Red face from exercising
AuburnL
Posts: 13 Member
I'm a pale redhead and my face gets beet red when I work out and stays that way for as long as an hour after. Is there anything that can minimize this? Google is not making me hopeful but you never know so thought I'd ask if anyone has found something that works. I work out in the morning now so it goes away by the time I commute but this summer my schedule changes and I'm going to have to do lunchtime workouts a couple of times a week. Guess I'll try to avoid scheduling after lunch meetings but man, it's embarrassing!
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What happens if you wash your face with cool water afterwards? See if the capillaries close down by doing that?0
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Doesn't seem to make a difference. It lasts through a shower. Even if I rinse with cool water. Just time from what I can tell. A friend recommended this ice packed headband/ scarf thing that she uses when she runs in the Palm Springs heat to try to keep my temp down a bit but that seems a little ridiculous in an air conditioned gym! Might try it though just to see if it makes a difference.
The color I turn is intense. I've had strangers ask if I'm okay and need assistance. lol.0 -
I am the same way. I look like my head is going to pop off. It takes a long time to cool down. Just one of those things. Keep up the good work! Better to exercise than not.
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I had this problem a lot last year. I have no solution, but I will say it has gotten so, so much better as I've gotten more fit (and lost weight, but not sure if that's related or if it is just improved fitness). Hopefully it will get better with time for you as well.0
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I've had this ever since I was a kid and even got tormented for it It is just one of these things sadly, I'm also very pale and also very blonde. Rehydration and drinking lots of water straight after, splashing and washing face, cool towel and a cool damp towel throughout your workout and wearing as lightweight clothes or as little as you can get away with have all had minimal effects. Cooling aloe vera gel kept in the fridge is refreshing when put on your face after a workout (sort of feels soothing like when you put after sun on sunburn) but I don't know how much it helps the redness.0
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eh my face turns red when exercising, when its warm outside, when i have more than small amounts of sugar (medical condition) really im just used to it now, nothing ive tried gets it to go away. some people ask me whats wrong with my face, i just ignore it now. you can buy anti redness foundations if it really bothers you that much in meetings0
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Like many have said before, it's just something you'll have to get used to wearing for a while after a workout. Do yourself a favor and consider it a badge of honor, proof to the world that you are doing what you want to do, when you want to do it.
As for trying to abate it with cooling, forget it. I swim in a competition pool (non-competitive lane btw) which is by all standards, cold, and within just a lap or two I'm as red as a person can be. Everytime there is a new lifeguard, it's almost an employment test to see how long before he/she is at the end of my lane asking me if I need assistance.
I carry that red face for about an hour, or hour and a half, until I'm fully de-stressed, physically and mentally, from the workout.
After my first half-ironman, the massage people had me escorted to the medical tent where they put IV's into both arms, mostly because of the extremely red face and neck contrasting against the rest of me which had gone grey. All I wanted was a massage....0 -
Doesn't seem to make a difference. It lasts through a shower. Even if I rinse with cool water. Just time from what I can tell. A friend recommended this ice packed headband/ scarf thing that she uses when she runs in the Palm Springs heat to try to keep my temp down a bit but that seems a little ridiculous in an air conditioned gym! Might try it though just to see if it makes a difference.
The color I turn is intense. I've had strangers ask if I'm okay and need assistance. lol.
Oh dear, that doesn't sound good.
I don't have much to offer other than what others have said. I take a cold shower afterwards and it stays red for about an hour. I work out during each lunch break and avoid afternoon meetings with people outside my organisation unless it's a telecon lol. My colleges however have gotten used to my post workout face so if I need a meeting with them in the afternoon it's not such a big deal anymore.0 -
Sorry, that reaction is linked to dialation of microcapillaries and the lightness of skin. It's a good thing. Anything that you do to address it systemically risks causing real problems because at the source that flushing is healthy - it's intended to take heat away from your core to avoid cooking your brain proteins*.
One thing that will reduce it is improving your overall cardiovascular level - a program that improves your VO2 will reduce the flush response a little in sub max exercise. For example, train for a marathon with intervals, tempo work, etc and you'll see it less. Of course to get there, you are going to have a flush often - added plus is you are going to get used to it.
Topically, maybe one of those freezable face masks with ice might temporary help. You could use it as a local face compress for 5-10 minutes. But I doubt this will help.
*if you are taking any niacin based medications flushing and exercise can be discussed with a doc.0 -
It's a fair-skinned person problem. My wife gets it too.
#thestruggleisreal0 -
I recently made a joke that i look like hellboy after I finish running. I also have no solution for the redness.0
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I use a green tint primer to tone down redness. Maybelline makes one and also Pur.0
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I feel your pain. When I took group classes, I would go up to the instructor beforehand to tell her about what to expect from my face and that I was fine. I came to get used to it, but it is a real drag.0
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I go for walks that usually turn into runs. My husband can always tell if I've run or walked by the color of my face when I get back in.
I also think that with improved fitness, I maybe don't get quite as red. But, as others have said, I just don't really care anymore! It's getting a little worse now because the temperatures are rising. Even indoors, I'm finding that it's worse in the summer time.
