Why do so many ladies not lift?
Replies
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Eh, on MFP seems like most people have considered it and those who don't don't like it (newbies excluded).
Offline, I suspect lots of women haven't considered it/do what their friends do or what they know or what their gym pushes. I ran and swam and biked as a kid, so when I got active again as an adult I did those things. In college when I had access to a gym I played around with the machines but didn't know what I was doing or that free weights would be better (I did not do sports for a team in college or high school and while I cross country skiied and swam in jr high we didn't do weights). I got a personal trainer for a while when I joined a gym and wasn't particularly encouraged to do heavy lifting and didn't know enough to ask and did the classes that seemed fun.
Much later I read about strength training (stuff like NRoLfW) and realized I should be trying more weight-type stuff and doing a progressive program, so I did, but it's normal most women might not think of this stuff, even without the irrational fear of magically waking up muscular (which I never had).0 -
I think the lifting thing for ladies has just not been well publicised apart from on specific fitness forums and on weird pinterest type links. It can be a life changer though in a way that other forms of exercise doesn't compare to re self confidence and changing perspectives
I wrote these reasons why I am a convert to lifting ages ago (well 18 months and they still just as relevant):- Finally finding a type of exercise that suits my personality
- It makes me calm and centered even during peak times of stress and work overload
- My glutes looks like they belong on a fitspo inspiration page
- The mantra I say to myself when I lift, spills over to all aspects of my life (you are strong and you can do this)
- Fit dudes in the weights section of the gym, even if they are mostly PT's and it is their employment to be fit and to do exercise
- Teaching me to have a different attitude towards food and nutrition
- Knowing that if people are staring at me, it because I look good rather than because I am weird.
- I can lift some bad a*** amounts, including all of my children regardless of age and size. The smallest mini-me loves how I can still carry her around like she is a little baby.
- excellent pelvic floor from all the glute related moves. No tena lady moments for this middle aged chick. Excellent pelvic control is useful in other area's :P
- Loving my arms and shoulders
- Feeling good in all the clothes that I wear
- I walk tall and confidently, and look people in the eye rather than trying to make myself invisible
- Being able to set myself targets on how to improve form and weights and for that to be fun
- B88bs still look amazing even if they have gotten smaller.
- I don't feel old.
- The only downside I can actually think of is that the armpit area of the dresses I wear tend to dig in due to well developed muscle but I think I can live with that
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I would need to hire a personal trainer because I honestly don't know how to go about weight lifting. Guys seem to learn in their teenage years now to weight lift because their friends do.
So for me it's out of fear of not knowing what I'm doing.0 -
I have been exercising for 30 years.....marathon running, spin classes etc. I'd been conditioned to think that less calories more cardio was the only way and didn't even consider anything else.
Then I had a ski accident, and knee surgery. Then I went over the handlebars of my road bike... My whole approach and confidence had changed. I lost my love for cardio but needed something else. I used a trainer for a few weeks to get me ready for my wedding earlier this year so she introduced me to some weights but when I tried to use the weights area of the gym I was very definitely pushed out by the Bros and didn't have the confidence to stand up for myself.
Thankfully we changed gyms in September.... And I'm "allowed" to work out however I please. I told the trainer at my obligatory induction session how I felt and he took me straight to the squat rack. Ok it's only 3 months ago but I've not looked back so far.
So, lots of things shape why we do what we do. I'm not saying I won't ever run another marathon.... But right now my knee can't take it. And I'm loving what I can do.
As for the risk of injury.... Aside from the ski and bike injuries,. I have broken my finger as I took off my gym pants after doing a 30day shred dvd workout at home. I figure I'm just as safe with 70kgs balanced on my back haha!!0 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day.
