How a Public Official Became a Bodybuilding Champion: Insights from Gwangju’s Park Geun-hye
Daniel Kim Views
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Before the crowd roared and the stage lights poured down, what struck me first was the athletes’ barely perceptible trembling.
At the women’s bikini division of the 72nd Gyeonggi Sports Festival on April 18 at Gwangju City Hall’s Sueojangdae Hall, spectators cheered at the competitors’ sculpted lines. What stood out to me, though, was one athlete who, after extreme restraint, gripped muscles that quivered like spasms and kept smiling through it all. The scene moved many in the audience to tears.
The silver medalist (2nd) that day was Park Geun-hye, head of the Public Relations Team at Gwangju City Hall.
By trade an administrative professional who handles city communications, she stood onstage as Gwangju’s representative. This was a commitment beyond recreational exercise. For eight years she has laced up her shoes at 4 a.m., when most are asleep, logging more than four hours of high‑intensity training a day and following a strict diet.
Bodybuilding is often more a battle with oneself than with others. Competitors spend months manipulating water and diet to peak for a few minutes onstage. When they tense every muscle to make their physique pop, the whole body can shake — a concentrated moment of endurance that compresses months of pain and patience.
One moment warmed the room further: despite a busy weekend ahead of local elections, Gwangju Mayor Bang Se‑hwan visited the arena. He watched quietly and applauded without speeches or fanfare. Though his visit was part of his role as host‑city leader, it felt like a genuine show of support for a colleague.
Park’s decision to compete while continuing her public duties sends a meaningful message to the civil service. It demonstrates the value of discipline and personal challenge beyond individual glory. Her meticulous preparation and years of patience allowed her to stand alongside professional athletes and challenge fixed perceptions of public servants.
Time onstage lasts only minutes, but the countless early mornings and long hours of endurance that led to that instant were anything but brief. The emotion that echoed through Gwangju that day went beyond the medal’s color, reaffirming how deeply effort and perseverance can resonate.











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