mbg Beauty Director
mbg Beauty Director
Alexandra Engler is the beauty director at mindbodygreen and host of the beauty podcast Clean Beauty School. Previously, she’s held beauty roles at Harper’s Bazaar, Marie Claire, SELF, and Cosmopolitan; her byline has appeared in Esquire, Sports Illustrated, and Allure.com.
Image by mbg Creative / courtesy of source
August 05, 2024
We love celebrating women on top of their game. In our new series Game On, we’re interviewing top athletes about their well-being routines—covering everything from nutrition that makes them feel strong to the moments that bring them joy.
Five-time Olympic gold medalist and world champion swimmer Missy Franklin may be retired, but she’s still holding court at 2024 Olympic Games in Paris—this time as a correspondent. Joining a roster of Olympic superstars like Allyson Felix, Kerri Walsh Jennings, Shawn Johnson East, and Katie Hoff, Franklin is serving as Yahoo Sports’ swimming correspondent during the games.
This is a very welcome return.
After retiring from the sport in 2018, Franklin kept busy with a variety of projects—both personal and professional, in the spotlight and not. Through her podcast Unfiltered Waters with fellow swimmer Hoff, she talks with fellow elite athletes about their journeys and untold stories. She became a mom in 2021 to a now three-year-old daughter. She also became an advocate for kidney health and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), a genetic disease that runs in her family.
“My grandfather had it. My dad is one of four and three of his siblings had it. All of them have undergone kidney transplants,” she told me. “Clearly, it affected our family.”
During a recent call, we spoke about her advocacy work, the next phase of her career—and how she cares for her body in retirement.
mindbodygreen: What made you want to speak out more about kidney health and ADPKD?
Missy Franklin: On a personal level, watching my dad go through it was challenging. Watching his health and quality of life decline affected me. We got to a point back in 2021 where we needed to reach out for a living donor transplant. He was on the organ transplant list—but for the kidney and liver in the U.S. that could be four years or more to get those organs. So we knew it was either dialysis or finding a living donor.
We had been pretty private about it up until that point—out of respect for my dad—but we were desperate. My mom put a post on Facebook, shared what we had been going through, and what my dad needed.
And we had several people—by the grace of God and through the kindness of their hearts—go through the process to see if they were a match. But they weren’t a match for this or that reason. And then we got the call in early 2022 that we had a match!
We found out a few days before the surgery that match was actually a fellow Olympic Gold medalist in swimming, Crissy Perham. We had never met her before; she just heard our story, and out of the goodness of her heart, she felt called to do it. She ended up being a perfect match for my dad. The first time they met was when they were getting rolled back for surgery.
And both of them, my dad and Chrissy, are doing fantastic. Chrissy and her husband are a part of our family now.
mbg: That’s unbelievable. I have chills. What has this all taught you?
Franklin: It’s also been very eye opening to the world of genetic disease. As well as the importance of living organ donation.
A lot of the work that I’m doing with Otsuka America Pharmaceutical Inc. now is just trying to bring awareness to ADPKD, but also genetic and hereditary diseases in general. I want to highlight the importance of health history conversations.
We know it can be really hard to have those conversations with family—it’s really not the most fun thing to talk about—but we know how important it is for early detection and putting a good plan in place with your healthcare providers.
That starts with sitting down together as a family and talking about those diseases that can be passed down. Then, work together to figure out the best way to keep you and your loved ones healthy.
Image by mbg Creative / Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc.
mbg: You’re right. These sorts of conversations are hard. I’m curious, how do you encourage people to start those conversations?
Franklin: It starts with just creating a safe place. So having the conversation somewhere where you know that everyone is going to feel very comfortable. And then it’s just about approaching it with so much love and grace for yourself and for the people that are around you.
I think recognizing right off the bat that it is hard to talk about and that it is a tough conversation helps. But at the end of the day, the goal is that everyone has their health, longevity, and well-being. With those things in mind, ask each other “How can we best support each other and put a plan in place moving forward for our family?”
mbg: How can people be proactive about their health, be it if they have a risk of genetic conditions or not?
Franklin: Just always making sure that you’re staying in open communication with your healthcare provider: Looking out for signs and being aware of what’s going on in your body.
I think the big thing for me is that we live in a culture where we’re expected to tough it out a lot of the time. So something might be happening in your body that doesn’t feel right, and yet, you just have that mindset of like, oh, I’ll be fine. That’s something I really hope that we can move away from.
The number one thing we should be considering with the most amount of seriousness is our health, right? So if there’s something that feels wrong, try not to push it aside—but instead seek the help you need.
Go to your healthcare provider. And yeah, it may be nothing, but it also may be something. And if it’s something, it could end up saving our life.
The number one thing we should be considering with the most amount of seriousness is our health, right? So if there’s something that feels wrong, try not to push it aside—but instead seek the help you need.
mbg: Tell me about the next phase of your career?
