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What is your gym pet peeve?

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Replies

  • Posts: 76 Member
    Do the right thing! Re rack your weights!! Ahhh
  • Posts: 211 Member
    hahaha...I tried to sneak one in.
  • Posts: 29,136 Member
    edited August 2016
    carmkizzle wrote: »

    Why do I think it's not their job to be someone's maid, regardless if the members' dues go towards their pay? Because, it isn't their job to be someone's maid. I don't expect someone to come behind me and pick up the paper towels I threw on the floor after wiping my sweat, or throw away the empty water bottle I left behind after I finished drinking it (just an example, I don't actually do those things).

    I'm an adult, I know to clean up after myself regardless of whose "job" it is to do it. Something that most of us were taught growing up. I don't think it's anyone's "job" to cater to my grown, should-know-better *kitten*.

    I just thought I'd add, it makes you wonder why they place trash cans and such all around the facility. I certainly don't think it's for decorative purposes ;) .

    So there job is to do what, exactly?
  • Posts: 43 Member
    edited August 2016
    Weight droppers. I hate hearing the sound through my already excessively loud music. If you're strong enough to lift it, you are strong enough to set it down.

    Because I should totally have no problem setting down a 90 lb dumbbell that I need someone's help to get into proper benchpress position initially. Or I should slowly lower a massive deadlift. This might be true for people who don't lift big weights but sometimes you need to give them a break.
  • Posts: 3,997 Member
    edited August 2016
    All the peeves posted are the same as mine and are the reasons why I don't belong to a gym anymore and built my own garage gym where I can:

    -Use any piece of equipment as long as I like.
    -Rest as long as I like.
    -Play music as loud as I like.
    -Stink up the place and make noises.
    -Don't wipe off gear if I don't feel like it.
    -Drop plates when lifting heavy (but I only use bumpers that don't make much noise).
    -And watch everything that happens in front of my garage door.

    The only thing that I do that wouldn't annoy somebody at the gym is that I always rerack and put all of my gear back where it belongs. I'm a neat freak that way. LOL!!!
  • Posts: 2 Member
    I feel judged at the gym! It's a family gym so there's a lot of teenagers who are mostly looking to just goof off. But they also like to gawk at the "fat people" and make them feel incredibly uncomfortable. You know....since they weigh 100 pounds and have the metabolism of a child. They have every right to judge, right?
  • Posts: 148 Member
    People doing silly stuff in the power rack--push ups, curls, etc. Get out!
    People talking to me while I'm working out.
    Not restacking the weights.
  • Posts: 29,136 Member

    Because I should totally have no problem setting down a 90 lb dumbbell that I need someone's help to get into proper benchpress position initially. Or I should slowly lower a massive deadlift. This might be true for people who don't lift big weights but sometimes you need to give them a break.

    Cosign

    And it is almost impossible to lightly lower a 400# deadllift
  • Posts: 465 Member

    That sounds horrible! Maybe time to set up a kickass home gym?

    working on it. Space and budget are limited but I'm getting very very close to what I need. Haven't stepped foot in a gym in over a year.
  • Posts: 4,855 Member
    Curls in the squat rack when the gym has at least 6 barbells not associated with a bench, rack, lifting platform, etc and plenty of open floorspace.
  • Posts: 2,430 Member
    _dracarys_ wrote: »
    Oh this thread again -_- I see the usual answers but awaiting following answers:
    -women who wear tight clothes
    -women who wear makeup

    Shouldn't be long now.

    My gym is attached to my place of work (so I get a free gym membership) sometimes I go in early to get in a weight training session. I get some of the worst looks because I have my hair and makeup done and I'm working out. I guess that would be considered my biggest pet peeve.
  • Posts: 450 Member
    edited August 2016
    This guy that screams out as if he's getting raped in jail while doing the leg press.
  • Posts: 117 Member
    Sweaty machines, people on their phones holding up equipment or space, and people that stop and stare.
  • Posts: 57 Member
    My only pet peeve is about the facility itself. One of the rooms upstairs where I do step class is incredibly hot - even with air conditioning. When I finish the workout sometimes I feel ill from how hot it is.
  • Posts: 57 Member
    I have 2. Those who sit at a machine playing with their cell phone while others are waiting to use it and people who don't wipe down their machine when they finish sweating all over it. No, I do not appreciate sitting in your butt sweat.
  • Posts: 4,537 Member
    carmkizzle wrote: »

    Why do I think it's not their job to be someone's maid, regardless if the members' dues go towards their pay? Because, it isn't their job to be someone's maid. I don't expect someone to come behind me and pick up the paper towels I threw on the floor after wiping my sweat, or throw away the empty water bottle I left behind after I finished drinking it (just an example, I don't actually do those things).

    I'm an adult, I know to clean up after myself regardless of whose "job" it is to do it. Something that most of us were taught growing up. I don't think it's anyone's "job" to cater to my grown, should-know-better *kitten*.

    I just thought I'd add, it makes you wonder why they place trash cans and such all around the facility. I certainly don't think it's for decorative purposes ;) .

