Why is shirtless running ok only if you "have the right body type"?

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Replies

  • gillie80
    gillie80 Posts: 214 Member
    edited August 2016
    actually thinking on it i might just run in my sports bra if it was hot enough, since i wear 2 cos i'm in the 'big boobs' department and like to feel secure. was too busy eating lunch while posting last comment. that's my excuse and i'm sticking to it.

  • auddii
    auddii Posts: 15,357 Member
    Hm, my only thought on this thread is that I didn't see any topless guys when I was in Scotland on vacation.

    I still managed to enjoy Scotland...
  • RachelElser
    RachelElser Posts: 427 Member
    Hornsby wrote: »
    Shirts are for other people. It's a 105 outside, no shirt for me. My goal in life is to only put a shirt on if I want to to. Not cause I have to.

    you can be like my Uncle Andy- literally the only time I've seen him wear a shirt is when we go out to dinner, and at funerals!
  • robininfl
    robininfl Posts: 1,137 Member
    There are a parade of shirtless guys on our street every day, nobody seems to have gotten the memo about covering up. Nobody has been scarred by this, that's silly. We do kind of make light of the guy with the boxer shorts on and big belly and three tiny dogs pulling him around because he looks comical, but only when he is well past us and can't hear us. And I'll note that the one day he was walking with his wife, he DID put a shirt on, LOL.

    There is only one guy I have ever been honestly happy about seeing running shirtless - Running Guy from my old job. This was a man who was usually coming in at the end of his run when I arrived at the building and he was just astonishingly well built, like a statue carved from ebony, no visible body fat, really looked like a photoshopped model in a perfume ad. I was really happy he ran with just the shorts because it was like seeing an exotic bird or beautiful sunset, it added beauty to my day.

    I'm not convinced it's cooler (at concerts and such I am much cooler in a big white shirt than in a tank top, shade really works) but 99.99999% of the time I am completely indifferent to what passing runners are wearing and that miniscule % of the tme, still think it's not my business even if I do have an opinion on the appropriateness of what you are wearing.
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  • caroldavison332
    caroldavison332 Posts: 864 Member
    It's none of my business what people wear exercising or doing lawn work regardless of how old they are or how much they weigh. They should wear whatever motivates them to keep fit, AND protects them from sun burn. As for that guy who always gets on the train dripping with sweat, bring a towel.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    So what prompted the first post -- has OP revealed it? I've never heard anyone complaining about shirtless runners. There's a 70+ guy I see running shirtless all the time, I just think good for him for being out running. Whatever makes you more comfortable.

    I'd also roll my eyes at some guy complaining that people judge him for running topless when it's actually illegal for me to do it (in a sports bra isn't topless), except I wouldn't want to for obvious comfort reasons anyway.
  • Heartisalonelyhunter
    Heartisalonelyhunter Posts: 786 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    So what prompted the first post -- has OP revealed it? I've never heard anyone complaining about shirtless runners. There's a 70+ guy I see running shirtless all the time, I just think good for him for being out running. Whatever makes you more comfortable.

    I'd also roll my eyes at some guy complaining that people judge him for running topless when it's actually illegal for me to do it (in a sports bra isn't topless), except I wouldn't want to for obvious comfort reasons anyway.

    I rolled my eyes at that too. It must be nice to feel the sun on your nipples. If I ran topless I'd be arrested.
    Also I have never seen a shirtless guy be cat called at or hollered at the way women runners are (regardless if we're wearing a sport bra or a baggy shirt). I actually stopped running outside because of that.
  • Michael190lbs
    Michael190lbs Posts: 1,510 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    So what prompted the first post -- has OP revealed it? I've never heard anyone complaining about shirtless runners. There's a 70+ guy I see running shirtless all the time, I just think good for him for being out running. Whatever makes you more comfortable.

    I'd also roll my eyes at some guy complaining that people judge him for running topless when it's actually illegal for me to do it (in a sports bra isn't topless), except I wouldn't want to for obvious comfort reasons anyway.

    I rolled my eyes at that too. It must be nice to feel the sun on your nipples. If I ran topless I'd be arrested.
    Also I have never seen a shirtless guy be cat called at or hollered at the way women runners are (regardless if we're wearing a sport bra or a baggy shirt). I actually stopped running outside because of that.

    I would bail you out of Jail..lol..
  • queenliz99
    queenliz99 Posts: 15,317 Member
  • 3dogsrunning
    3dogsrunning Posts: 27,167 Member
    queenliz99 wrote: »
    doo7mpyhweqh.jpg


    This repulsive!! LOL

    Running in jeans is pretty repulsive to me. I'd die of chafing.
  • gillie80
    gillie80 Posts: 214 Member
    Oh myy.... shirtless an barefoot. *swoons*!
  • caroldavison332
    caroldavison332 Posts: 864 Member
    queenliz99 wrote: »
    doo7mpyhweqh.jpg


    This repulsive!! LOL

    Running in jeans is pretty repulsive to me. I'd die of chafing.

    Yes! Cover those bare feet!
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  • CurlyCockney
    CurlyCockney Posts: 1,394 Member
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Running shirtless, walking topless, wearing a wife beater, it is all about societal expectations. Society, at least american, says that men and woman should have these very idealized bodies and those that don't are inferior or less than attractive. Thats just the way it is like it or not society has set those expectations, you can go against those expectations or go with the flow.

