to pay bills and care for their families. The first thing these guys should do upon making any good money is hire a trustworthy accountant that has experience in financial and retirement planning. Most of these guys (talking about the top 1-2 guys) over the course of the 10+year window of viable competition, probably gross well over $5-6 million. After taxes, I can imagine them having closer to $800K-1 Million saved up (considering living expenses, drugs, trainer/nutritionist fees etc) if they played their cards right and invested accordingly. Saving money is a lot harder than what people imagine and the more you make, undoubtedly the more you spend.
Sadly, most go the route of professional basketball players and spend as if their money will last forever.

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