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ilovesweeties wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day
this myth that only lifters get 6 packs, or that all lifters get sculpted abs, it does not reflect reality
olympics 2012 5000 m start
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/02/2012_Olympics_-_Womens_5000m_start_3.jpg
Can definitely see 6packs there
olympics 2012 weightlifting 63 kg gold medalist
http://www.olympic.org/Assets/MediaPlayer/Photos/2014/Nanjing/22/22_08_2014_Weightlifting4_HD.jpg
I am sure there are some impressive abs in there, they definitely are not visible though
And in real life, the average person lifting in the gym might have the intention of getting sculpted abs. In practice, few do. It has far more to do with diet than training routine.0 -
You don't need to lift to get abs as abs mean low bf%, but most Olympic athletes lift as part of their training program0
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singingflutelady wrote: »You don't need to lift to get abs as abs mean low bf%, but most Olympic athletes lift as part of their training
Agreed
It doesn't bug me if people don't want to lift but pro athletes have to have well-rounded training programs and those generally include lifting.0 -
I think that many just don't think about it or know very little about how to start and don't want to stick out by possibly doing something wrong at the gym. Machines are fairly easy to figure out--most have tiny diagrams on them showing what to do. Lifting free weights correctly takes a bit more forethought. I've read several coaches saying that the women they train tend to be very concerned with getting form right. My guess is that's as much for embarrassment prevention as it is for injury prevention.
^^^^^ this.0 -
singingflutelady wrote: »You don't need to lift to get abs as abs mean low bf%
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Speaking personally, I only got into lifting several years ago because I saw a fitness model (probably on Oxygen magazine or something) and I thought, WOW, now THAT is how I want to look. I find that look to be "fit". But, there are lots and lots of women who think women with low fat and "ripped" muscles look gross. And that's just one reason that lots of women don't lift. Personally, I find the supermodel look (skinny fat) to be gross.... in fact all I can think of is "get that woman a f***ing hamburger!!!!" I'm sure lots of guys and girls look at men the same way. Some love the look of say, Vin Diesel (mmmmmm), whereas some prefer the look of Justin Bieber (I know, I know, I really went out there with that one, but yeah, some girls dig his look).
It's all personal preference and all the evidence is anecdotal. Everyone has their reasons for lifting or not lifting.0 -
Justin Bieber????? Ohhhkaaaay.....!!!0
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kimiuzzell wrote: »Justin Bieber????? Ohhhkaaaay.....!!!
I had to pick some dude with no muscles - he was the first one that came to mind LOL0 -
By the way, as a side note, do not simply Google "XXX" if you're trying to find the movie that Vin Diesel was in. You will not like the results! LOL And doing a Google search on "actors that are not ripped" gave me only actors that were ripped... so... Google FAIL today!!0
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ilovesweeties wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day.
Why not both, especially if it means improving your 5K time. Getting more serious in the weight room definitely assisted my running and helped me break 20 min (5K)/43 min (10K), and I didn't make any changes to my cardio regimen.
Why does it always have to be one or the other with some people?0 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »to a large extent, i think it's about exposure. males tend to be exposed to lifting at a fairly young age whereas women aren't. most of the women i know who lift do so because they were involved in athletics that required them to get stronger and that was their exposure...i think relative to men that is a much smaller group. this lack of exposure also breeds misconceptions...and really, the industry at large doesn't help matter much.
i do know quite a few female lifters, but i know far more who do their resistance training in classes and "boot camp" type of things and circuit training vs traditional "heavy" strength training. i'm totally cool with that...i do believe resistance training is pretty essential to general fitness and overall health...but i don't believe that it has to be "heavy" to be viable...hell, i don't lift "heavy" all of the time as I tend to work in a variety of rep ranges in 6-8 week cycles.
i do think "heavy" gets overplayed on MFP as the only way to do it...but it really depends on where you're coming from and what your goals are overall...if i lifted "heavy" all of the time i wouldn't have much left for cycling or running.cwolfman13 wrote: »they could be doing cardio elsewhere...it is exceedingly rare that i do cardio in the gym...the only reason i go to the gym is to lift...but i also ride about 80+ miles per week or so. if your only contact with me was at the gym, it would be easy to assume that i do no cardio...but i do quite a bit actually.
I agree. I think lots of things get overplayed as the ONLY way to do it. I lift, I also do Pilates and Yoga. I know that all three are improving my strength. Today's handstands in yoga take quite a bit of strength. And balance. I had the balance today, but couldn't quite pull it off. It's a goal of mine.
