General Comment About People Who Don't Lift
Replies
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Awesome! Another success story for my notes.0
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You don't have to lift heavy at all to get benefits from strength training.
Try a class like "Group Power" (a strength training class that does lifts to music) at your local gym if you think you mighty like to get into strength training that way. They start people of f with low weights, or just the bar, until you feel strong enough to start putting more weight on the bar.0 -
Not that I'm in immediate danger of either, but I'd rather have a dancer's body than a lifter's body.
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I don't believe I am. You need the stretching and cardio of dancing, along with the strength training to get a dancers body. You need to dance.
Yes. Plus, be born to parents who had the right combo of genes to gift you a body suitable for dance.
Yes, you are so right. Cause and effect runs the other way. This reminds me of when people point to long distance runners and claim the exercise will make your muscles longer. Maybe people with long muscles (genetically determined) are more likely to become successful long distance runners. Successful competitive body builders will likely be those whose genetics are more conducive to the sport. There seems to be lots of confusion about correlation vs causation around here, including lack of understanding regarding direction of cause/effect and omitted variable bias. You know that higher ice cream sales causes more swimming pool drownings, right? The two are positively correlated!
eta: I totally reversed osteopenia (pre-osteoporosis) caused by medication solely by heavy weight lifting. The end.
Yes, quite true. Also, my friend Acg67 has a great chart that shows the correlation of the increase in pirate activity to changes with global warming. That proves it!! lol0 -
This is why I love lifting...
A few months ago, I junk picked this old trunk on the side of the road.
I felt like She-Rah that I was able to pick it up and put it in the back of my truck by myself.
This is how it looked refinished:
I was using it as a coffee table, but it's a little too high, and the cats like to sit on it RIGHT in my line of vision if I lay down to watch tv. I wanted to take it upstairs. Problem? It didn't fit through the opening at the landing at the bottom of the stairs, because whoever built my house was a complete idiot and made things non-standard sizes. To take it up the steps, I had to lift it up OVER the railing, which means lifting it over my head. Granted, I could have been less stubborn and waited until my husband got home, but that's just not like me.
So, yeah... thanks to lifting, I can pick up a trunk made of wood and tin, measuring 40" long, 25" deep, 27" high, over my head by myself.
And I thought I felt like She-Rah before...0 -
Besides the numerous health benefits that have already been discussed....
It just makes me feel like a total bad-a**.
That's reason enough right there.0 -
Besides the numerous health benefits that have already been discussed....
It just makes me feel like a total bad-a**.
That's reason enough right there.
It does, doesn't it?
On rest days, I feel like this:
After I set a new PR on the deadlift I feel like this:
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When I made my original comment about aspiring to a dancer's body, I was thinking about belly dancers. Most of them look very fit, and they can do beautiful and controlled movements with their bodies, so it's obvious that they exercise and practice. I've never watched a belly dancer and thought "look at those muscles!" What I see is grace and control, and I aspire to that, not rippling muscles.
But I do lift and increase weights until I can't complete 12 reps. I recognize the importance of building muscular strength in my own life (I like to garden). But I think it's perfectly fine to aspire to something different than what heavy lifting gives you.0 -
When I made my original comment about aspiring to a dancer's body, I was thinking about belly dancers. Most of them look very fit, and they can do beautiful and controlled movements with their bodies, so it's obvious that they exercise and practice. I've never watched a belly dancer and thought "look at those muscles!" What I see is grace and control, and I aspire to that, not rippling muscles.
But I do lift and increase weights until I can't complete 12 reps. I recognize the importance of it.
Wait! There is more than ONE type of dancer?! Unpossible.0 -
I've thought about lifting but I don't have weights and I belong to Curves for Women and don't want to join another. Curves says I'm getting strength training because their equipment works with resistance not weights. I also do strength training on my WII fit which includes lunges, pushups etc. And incase I'm not getting enough I also downloaded YAYOG. I did that on Saturday for 16 minutes and discovered the muscles I'm missing (I mean that I haven't exercised!). I'll probably try that once every 2-3 days as well. So do I still need to lift?