    You still didn't answer my question. What is their job? I'm sure somewhere in their job description is verbiage similar to this: "Employees shall keep gym neat." AND "Employees shall rack any loose weights at the beginning and end of every shift."

    This isn't an argument about adults knowing better and cleaning up after themselves. I'm simply trying to learn what you think the job of an employee at a gym is.

    Here's a similar example from a different perspective: My gym provides clean sweat towels on a table for members to use. When finished, you put the towel in a basket filled with other sweaty towels. The employees of that gym handle those towels when placing them in a washing machine. Not really any different than picking up a sweaty paper towel and placing it in the garbage receptacle in my opinion.
  • Posts: 272 Member
    ralfprz wrote: »
    I dont smell the greatest after a 2 hour cardio sesh but theres always that one SUPER STINNNKYY/PISS/B.O person in the gym, huge pet peeve when they start working out next to you and you cant even breathe.

    Ditto. I feel so rude but it kills me
  • Posts: 4,855 Member
    ndj1979 wrote: »

    so gym staff should complain about having to re-rack weights and clean up the place where they work at? Back when I worked in restaurants I had to clean up all kinds of nasty stuff, I did it because I got paid to do it.

    When you eat in a fast food place do you take your trash and put it in the garbage can or do you just leave it? Sure someone will come around and clean up after you, but it is customary in a place like that to throw your trash away, just like it is customary to put your weights back.

  • Posts: 29,136 Member

    Dumbbells are made of rubber. They make a dull boing noise. No problem. Barbell exercises make noise. The bar and hole of the weight plate have space to make sound. The plates will hit together and make sound. No problem. People who every time, at the top of their deadlift motion, DROP the barbell like they just roasted Eminem in a rap battle and are dropping the mic are the worst kind of people.

    OH. And people who drop cable weights. Wow.

    try and pull a 400# max deadlift and see how lightly you can set it down ..

    deadlifts, by their nature, are going to be loud...

    technically, at the top of your deadlift you are supposed to RDL it and then let the weight come down to the floor after you get about knee high...not really sure how you do that with minimal noise, but I am open to suggestions..

  • Posts: 63 Member
    edited August 2016
    ndj1979 wrote: »

    try and pull a 400# max deadlift and see how lightly you can set it down ..

    deadlifts, by their nature, are going to be loud...

    technically, at the top of your deadlift you are supposed to RDL it and then let the weight come down to the floor after you get about knee high...not really sure how you do that with minimal noise, but I am open to suggestions..

    What you said: let the weight come down to the floor after you get about knee high
    This is what I said: at the top of their deadlift motion, DROP the barbell

    Do you see what you're trying to defend and what I'm annoyed about? They're not the same :)

    My friend is pretty good at not being obnoxious. Even though he drops sometimes when he's just goofing around. What he's doing in that video is not slamming. And yes I know those are some bumper plates, but he still isn't dropping it right after he straighens out.
  • Posts: 29,136 Member

    What you said: let the weight come down to the floor after you get about knee high
    This is what I said: at the top of their deadlift motion, DROP the barbell

    Do you see what you're trying to defend and what I'm annoyed about? They're not the same :)

    My friend is pretty good at not being obnoxious. Even though he drops sometimes when he's just goofing around. What he's doing in that video is not slamming. And yes I know those are some bumper plates, but he still isn't dropping it right after he straighens out.

    those still came down pretty hard..

    my point is that deadlifts are never going to be a quiet lift...

    No, people should not be screaming like they are giving birth when doing their lifts, but, come on, it is a gym and by nature it is going to be loud...

  • Posts: 263 Member
    I go to the gym to be happy, so I'm rarely peeved. I can only remember being peeved one time when this lady was on her phone next to me having such a bitchy awful gossipy conversation. I just wanted to reach over and smack her on the mouth. Otherwise, even the phone wouldn't bother me. I just don't want to listen to the negative *kitten* while I'm in my happy place
  • Posts: 43 Member
    OH. And people who drop cable weights. Wow.

    The people that pound cable weights on every rep and the people who do exercises directly in front of the free weights are probably my biggest pet peeves.

  • Posts: 1,510 Member
    edited August 2016
    people who stand in front of the dumbbell rack so no one else can get a weight and people who think its a place to meet people and wear
    perfume
  • Posts: 14,261 Member
    The only time I've ever really been irritated at the gym was this day:
    Today at the gym, I needed to get into a locker and when I asked the woman who was sitting on the bench in front of it if I could just grab my stuff really quick, she just stared at me and moved even more slowly doing what she was doing--put on boots, laced them up, paused, stared at spiral-y telephone cord keychain bracelet, put it on, sighed, slid hoodie on over arms, stopped and looked around, slid on coat (at this point another woman came up and asked if she could get to the locker above #1's head but #1 just kept going), put on gloves, twisted scarf around neck, looked down and fluffed scarf, slowly leaned forward to pick up bag. At that point I put my hand in the middle of her back and pushed her off the bench. No I didn't. But I kind of wanted to.
This discussion has been closed.