Franklin: I started a podcast with my fellow Olympic teammate Katie Hoff back called Unfiltered Waters, and we’ve been doing a ton of work, having amazing conversations with incredible athletes and a lot of Olympians. That just put us on the radar.
We got reached out to you by Yahoo Sports that asked if we’d be interested in being correspondents for pre-Olympic trials, Olympic trials, and Paris this summer. So Katie and I are both absolutely overjoyed. The list of women that are there with us as correspondents is absolutely ridiculous: Allyson Felix, Kerri Walsh Jennings, Shawn Johnson East. So to be included in that group is just such an honor.
I think what we really want to do is continue sharing the sport of swimming with the world. And have the excitement and joy that comes along with watching the olympics. We just want to make sure everyone at home is feeling it just as much as we are In paris.
mbg: I want to pivot to talk about how you care for your body now. Let’s start with nutrition. What meals make you feel your strongest?
Franklin: I think a lot of people have really recognized the importance of protein. I love protein. It just makes me feel so strong. And I’m really focused on strength training right now. So, to support all the hard work I’m doing in the weight room, I need protein. It’s not one size fits all, but I’ve found that what works really well for me is high protein and high fat. I also make sure that I’m getting the carbohydrates I need to stay energized and refueled as well.
I also love veggies more than anything. So I also eat tons of veggies. My favorites are just like raw veggie salads. Like a Greek salad with peppers, tomatoes, onion, cucumber, and my homemade dressings.
But when my three year old asks if we can go out for ice cream, then we go out for ice cream! Recognizing that balance is so important—and it looks different for everyone, but if I can focus on those whole foods and hitting my protein goal, then it really just allows me to also enjoy food when I want to enjoy it.
When my three year old asks if we can go out for ice cream, then we go out for ice cream!
mbg: The conversation around protein has evolved in this really cool way lately…
Franklin: I agree! And Finally! It’s really cool, too, because it’s helping women steer away from being skinny as opposed to being strong. It’s not about being small, it’s about taking up space. That’s why I love the emphasis on protein, because I feel like it’s helping shift the culture to this place of, let’s not be afraid of muscles and let’s not be afraid to see what our bodies are capable of.
mbg: How do you prioritize sleep—especially when you’re struggling to get rest leading up to something big?
Franklin: Sleep is critical. I also think it’s interesting that our understanding of sleep needs is evolving. For example, we’re now realizing that all the past sleep studies have told us that 8 hours is optimal—but they’ve all been done on men. Now we realize that women need more1—it’s actually more like 9-10. I think it’s great that we’re now realizing we probably need more sleep than we are getting.
The second thing I’d say is to use sleep aid tools. If you’re coming up on something big, you may have some anxiety and a hard time sleeping. But don’t be afraid to use tools to help you.
I absolutely love this company called Dream Recovery. They have an amazing sleep mask and mouth tape. Mouth taping not only helps me sleep, but it gives me a better quality of sleep—the difference in my sleep score when I’m mouth taping versus when I’m not is significant.
So I think not being afraid to try different things and use tools to help you get a better night’s sleep—sometimes you just need that little extra bit of help, and that’s okay.
mbg: What are your go-to workouts at the moment?
Franklin: I recently discovered a franchise called Burn Boot Camp. I’m obsessed.
Every day it’s a different protocol, but it’s a mix between strength training and conditioning days. It’s one of the best communities I’ve ever been a part of. And that’s what’s made it so special for me. Ever since I retired, I’ve just so missed that feeling of teamwork and camaraderie. And I found it here.
It was really also based on the woman in mind. So there’s free childcare in every class.
Mbg: Free child care! That’s amazing! OK, speaking of teammates, what makes a good teammate? I love asking athletes this question.
Franklin: I think there’s a lot of good qualities that go into a teammate, but I think one of the biggest ones is recognizing that attitudes are contagious. So, which attitude are you spreading? What attitude do you want to be known for spreading?
This is, by no means, to imply that you need to walk on, in my case, the pool deck every day being happy and positive and bubbly—because the truth is we’re humans and that’s not how we’re going to feel every day. But it just means even on the days where you don’t feel like that, that you are still showing up as a good teammate to the people that are around you. You’re still being encouraging and motivating.
It’s about accepting people for exactly how they are that day and accepting yourself for how you are that day, but knowing that you still have a responsibility as a teammate to uplift.
That can actually really help you as well. There were many days in practice where I went in and I wasn’t feeling it—I was sore, I didn’t want to be there—but the second I started amping my teammates up, I started amping myself up. Then, I felt so much better. It’s a beautiful cycle.
mbg: What advice would you give young women who are interested in swimming or sports in general?
Franklin: It’s just such a fun time to be a woman in sports, right? It’s such an amazing time to be raising a daughter and to see all the incredible role models that she’s going to have growing up.
My advice to them would be to really use these amazing role models as inspiration, but also know that you’re going to forge your own path and create your own platform. These athletes, what they’re doing now is incredible and they’re showing us what’s possible. But then when it’s your turn to go out and do that, don’t let any ceiling stop you.