And, yes, I think some folks think "cardio" is something done in a gym on a machine. I do some in gyms, some at home (we have a treadmill) and lots outside.0 -
I am so jealous ! I have wanted to try this for so long, but I suffer from vertigo which I have been told is one of the very few reasons not to try aerial yoga I have a friend who teaches, and even she would not let me.
Until I saw your comment and had a second look, I thought (and wondering why) the picture as upside down0 -
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »to a large extent, i think it's about exposure. males tend to be exposed to lifting at a fairly young age whereas women aren't. most of the women i know who lift do so because they were involved in athletics that required them to get stronger and that was their exposure...i think relative to men that is a much smaller group. this lack of exposure also breeds misconceptions...and really, the industry at large doesn't help matter much.
i do know quite a few female lifters, but i know far more who do their resistance training in classes and "boot camp" type of things and circuit training vs traditional "heavy" strength training. i'm totally cool with that...i do believe resistance training is pretty essential to general fitness and overall health...but i don't believe that it has to be "heavy" to be viable...hell, i don't lift "heavy" all of the time as I tend to work in a variety of rep ranges in 6-8 week cycles.
i do think "heavy" gets overplayed on MFP as the only way to do it...but it really depends on where you're coming from and what your goals are overall...if i lifted "heavy" all of the time i wouldn't have much left for cycling or running.cwolfman13 wrote: »they could be doing cardio elsewhere...it is exceedingly rare that i do cardio in the gym...the only reason i go to the gym is to lift...but i also ride about 80+ miles per week or so. if your only contact with me was at the gym, it would be easy to assume that i do no cardio...but i do quite a bit actually.
I agree. I think lots of things get overplayed as the ONLY way to do it. I lift, I also do Pilates and Yoga. I know that all three are improving my strength. Today's handstands in yoga take quite a bit of strength. And balance. I had the balance today, but couldn't quite pull it off. It's a goal of mine.
And, yes, I think some folks think "cardio" is something done in a gym on a machine. I do some in gyms, some at home (we have a treadmill) and lots outside.
People seem to be coming around to bodyweight lifting, so maybe we should call it that. I did call my difficult yoga strength asanas bodyweight lifting here, now that I think about it. And even one specific part of bellydance!
Bellydance, you say? I swear there is a floor move that requires amazingly strong quads and then abs. It's insane. I would love to have the most boastful lifters try that one, but there's no way they'd have the mobility off the bat anyway. Then there's the standing up version, where the leverage makes the back and ab strength required insane as well.
If anyone is up to the challenge, I'll find videos for y'all But the point is that other things can require enormous strength (in certain areas) without traditional lifting.
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ilovesweeties wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day.
Why not both, especially if it means improving your 5K time. Getting more serious in the weight room definitely assisted my running and helped me break 20 min (5K)/43 min (10K), and I didn't make any changes to my cardio regimen.
Why does it always have to be one or the other with some people?
I hope you can see the irony in this statement.0 -
rainbowbow wrote: »ilovesweeties wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day.
Why not both, especially if it means improving your 5K time. Getting more serious in the weight room definitely assisted my running and helped me break 20 min (5K)/43 min (10K), and I didn't make any changes to my cardio regimen.
Why does it always have to be one or the other with some people?
I hope you can see the irony in this statement.
Enlighten me.0 -
My gym is full of female lifters....like me.0
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_nicolemarie_ wrote: »Just a question for ladies who are lifting: Do you generally go to the gym alone? What about a spotter? Or is the weight generally not so high as to need a spotter?
I go alone and end sets with 5-10 reps, and thus do not need a spotter.
(I'm not squatting due to bad knees.)0 -
_nikkiwolf_ wrote: »As a woman who recently decided she wants to lift, I have to say it isn't easy to get started.I have been to gyms and told the trainers I wanted to lift heavy but they always show me low weight high rep exercises. Even when I insist I get nowhere.