Real life example, I'm 51, I do resistance and was doing Jillian Michaels 30 DS with 3/5 lb weights only. I fell down 11 stairs, and cracked my collar bone in 2 places (not broken through). The first doc told me "You are lucky for your age" the Ortho told me "Its a good thing you exercise or you would have shattered that baby, its a very thin bone"
Resistance is helpful, lifting is helpful, have your DEXA scans and talk to your doctor if you don't really want to do more and are not sure if you should. I want to do more but have to wait, just not as long as I would have if I hadn't been doing anything.0 -
To the person who said they prefer a dancer's body, there basically the same body type a a female lifter, just more flexible.
Example Misty Copeland, very famous ballet dancer:
Misty Copeland doesn't have a typical ballet dancer's body, and that's something that seems to be mentioned whenever I read about her. I've seen some uncomplimentary comments about her body. She is more obviously muscular/athletic and has a bigger bust than is usually considered desirable.
Ballet dancer's bodies are important in whether they're selected for ballet school or ballet companies. If their body isn't right, then often they'd never make it, and so we don't see a big variation in body types amongst classical ballet dancers. Misty Copeland has done extremely well to make it with an atypical body (and she also started ballet relatively late!).
I did ballet when I was younger, but I was quite muscular in the legs, busty and much too heavy (at around 120 lb). Ballet didn't give me a dancer's body! So yes, ballet dancers and weight lifters can have similar bodies, but stockier ballet dancers will have difficulty making a career, whereas stockier weight lifters won't have that problem. So we tend to see long-limbed, less muscular looking ballet dancers, not because ballet has made them like that but because those are the ones who are selected.0 -
I have not read nearly all the comments...I got bored. JUST last night I started to read New Rules of Lifting for Women. It was insightful. According to what I have read so far is that you can't get a dancer's body. That body of long and lean is genetic. You can however get the muscle tone the dancer has...through lifting!!!! There are apparently no workouts to make a person long, lean, appear taller, etc. You can't change that part of your body!0
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Besides the numerous health benefits that have already been discussed....
It just makes me feel like a total bad-a**.
That's reason enough right there.
It does, doesn't it?
On rest days, I feel like this:
After I set a new PR on the deadlift I feel like this:
totally agree. rest days feel so wronnnnnnnng!0 -
@ Those knocking curves, seriously don't knock unless you've actually tried it.
It's actually a really great, non intimidating way to motivate women to weight lifting. It's the first form of weightlifting I ever tried, and was my gateway drug to having the confidence to go to a real gym. Did I stick with it? Nope, but that's not curves fault. I was a much smaller girl back then, and in my first month alone I can still remember losing 12 inches between hips/waist/chest/thigh/arm. That's a lot of inches.
Do you know how overwhelming it can be the very first time you walk into a lifting room by yourself, or even with a friend as a women, especially not one in shape? Trust me, if you understand a little about your muscles and what you are doing before hand, which curves can teach you, the intimidation factor goes down drastically.
Their machines are based on hydrolics and resistance, much like those at orangefitness (which I call 'curves for super fit people who like HIIT), yeah the name needs some work...
Without having done curves first, I wouldn't have found the confidence to go to the gym. Without doing that I wouldn't have done BFL, and without that I wouldn't have learned what healthy, clean eating is, and I wouldn't have learned NRoLfW or tried Bodypump, so it really is a continuum and Curves is Beginner 101.
If your grandma or your daughter is thinking about doing an exercise program, but lifting at the gym is too overwhelming for them, or they are uncomfortable exercising around men for whatever reason and they want to try curves, why not? Just tell them to keep it month-to-month, because if they get the lifting bug, they will want to move on.0 -
When I made my original comment about aspiring to a dancer's body, I was thinking about belly dancers. Most of them look very fit, and they can do beautiful and controlled movements with their bodies, so it's obvious that they exercise and practice. I've never watched a belly dancer and thought "look at those muscles!" What I see is grace and control, and I aspire to that, not rippling muscles.