    Personally I run with a tank top or a "dry" fabric type shirt. I don't have an attractive body and don't have the desire to let the world view my saggy empty skin.

    Wearing a what now?

    Wifebeater, known in the more civilized parts of the world, as an A-shirt, or some such silliness:
    big-and-tall-t-shirts-wife-beaters.jpg

    Vest or tank top

    Those two things describe a very wide variety of things. Wifebeater is very specific article of clothing, though as I said, the manufacturer's name for it is A-shirt, but probably only because someone would get mad about the more common name being on a clothing package.

    Come to my country and ask for a wifebeater or an A shirt and you're getting nowt

    Vest or tank top is what they are specifically called in the UK

    Ask for a wife beater round here and you'll get a can of Stella!
  • sfcrocker
    sfcrocker Posts: 163 Member
    It's part of emotional maturity. When you are over 35, you are pretty much in fatherhood territory and you need to set an example and not come across as the show off to passers by especially when there are children, teens and very young women around... Like in their late teens and early 20s.

    I think real emotional maturity is just being yourself and not caring so much about what everyone else thinks. If I'm 70 and still running and it's hot out I'm not going to wear a shirt and sweat like a pig (do pigs actually sweat?) just to meet someone else's idea of what I should be doing. Then again, where I live it's pretty cold so if I'm running at 7 a.m. I'm likely wearing a sweatshirt so it's a moot point.
  • _Waffle_
    _Waffle_ Posts: 13,049 Member
    Offensive.jpg
  • queenliz99
    queenliz99 Posts: 15,317 Member
    queenliz99 wrote: »
    doo7mpyhweqh.jpg


    This repulsive!! LOL

    Running in jeans is pretty repulsive to me. I'd die of chafing.

    That's what I was thinking too!!
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Running shirtless, walking topless, wearing a wife beater, it is all about societal expectations. Society, at least american, says that men and woman should have these very idealized bodies and those that don't are inferior or less than attractive. Thats just the way it is like it or not society has set those expectations, you can go against those expectations or go with the flow.

    Personally I run with a tank top or a "dry" fabric type shirt. I don't have an attractive body and don't have the desire to let the world view my saggy empty skin.

    Wearing a what now?

    Wifebeater, known in the more civilized parts of the world, as an A-shirt, or some such silliness:
    big-and-tall-t-shirts-wife-beaters.jpg

    Vest or tank top

    Those two things describe a very wide variety of things. Wifebeater is very specific article of clothing, though as I said, the manufacturer's name for it is A-shirt, but probably only because someone would get mad about the more common name being on a clothing package.

    Come to my country and ask for a wifebeater or an A shirt and you're getting nowt

    Vest or tank top is what they are specifically called in the UK

    Ask for a wife beater round here and you'll get a can of Stella!

    Well, I do always picture Stanley Kowalski in one.
  • CurlyCockney
    CurlyCockney Posts: 1,394 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Sued0nim wrote: »
    Running shirtless, walking topless, wearing a wife beater, it is all about societal expectations. Society, at least american, says that men and woman should have these very idealized bodies and those that don't are inferior or less than attractive. Thats just the way it is like it or not society has set those expectations, you can go against those expectations or go with the flow.

    Personally I run with a tank top or a "dry" fabric type shirt. I don't have an attractive body and don't have the desire to let the world view my saggy empty skin.

    Wearing a what now?

    Wifebeater, known in the more civilized parts of the world, as an A-shirt, or some such silliness:
    big-and-tall-t-shirts-wife-beaters.jpg

    Vest or tank top

    Those two things describe a very wide variety of things. Wifebeater is very specific article of clothing, though as I said, the manufacturer's name for it is A-shirt, but probably only because someone would get mad about the more common name being on a clothing package.

    Come to my country and ask for a wifebeater or an A shirt and you're getting nowt

    Vest or tank top is what they are specifically called in the UK

    Ask for a wife beater round here and you'll get a can of Stella!

    Well, I do always picture Stanley Kowalski in one.

    I googled the name but I'm none the wiser, sorry!
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    One of the characters in Streetcar Named Desire (which is great).

    Here's Marlon Brando in the role:

    c39onymdp49f.jpg

    The character famously bellows "Stella!" at his wife.
  • 3dogsrunning
    3dogsrunning Posts: 27,167 Member
    jemhh wrote: »
    pdxhak wrote: »
    Seriously how far does this go with exposed skin? Tank tops OK? Sleeveless t-shirts? Shorts?

    Guys should really never wear tank tops except maybe at the gym or possibly the beach.

    jason-momoas-muscles-seriously-out-of-control.jpg

    *drops mic*

    Point made.

    I met him once.

    *checks photo* he wasn't wearing a tank top. Damn.



    Have no idea who this is.

    @jemhh - Jason Momoa. Khal Drogo from Game of Thrones and a bunch of other stuff.
  • CurlyCockney
    CurlyCockney Posts: 1,394 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    One of the characters in Streetcar Named Desire (which is great).

    Here's Marlon Brando in the role:

    c39onymdp49f.jpg

    The character famously bellows "Stella!" at his wife.

    Ah thanks for explaining, it's been eons since I watched that film.