The other thing is finding "programs" that work. It is all so complex. I can pop in any exercise video and lift my cute purple dumbbells fine. But anything (heavy) weight lifting seems to come as a "program" with exercise descriptions that require deciphering, and that can be daunting. My current gym also doesn't have barbells so all the recommendations about SL and 5x5s don't do much for me. (I just discovered darebee with clear descriptions, pictures and no barbells!)
[as I side note: I've seen the same trainer doing intro sessions with new members a few times since, and the women always end up in the cardio/class area, while he shows the men around the weights floor...]
I gave up on getting advice from the trainer and went looking online for training plans and was faced with the same problem as joinn68: no barbells in my gym, nearly all programme recommendations like NROL, SL, 5x5 require barebells. After quite a bit of research and some money wasted on two books which weren't as useful to me as I had hoped, I finally managed to conjure up a dumbbell routine to get me started...
For anyone who does not belong to your gym and is unsure where to start, my recommendation is to take a session or two with a trainer. I took a cheap four session group session at the Y and afterwards was comfortable going into any gym and doing my thing.0 -
I'm surprised at the number of people who see an equal, or close to equal distribution of genders. As a former yoga teacher, I have been to dozens of gyms in three different states and have always observed many, many more males to females in the free weight section. (Women do seem to be a bit more comfortable with the weight machines.)0
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I'll just interject that sometimes the trainers are bad, and push women to the machines and the cardio equipment, as they tend to do at the gym I go to. I said "I want to lift weights" and they say "ok, here are the machines". "NO DUDE, I want to really lift weights!!!" "What? You mean the machines right? You should start with machines." DOH!!!!0
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My gym is mainly men and boy-men in the free weights section, apart from a small number of awesome women..probably under 5 do free weights in a gym that generally has about 40-50 people in there (it's big)
What I love is that it seems to be the older women leading the way on compound lifting in the main ...those in their 40s and up and they look feckin' awesome. Bodies that many women half their age would aspire to have.
TBH I rarely go in free weights section without my trainer...there's only 2 racks (and one is a smith machine) and 4 benches and I tend to prefer cable/ TRX/ kettlebells and dumbbells when I'm alone
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@JaneiR36 I had to laugh at myself last bench press..took my glasses off just in case I dropped the bar...hmm...think I'd have more than glasses to worry about.
Those massive fails, I think are people overly faithful in their ability. Like those parkour vids.
Any other injury I've had has been outside of deliberate exercise...periformis from shopping trolley (6 months to recover 100%), tailbone from roller skating (12 months), pregnancy (haha) and now this wrist crap which is going on 7 weeks now!
I don't really have to interact much. I did burp rather loudly once cos I forgot I had company. (Headphones on). Oops. Lucky it was that end.What is a ladies idea of lifting heavy? as a matter of interest
For myself, I think of it as lifting smart, not just heavier which does happen cos progression. I have limitations, I work around them and there's satisfaction in that. My goals and context aren't quite the same as my neighbour who competes in lifting comps.
I sort of cringe for those new to the idea when the term heavy is used and agree with @cwolfman13 and @Sabine_Stroehm because it's not always about how heavy or rather who's heaviest. Just depends on goals, ability etc. Everyone has to start somewhere.kshama2001 wrote: »_nikkiwolf_ wrote: »As a woman who recently decided she wants to lift, I have to say it isn't easy to get started.I have been to gyms and told the trainers I wanted to lift heavy but they always show me low weight high rep exercises. Even when I insist I get nowhere.
The other thing is finding "programs" that work. It is all so complex. I can pop in any exercise video and lift my cute purple dumbbells fine. But anything (heavy) weight lifting seems to come as a "program" with exercise descriptions that require deciphering, and that can be daunting. My current gym also doesn't have barbells so all the recommendations about SL and 5x5s don't do much for me. (I just discovered darebee with clear descriptions, pictures and no barbells!)
[as I side note: I've seen the same trainer doing intro sessions with new members a few times since, and the women always end up in the cardio/class area, while he shows the men around the weights floor...]