I'm also very pale and blush at someone mentioning blushing. My whole family is that way!0 -
I'm the same, and have also had people expressing serious concern for my wellbeing. I'm very pale, but I'm also dark-haired, so I think it becomes even more startling for strangers to see me looking like my head is about to explode.
I wish I had an answer. Cooling etc does absolutely nothing, it's just something you have to live with for an hour or so. It happens mostly if I add things like sprint intervals to a run. I actually had a car wind their window down to check on me once after a hill sprint last week... embarassment doesn't help the situation either0 -
I think it's just the fair-skinned thing. Accept it as a badge of honor, I earned the red face by exercising!
I turn red if it's windy, sunny, cold, hot, or I'm exercising for more than two minutes, or because the sky is blue, sometimes to the point of being scarlet. I get the random people asking me if I'm ok as well.
Since your natural response kind of takes away one of determining symptoms of heat stress, exhaustion, etc, learn what your "normal" red shade feels and looks like (yep mirror), so that both you and those around you regularly (SO, friends, workout buddy, gym acquaintance, family, etc) know what to expect. This will help limit heat related issues, but you should pay attention to the other heat related symptoms even closer. My husband has learned to ignore my red color unless I'm purple or getting a white ring or ghosting out after being red. When I would go on the not air-conditioned plant floor in the summer at my previous job, my boss quickly learned what level is normal for me.
I hope the improved fitness thing helps reduce it is true, but if not I've learned to accept it.0 -
I have the same problem. I also tend to overheat in temperatures over 65 degrees (F), so I'll get a little red just from walking in hotter/humid temps. If I'm running or doing cardio I'd rather it be in the 40s or 50s! No matter what, my face gets red. The harder I work, the redder it gets. I'll echo what others have said that I do think it goes away faster post workout as my cardiovascular fitness has improved. I also think it gets a little less red in general, but that could all be in my head.0
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I'm not pale but I do have the same issue.
I find a cool shower takes a half hour off my redness. It does look very embarrassing and I generally only jog in the morning when no one is there0 -
I have the same problem right down to people thinking I'm in distress.
If you wear makeup, a good coverage foundation seems to help mask it so I look flushed instead of apoplectic.
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I have the same problem. However, it has reduced as my fitness level has increased. It used to happen every time I would run, now it only happens if its really hot out when I run.0
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Another fair haired, fair skinned person here and, yes, I get the same thing. I haven't found anything to make it go away, I just give myself about 30 minutes or so after working out before I have to go anywhere where it may matter.0
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I get red, too, on my cheeks and under my chin. I have a really nice yellow concealer by Clinique that hides the redness (I put it on afterward--I wipe sweat off my face with a towel the whole time I work out, so the concealer would just come off). But, they discontinued it and made a yellow primer in its place, which doesn't really work. So, I found that NYX has concealers in yellow and green to hide redness. I have to order one from Ulta when I run out of the Clinique one.0
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I guess I’m confused here. Why would you be embarrassed when people see you with a post workout flush? I tend to sweat for as much as an hour after a good workout (and like you, even a cold shower doesn’t fully work). So, I do my workouts and leave enough time to “cool down” after and then I shower. Takes some planning, but if it really bothers you, then plan you must.0
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AllanMisner wrote: »I guess I’m confused here. Why would you be embarrassed when people see you with a post workout flush?
They have no idea that your face is tomato-red because of a workout and think you might be having a heart attack or something. I, too, have had strangers offer to get me medical assistance. I even had an instructor come up to me in the middle of class and (quietly, politely) suggest that maybe I should dial back the intensity. I think she thought I was going to die in her class, and that probably would have made her feel bad
Also like some of the previous posters, my glowing crimson face issues went away after I got more fit. It barely ever happens anymore, now that I'm 2+ years into doing 6-ish hours of cardio per week. I forget when it stopped happening, though.
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I've been either "jogging" (I can honestly WALK faster than I jog!), or riding my bike, during my 30 minute lunch break. I come back so red, but that just proves that I'm out doing what I can to reach my goal. I consider it a badge of honor, I wear it proudly. However, everyone that I come into contact with, knows that I've been working on this since November so it's never an issue. If anyone at your job asks, just tell them you're working out at lunch. They'll get used to it AND you might find them cheering you on. My people ask if I'm ok if I didn't work out at lunch!0
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AllanMisner wrote: »I guess I’m confused here. Why would you be embarrassed when people see you with a post workout flush?
When you're a pale blonde or a redhead, that post workout flush look seriously like you're having a cardiac emergency or something.
Also, it might be a gender thing. I go running with my brother on occasion. He's a true redhead and gets even redder than I do. He's also significantly overweight and at risk for an actual heart attack, but he's never had anyone ask him if he's OK. I get asked on the regular - I've even had a police officer pull his patrol car over to check.
I guess it's not ladylike to get a red face.
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I apologize if I offended anyone. I was responding to the question as an after the fact, cool down thing. I can definitely sympathize with having your workouts interrupted to check on you. That would bother me, too.0
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Cool wet towel applied to the wet areas directly after your workout, drink lots of water before, during, and after your workout, and avoid mirrors
-Someone who turns red-purple0 -
I don't think you offended anyone, you asked a legitimate question - why is it embarrassing for people to see the after-effects of your workout. The answer, basically, is that people get ****ing weird about it.0
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