Most beauty queens would not advertise that they once weighed 234 pounds.
Miss South Carolina's Bree Boyce made it her platform, and now she's on her way to competing in the Miss America pageant.
"If I hadn't gained the weight and then lost it, and didn't say anything about it, I wouldn't be helping others," said Boyce, who won the crown last Saturday. "I'm proud of it."
"I didn't necessarily choose my platform," she told ABCNews.com. "It chose me."
What makes Boyce's victory even sweeter was winning the preliminary swimsuit round.
"I never went to pool parties when I was a little girl," said Boyce, who was overweight by age 10. "So to go up on stage in a bathing suit was terrifying."
This time was different. "Right before I walked out on stage, I thought, 'This is your moment, what you've worked so hard for.'"
Over the course of three years, Boyce lost more than 110 pounds the old-fashioned way: through healthy eating and exercise.
At a news conference after the Miss South Carolina pageant, she held up a pair of faded blue, size-18 jeans she used to wear.
They serve as a reminder of where she came from and keep her from slipping back.
"When I think of the past and of all the hard work and how would that look to others if I gained the weight back, I just think this is something I have to keep up with," Boyce said.
The 22-year-old theater major said she began gaining weight at age 7. By 10, it was clear she had a problem. She tried every diet possible but always gained the weight back.
At 17, she had reached her highest, 234 pounds, and was having knee problems. Her doctor warned that her knees and joints couldn't handle the excessive weight and that she would have more problems in the future if she didn't slim down.
"I wanted to be a Broadway star and go to college and have a family one day," Boyce said. "My weight was hindering all those things. I decided to make a change that day."
Boyce went on an Atkins-type diet, losing 65 pounds. She competed in her high school pageant her senior year, and, even though she was heavier than the rest of the girls, she won.
Her victory was short-lived. Boyce gained the weight back and more. Then she stopped dieting and met with a nutritionist.
She reframed what she ate and why. Instead of looking at food as comfort, she viewed it as fuel. She shopped at the supermarket and learned to cook.
She got moving too. She got up every morning at 5:30 to work out.
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