Elijah lives in San Diego, California. He is extremely energetic and outgoing! One would say “life of the party” his unique quality is he is a 5’2 transgender bodybuilder, weighing 130lbs and proud to be who he is! Elijah's normal day starts at 2am going to the gym to weight train, and cardio. His hobbies includes bodybuilding, fitness, surfing, fashion and beauty, and volunteering for the San Diego Firehouse Museum. He believes he is skilled at anything he can put his mind too, He is goal oriented and even his failures are part of Elijah's success. Bodybuilding is a sport Elijah competes in, and in his last show he placed third.
Elijah is a personal trainer, and in his spare time he continues to work towards becoming a firefighter with the City of San Diego. He has the completed first Fire Academy threw Miramar College, and plan to make it into San Diego’s academy this summer. Elijah started working as an intern with the City of San Diego Fire Rescue to help implement AED’s into an app called PulsePoint to help cardiac arrest patients and save life’s.

Elijah lives in San Diego, California. He is extremely energetic and outgoing! One would say “life of the party” his unique quality is he is a 5’2 transgender bodybuilder, weighing 130lbs and proud to be who he is! Elijah's normal day starts at 2am going to the gym to weight train, and cardio. His hobbies includes bodybuilding, fitness, surfing, fashion and beauty, and volunteering for the San Diego Firehouse Museum. He believes he is skilled at anything he can put his mind too, He is goal oriented and even his failures are part of Elijah's success. Bodybuilding is a sport Elijah competes in, and in his last show he placed third.
Elijah is a personal trainer, and in his spare time he continues to work towards becoming a firefighter with the City of San Diego. He has the completed first Fire Academy threw Miramar College, and plan to make it into San Diego’s academy this summer. Elijah started working as an intern with the City of San Diego Fire Rescue to help implement AED’s into an app called PulsePoint to help cardiac arrest patients and save life’s.














