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'Survivor' champ plans to 'breathe and take
it in'
Sex therapist Denise Stapley sounds off on taking the
Season 25 crown
Entertainment Tonight.
Denise Stapley became the 25th person to win "Survivor "on Sunday night,
taking home the million-dollar prize after miraculously surviving every single
tribal council in the Philippines outing of the CBS hit reality show.
Denise started the game on the doomed Matsing tribe, sticking out as her
tribe mates went home one by one, finally leaving only her and her alliance-mate
Malcolm. She later joined the Tandang tribe, and managed, somewhat miraculously,
to hang on until the merge, when she was reunited with Malcolm and seemed to
have a renewed shot in the game.
Denise, a sex therapist from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, says of her strategy coming
into the game, "I remember laughing -- I wrote out a two page strategy. It
looked a lot like I live my life outside the game: Build relationships, and keep
building them. It's part of who I am. That was vital because of having to be the
bottom-feeder."
Denise says of surviving her first Kalabaw tribal council, "That was luck. I
won't even mince words on that one. The luck of the draw for me was Dana getting
sick. ... Had Dana not been sick, I would probably not be talking to you." She
says that since Kalabaw members Katie and Dawson struggled physically, she was
able to look "for the cracks."
Denise proved small but mighty in the physical challenges, and says, "I
didn't know what to expect. I'm really happy with the way that I was able to
perform in challenges. ... I work out six days a week and swim and do a little
bit of jogging. ... The game just brought out this part in me that I don't even
know I had. .. The first thing I did when I came home was do my first gladiator
[event]."
In terms of whether her relationships with fellow members of the final four
were real or for strategy, she stresses, "That was completely genuine. ...
People won't ever believe that, but we know. ... We slept next to each other for
weeks and would have conversations about our kids and our families and things in
our lives and the game. It was 100 percent genuine and real."
Denise also reveals that she recognized Lisa Whelchel as a celebrity on day
one, and actually was the one who revealed it to Jonathan Penner. "From my
understanding, Jonathan had a sense that he knew Lisa from someplace; my telling
him was a confirmation," Denise says.
Penner later told Denise during the final tribal council that she had come
off as a "bitch" on the show. Denise says in reaction to that, "It was mean. It
was really, if anything, it was shocking. You can see it on my face, it's like,
'Wow! Ouch, that hurt!' ... I'm pretty sure that was coming from a reflection of
how I might be seen. ... It was coming, I believe, from the [clashes in my]
relationship with Abi, and how that could be portrayed."
Of what went down between her and Abi, Denise says, "[Watching it on TV] just
doesn't translate how bad it was out there with her. ... Therapist or not, I'm
human, [and] it was shocking to me that she'd never experienced any feedback
about her being this way. ... In the game, that's who she was, it's not a bad
edit, that's who she was. ... I think she was just shocked, just, to have me
challenge her. For her, it was like coming out of left field."
On what she plans to do with her winnings, Denise says that she and her
husband "plan first to breathe, just breathe and take it in." She says that they
want to put some aside for their nine-year-old daughter's education fund, and
adds, "We've got some big decisions." The always level-headed competitor
stresses that she and her husband want to be "good stewards" of the
million-dollar prize.