I gave up on getting advice from the trainer and went looking online for training plans and was faced with the same problem as joinn68: no barbells in my gym, nearly all programme recommendations like NROL, SL, 5x5 require barebells. After quite a bit of research and some money wasted on two books which weren't as useful to me as I had hoped, I finally managed to conjure up a dumbbell routine to get me started...
For anyone who does not belong to your gym and is unsure where to start, my recommendation is to take a session or two with a trainer. I took a cheap four session group session at the Y and afterwards was comfortable going into any gym and doing my thing.
I agree, find a good PT to help with starting. Shop around. Ask a lot of questions - research helps with knowing what to ask. I had a PT for long time (help with injuries, joints). Finally went out on my own this year but every gym session I think of her and I'm grateful for what she taught me.RoseTheWarrior wrote: »I'll just interject that sometimes the trainers are bad, and push women to the machines and the cardio equipment, as they tend to do at the gym I go to. I said "I want to lift weights" and they say "ok, here are the machines". "NO DUDE, I want to really lift weights!!!" "What? You mean the machines right? You should start with machines." DOH!!!!
I have seen this too at my gym (female gym too - great crèche a first priority for me). My PT had her own personal studio. If I needed a PT again, I'd go back to her. I sometimes wonder if I'd have stayed this interested with a different trainer.
I do feel the women are initially coralled off to cardio or machines unless you're with a trainer. That comes back to yourself having confidence in what you're doing though and the gym then meeting market demand. I don't think the trainers are bad, just realistic perhaps. What I've seen of their training is mostly compound, it's pretty good. I'd have to say, alot of the cardio involves barbells, body resistance (yoga), suspension training so it's intense and I can see the attraction for that as well. As long as it's not me though, I like breathing and standing upright by the end haha (yes I need a tad more cardio).0 -
I am so jealous ! I have wanted to try this for so long, but I suffer from vertigo which I have been told is one of the very few reasons not to try aerial yoga I have a friend who teaches, and even she would not let me.
Until I saw your comment and had a second look, I thought (and wondering why) the picture as upside down
Had to check myself on this one, I screamed and laughed so hard!! :laugh:0 -
rainbowbow wrote: »ilovesweeties wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day.
Why not both, especially if it means improving your 5K time. Getting more serious in the weight room definitely assisted my running and helped me break 20 min (5K)/43 min (10K), and I didn't make any changes to my cardio regimen.
Why does it always have to be one or the other with some people?
I hope you can see the irony in this statement.
Enlighten me.
I'm not sure, but the woman did say she keeps up with her lifting a little. It was the first thing that jumped out at me when I read your initial response0 -
ilovesweeties wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Why the stereotype here?
I'll be honest, i'm kind of getting tired of this generalization coupled with the fact that women *must* lift weights if they want to be "cool, fit, attractive" and so on. It's perpetuated on MyFitnessPal so much that it's borderline ridiculous.
If some woman prefers to dance, to run, to swim, to play tennis, to do WHATEVER, why is she barred from the *cool kids club*? I'm just saying.
Let's not even get into the fact not not everyone wants to look like a bodybuilder or a fitness model.
Well said.
I concur! I put a lot of effort into becoming a runner over the last year, because I'd rather be able to run than lift. I am slim now, but quite fluffy, so I've done some lifting. I saw some results and I keep it up a little, but the feeling I get from lifting is nothing to the adrenaline rush and pure joy I felt when I finally ran a 25 min 5k. It's horses for courses, isn't it? If a lady doesn't lift because she's scared or intimidated, that might be sad, but if a lady doesn't lift because she doesn't want to, then what's the big deal? Sure, sculpted abs might be awesome, but give me a lung-bursting run any day.
Why not both, especially if it means improving your 5K time. Getting more serious in the weight room definitely assisted my running and helped me break 20 min (5K)/43 min (10K), and I didn't make any changes to my cardio regimen.
Why does it always have to be one or the other with some people?
I lift heavy and run too. Lots of distance runners lift to optimize their running times. That's why I made the comment on the photo of the Olympic runners.0
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