But I do lift and increase weights until I can't complete 12 reps. I recognize the importance of building muscular strength in my own life (I like to garden). But I think it's perfectly fine to aspire to something different than what heavy lifting gives you.
Earlier in the thread there was a belly dancer who posted a picture of her body. How does her body look different from the pictures of the women who lift that have been posted? I've looked and I don't see any difference. Maybe you can point it out to me? As far as aspiring to something different that what heavy lifting gets you, I'd say that's up to the individual. I questioning what the difference is in a dancer's body and a lifter's body. Ruling out ballet dancers, I don't see any. And the pictures and comments posted by dancers confirm that.0 -
When I made my original comment about aspiring to a dancer's body, I was thinking about belly dancers. Most of them look very fit, and they can do beautiful and controlled movements with their bodies, so it's obvious that they exercise and practice. I've never watched a belly dancer and thought "look at those muscles!" What I see is grace and control, and I aspire to that, not rippling muscles.
But I do lift and increase weights until I can't complete 12 reps. I recognize the importance of it.
Wait! There is more than ONE type of dancer?! Unpossible.
Yeah, one thinks of belly dancers, one thinks ballerinas. Me, I think more of a chorus line type dancer like the Rockettes. :ohwell:0 -
When I made my original comment about aspiring to a dancer's body, I was thinking about belly dancers. Most of them look very fit, and they can do beautiful and controlled movements with their bodies, so it's obvious that they exercise and practice. I've never watched a belly dancer and thought "look at those muscles!" What I see is grace and control, and I aspire to that, not rippling muscles.
But I do lift and increase weights until I can't complete 12 reps. I recognize the importance of it.
I'm a terrible example but:
VS
Same arm and the more I lift the slimmer it well get despite the flex photos.
Also check out my giant thighs I got from all the squats</sarcasm>1 -
No, I haven't seen all the pictures in the thread (and not the belly dancer posted earlier). I wasn't talking about every possible dancer anyway; I was talking about the dancers in my head. I have a DVD of belly dancers performing, and their bodies look very different from the bodies of weight lifters that I've seen posted around the forum here.
Again - I haven't seen all of them, but I did know that there are hard muscled dancers and less hard muscled lifters. I've seen a few examples of both in this thread.
If I didn't want to be able to dig out rocks and move heavy things around in the wheelbarrow to do landscaping projects, I don't think I'd do much weight lifting. I'd still practice belly dancing.0 -
I wish people would come to terms with the fact that a slightly higher body fat percentage will turn "OMG she's like SOOOOOO bulky!!!!!!! #Idontwannalooklikethat %whateverstupidtaggingthingpeoplearedoingthesedays" into "grace and tone and control" and all those other good adjectives people use for strong chicks that don't have super low BF%'s.
Also, what ProfRat said. Elite level athletes have genetics going for them before they get into the sport.
Finally, looking at the word 'lithe', a good chunk of the possible definitions describe something that can't really be shown in a photograph.0 -
Oh and if you want a dancer's body, you can just look like me! I'm a totally hot zumba dancer. :P I'm all like out there shakin my money maker...and then some.0
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No, I haven't seen all the pictures in the thread (and not the belly dancer posted earlier). I wasn't talking about every possible dancer anyway; I was talking about the dancers in my head. I have a DVD of belly dancers performing, and their bodies look very different from the bodies of weight lifters that I've seen posted around the forum here.
Again - I haven't seen all of them, but I did know that there are hard muscled dancers and less hard muscled lifters. I've seen a few examples of both in this thread.
If I didn't want to be able to dig out rocks and move heavy things around in the wheelbarrow to do landscaping projects, I don't think I'd do much weight lifting. I'd still practice belly dancing.
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/896786-general-comment-about-people-who-don-t-lift?page=8Not that I'm in immediate danger of either, but I'd rather have a dancer's body than a lifter's body.
No reason you can't have both. I'm a bellydancer, and I also lift heavy.0 -
I wish people would come to terms with the fact that a slightly higher body fat percentage will turn "OMG she's like SOOOOOO bulky!!!!!!! #Idontwannalooklikethat %whateverstupidtaggingthingpeoplearedoingthesedays" into "grace and tone and control" and all those other good adjectives people use for strong chicks that don't have super low BF%'s.
