
The fitness champion, mother of four, and founder of Oxaliburn is on a mission to prove that motherhood and personal transformation are not competing forces — they are one.
There is a particular kind of strength that is not built in a gym — it is forged in the quiet hours after childbirth, in the discipline of showing up when exhaustion makes rest seem like the only option, in the decision to chase a dream even when the world tells you your chapter has closed. Oxana Rumyantseva knows this strength intimately. She has been building it for 23 years.
A fitness champion, certified coach, mother of four, and now the founder of her own supplement brand, Oxaliburn, Oxana has carved a path that defies the conventional narratives around womanhood, athleticism, and ambition. Her story is not simply one of physical transformation — it is a blueprint for what becomes possible when a woman refuses to shrink.
A Starting Gun Called Motherhood

For many women, having a child signals a pause in personal ambition. For Oxana, it was the starting gun. After the birth of her first daughter, she made a decision that would set the trajectory for the next two decades: she would compete. She would step on stage.
“Motherhood inspired me to become the strongest and healthiest version of myself,” she says. “Through my own transformation, I discovered a deep passion for helping others achieve their best shape and optimal health.”
That decision was not just a personal milestone — it was the genesis of a career. The stage gave Oxana’s passion a direction, and she has never looked back. Today, with four children and a thriving global coaching business, she stands as living proof that the demands of family and the pursuit of personal excellence are not at odds. They can, in fact, fuel one another.
Bridging the Gap Between Extremes

The fitness industry has a tendency toward extremes — extreme diets, extreme training programs, extreme aesthetics. And for mothers who are already navigating the complex terrain of postpartum recovery, hormonal change, and time scarcity, this culture can feel alienating at best, and damaging at worst.
Oxana’s work is a direct response to this gap. Through her online training and nutrition programs, she offers professional-grade guidance that is accessible, sustainable, and designed with real women’s lives in mind. Her methodology does not demand that women sacrifice their health for aesthetics, nor does it ask them to put their ambitions on hold for the sake of their families.
“Many women feel they have to choose between family and their best shape,” she explains. “I show them they can have both.”
This philosophy extends beyond coaching into her entrepreneurial ventures. With Oxaliburn, her supplement brand, Oxana is tackling another industry blind spot: the lack of clean, trustworthy performance supplements formulated specifically for women. In a market dominated by products designed with male physiology in mind, Oxaliburn represents a meaningful shift toward inclusion and precision.
The Anatomy of Authenticity

In an era saturated with personal brands, the word ‘authentic’ has been stretched to the point of meaninglessness. But when Oxana speaks about her approach to coaching and business, the authenticity is structural — it is built into every decision she makes.
Every project she takes on must align with her core values: strength, discipline, authenticity, and long-term health. She doesn’t follow trends. She builds things that genuinely work — because she has tested them on herself, in the most demanding conditions imaginable: raising four children while competing at the highest levels of the sport.
“I am not just a coach — I live this lifestyle every single day,” she says, and the record bears this out. Oxana has rebuilt her body after childbirth not once, but four times. She understands both the physical mechanics and the emotional weight of transformation — the doubt, the discipline, the small daily victories that compound over years into something extraordinary.
What Success Looks Like

Ask Oxana what success means to her, and the answer is telling. There is no mention of trophies or follower counts. Instead, she speaks of freedom.
“Success to me means freedom — freedom of choice, time, and mindset,” she reflects. “It’s waking up proud of the person you are becoming. It’s building a strong body, a resilient mind, a healthy family, and a business that helps others. Success is alignment between who you are and how you live.”
This definition has practical consequences. It means Oxana’s business decisions are not driven by short-term revenue, but by whether a product or program genuinely serves the women she works with. It means her milestones are measured not just in competition results, but in the transformations she witnesses in the women who trust her with their goals.
What’s Next: OxaliMama

If Oxaliburn represented the first chapter of Oxana’s entrepreneurial story, her next project signals a deepening of her mission. OxaliMama is a supplement specifically designed to support women in postpartum recovery — helping them safely and effectively return to their best shape while respecting the profound demands that childbirth places on the body.
The postpartum supplement space is, like so much of women’s health, underserved. Products designed specifically for new mothers — that address energy restoration, metabolic recovery, and hormonal balance without compromising safety — are rare. OxaliMama is built to change that.
“OxaliMama is more than just a product — it’s a mission to help mothers restore their energy, metabolism, and self-confidence while respecting their bodies and the recovery process,” Oxana says. “I want women to know that motherhood and personal transformation can go hand in hand.”
It is a statement that could serve as the thesis for Oxana’s entire career. The body of work she has built over 23 years — the competition wins, the coaching programs, the supplement brand, and now OxaliMama — all flow from the same conviction: that women deserve to feel strong, capable, and fully themselves, at every stage of life.
In a world that often asks women to choose, Oxana Rumyantseva keeps choosing everything. And she is building the tools to help other women do the same.
Follow Oxana Rumyantseva: @oxana.fit | www.instagram.com/oxana.fit