An Inside Look at the Littlest Bodybuilder
Dwarfism hasn't stopped Aditya "Romeo" Dev from becoming a bodybuilder.
April 24, 2009 — -- At 2 feet, 9 inches and a mere 19 pounds, Aditya "Romeo" Dev isn't like other bodybuilders.
The 21-year-old from Punjab, India, weighs as much as the body armor worn by U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, but that hasn't stopped the little person from becoming a body builder.
Dev told "Good Morning America" today that the most he's ever lifted is 10 pounds -- about half his weight.
"From the very beginning I liked lifting the dumbbells and lifting weights," he said through a translator. "I used to watch wrestling when I was a small kid and that's how I got inspired."
His hard work has paid off -- three years ago the Guinness Book of World Records named him the world's smallest body builder.
When he hit a Crunch gym in New York City, people flocked to him, picking him up for a pose and taking pictures.
And ladies, he's available.
"I don't have a girlfriend," Dev said, with a shy grin.
But since his workouts have been trimmed to one hour per day for medical reasons, Dev said he's been using the time to work on his other hobby-- singing and dancing.
"I used to watch a dance video, Indian-style," he said, "And I got inspired by looking at it."
For the last two years, Dev has trained to be a bodybuilder and he considers himself the strongest dwarf in the world.
Using a regimen that includes 3.3-pound custom-designed dumbbells from his trainer, Dev has bulked up and is the size of an average 2-year-old.
His chest measurement is 20" and his exercise routine also includes aerobics and dance. Dev trains at the Leo Health Club in Phagwara, India and his trainer is the health club owner Ranjit Pal, "Mr. Punjab."
Dev said he's never let his size stop him from doing anything, though his height -- which is about as tall as a baseball bat -- does make him shy around girls.
Still, Dev's father said his son has never been bothered about his height or had an inferiority complex.
While Dev said he is "always in the gym," all his workouts are unable to combat his serious health condition. His family fears he doesn't have long to live because he suffers from brain aneurysms and his family is too poor to finance necessary medical treatment.