This. A belly dancer and a figure competitor (in other words, the super tanned, super lean women flexing in bikinis on stage) might have the same exact muscle mass. One has a higher level of bodyfat, one has a very low level of bodyfat. The figure competitor might look just like your belly dancer image in the off season.0 -
Also, started with the machines because I was a bit afraid of doing the free weights until my back got stronger. While I think this was a good plan and worked well, I can't believe how much difference I'm seeing since I progressed to free weights. It's like night and day. If you have a choice, use free weights.
I am doing this too because of some lower back issues. I don't think I can go right into freeweight exercises on some of the lower body exercises. My back is too weak. I'm working up to it though. :bigsmile:0 -
I am doing this too because of some lower back issues. I don't think I can go right into freeweight exercises on some of the lower body exercises. My back is too weak. I'm working up to it though. :bigsmile:
Careful, this could be a dangerous way to go. No machines will strengthen the stabilizers and antagonists the way actual lifting can. You should be doing freeweight exercises, starting light and very slowly moving up. If you build certain larger back muscles up without building the stabilizers around them, you can create an imbalance that can get you injured later on.
The right way is to do the correct compound exercises from the beginning.
Read the weakness, back recovery, guidelines, and inflexibility articles here:
http://www.exrx.net/Exercise.html0 -
I was talking about the dancers in my head.
Well that certainly makes it crystal clear by any objective standard! lol0 -
I am doing this too because of some lower back issues. I don't think I can go right into freeweight exercises on some of the lower body exercises. My back is too weak. I'm working up to it though. :bigsmile:
Careful, this could be a dangerous way to go. No machines will strengthen the stabilizers and antagonists the way actual lifting can. You should be doing freeweight exercises, starting light and very slowly moving up. If you build certain larger back muscles up without building the stabilizers around them, you can create an imbalance that can get you injured later on.
The right way is to do the correct compound exercises from the beginning.
Read the weakness, back recovery, guidelines, and inflexibility articles here:
http://www.exrx.net/Exercise.html
Talk to your doctor before you do any of that.0 -
Talk to your doctor before you do any of that.
That's a given. Rather, a physical therapist. Doctors generally know very little about this topic.0 -
If your grandma or your daughter is thinking about doing an exercise program, but lifting at the gym is too overwhelming for them, or they are uncomfortable exercising around men for whatever reason and they want to try curves, why not? Just tell them to keep it month-to-month, because if they get the lifting bug, they will want to move on.
I joined a small women's only gym. They have female trainers, the place isn't crowded all the time, and you don't ever have to unrack huge amounts of weight that guys have left on the bars.
There are better options than Curves, though it's good that it helped you.
I did Curves for 6 months before I gave up. I saw no difference.
edited because I seem to spell better the second time around.0 -
I just want a slim body. I don't care if it's toned. I don't care if it's perfect. I just want to be slimmer then I am.
I think people get too obsessed with body fat % and **** that I just couldn't care less about.
My motto? To each his/her own! If you wanna lift - great! Good for you.
If you don't wanna lift but are still trying to lose weight - great! Good for you!
Either way you're going to be healthier then you are as an overweight person so go for it!!! I'll support people either way.0 -
I am doing this too because of some lower back issues. I don't think I can go right into freeweight exercises on some of the lower body exercises. My back is too weak. I'm working up to it though. :bigsmile:
Careful, this could be a dangerous way to go. No machines will strengthen the stabilizers and antagonists the way actual lifting can. You should be doing freeweight exercises, starting light and very slowly moving up. If you build certain larger back muscles up without building the stabilizers around them, you can create an imbalance that can get you injured later on.
The right way is to do the correct compound exercises from the beginning.
Read the weakness, back recovery, guidelines, and inflexibility articles here:
http://www.exrx.net/Exercise.html
I'm doing both, but I'm lifting heavier for quads on some of the machines. My legs were pretty weak. I also do squats and lunges but with way less weight.0
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