Lighter Side: Law grad reveals bodybuilding shock

A trainee lawyer has shocked her colleagues with her rather muscly secret that until now she’d kept hidden under her legal robes

After she was announced as the winner of Miss Bikini Wales, a graduate law student from Swansea decided to reveal the muscles she’d kept hidden under her professional clothes to her classmates.

Colleagues were shocked to discover that in her spare time, criminology and law graduate Helen Derbyshire was consuming up to 10 kilos of chicken each week to keep up the protein-rich diet required to be a bodybuilder.

The Daily Mail reported that Derbyshire eats seven protein-enriched meals a day and secretly trained for hours after lectures each day to keep her muscles pumping.

At the same time as sticking to her strict bodybuilding regime, the young lawyer was able to gain her law degree from Edge Hill University in Lancashire. She said she didn’t tell anyone about her double life while she was a student because she didn’t want them to make presumptions.

“I have studied criminology and law for four years and I also have a huge passion for competing for the bikini body titles,” Derbyshire says.  

“People have this assumption that you have no brains but I like to develop all of my assets - mental and physical…I kept it under wraps. It must have been a shock when people found out that I wasn't bookish all the time.”

The lawyer’s significant other is sympathetic to her demanding physical and professional schedule: He just so happens to be the current Mr Wales.

Partner Neil Andrews has held the title for three consecutive years, and the pair are currently getting ready to compete for the British titles at the bikini and bodybuilding championships in Nottingham.

Derbyshire says she’s lucky she’s found someone that can partake in her strict and extreme eating regime.

“Every week we get through more than 10 kilos of chicken, five kilos of mince and two and a half kilos of fish,” she says. “It's a lifestyle that we are proud of and work hard at.”

Recent articles & video

Former Constantine Cannon and Robins Kaplan lawyers launch antitrust law firm

International Bar Association releases report on AI’s impact and ethical governance in law

US district court orders Iraq to pay former legal counsel for unpaid services

King & Spalding seeks dismissal of lawsuit over its diversity job program

Harvard Law reports decline in students of colour after Supreme Court's affirmative action ban

UK legal sector criticized for gaps in anti-money laundering supervision

Most Read Articles

Greenwashing action leads to $12.9m fine, dubbed as the 'highest yet'

Colin Biggers & Paisley adds partner Kerry Ioulianou to construction and engineering team

Mills Oakley adds Tamara Heng, Jennie-Lee Schloffer, Tina Tomaszewski as partners

Dentons hires employment and safety partner Jackie Hamilton, two special counsel