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Should women lift heavy?
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Keladelphia wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »enterdanger wrote: »My ovaries can't handle heavy lifting.
I thought it made one's uterus fall out.
My mom legitimately believes this and reminds me on a regular basis.
It can if there is a uterine prolapse. Running, jumping, lifting heavy objects, most exercise other than walking actually can exacerbate a prolapsed uterus and yes, it can actually come out. Kegels can help, but not always prevent it.2 -
Luckely my wife doesnt have to lift heavy cause I do the cooking :P1
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diannethegeek wrote: »Yes women should go ahead and lift heavy if they want to.
It's okay if they show their ankles, too.
Smelling salts and a fainting couch ASAP!!!!111111
:laugh:
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I think women should do as they please, same as men.0
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tl;dr
I used to lift light, now I lift heavy. And heavy for me is heavy for me!
48 years old and still going, don't pry my heavy weights from hands, something might happen to you if you try.3 -
diannethegeek wrote: »HeliumIsNoble wrote: »diannethegeek wrote: »Yes women should go ahead and lift heavy if they want to.
It's okay if they show their ankles, too.
Does she even lift?1 -
As long as you are able to do so and not hurt yourself, why not? What does your gender have to do with it?1
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If she wants. Not every woman has a need for strength, nor do all women want to get bigger. But as with men, some women want to challenge themselves by seeing how heavy they can lift and they love the physical changes.
What a woman looks like after heavy lifting depends on her body type. There's a myth that everyone slims down. But if you are short and somewhat squat at a normal weight heavy lifting will make you look squatter.0 -
Everyone who is capable of doing resistance training should do lift. There is literally no downside to being stronger, and significant increases in useful lifespan and compression of morbidity as we approach the downward slide of life.1
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diannethegeek wrote: »HeliumIsNoble wrote: »diannethegeek wrote: »Yes women should go ahead and lift heavy if they want to.
It's okay if they show their ankles, too.
Does she even lift?
She's lifting her skirt, can't you see? ;-)3 -
diannethegeek wrote: »HeliumIsNoble wrote: »diannethegeek wrote: »Yes women should go ahead and lift heavy if they want to.
It's okay if they show their ankles, too.
Does she even lift?
She's lifting her skirt, can't you see? ;-)
And that appears to be quite a bit of material, so likely heavy.3 -
yes, the more you stress the muscle the more it grows. very few people want to be bean pole skinny. the shape is from the muscle. the more muscle the better shape.
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Now I wonder what everyone's definition of "heavy" is. If I could lift 300 (not there yet) but lifted 200 is that heavy? Or is there a max weight you think people should stop at regardless of their ability and/or potential?
The actual weight is relative to the individual..."heavy" typically describes working in a lower rep range (1-5or6) at a higher % of THEIR 1 RM and is typically done with barbell work. "Heavy" generally produces maximal strength gains...think power lifters.0 -
@cwolfman - "at a higher % of their 1 RM". Can you explain what that means? Can you give an example? I never quite got the 1rm thing - I picture the powerlifters in those competitions grunting to lift the heaviest they can then walk away. Don't know how that would correspond to average folks. Hope that makes sense.0
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CeeBeeSlim wrote: »@cwolfman - "at a higher % of their 1 RM". Can you explain what that means? Can you give an example? I never quite got the 1rm thing - I picture the powerlifters in those competitions grunting to lift the heaviest they can then walk away. Don't know how that would correspond to average folks. Hope that makes sense.
Heavy would be 85% or more of a person's 1 rep max and is generally done for 5 or fewer reps. A 1 rep max is the weight you can lift for one full rep and then you need to put it down because you cannot do another proper rep. So if your bench press 1 rep max was 100 lbs, heavy would be 85-100 lbs. I'd go further and say that the 100 pound bench press should be something you can reliably do on a given training day, not something you did one time while amped up for competition.
That's what I can consider the technical definition of heavy lifting. However, think it's more limited than what many non-lifters would call heavy lifting. I think many non-lifters see weights a increasing in difficulty or heaviness purely based on machine vs dumbbells vs barbells. If it happens to come up that I lift weights, people will ask "what kind of weights do you lift?" I was never really sure what they were asking (actual numbers? type of equipment? specific exercises?) but my husband was with me once and answered "heavy ones" and that seemed to satisfy the asker. So that's what I say now too.1 -
@jemhh put it far more concisely than what I was working on. Heavy is individualized - my heavy squat's weight is going to be a different from yours - but both will be five reps or fewer.0
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I consider anything in the 1-20 rep range still heavy as long as your pushing yourself.1
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Even if they DON'T want to!3
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ijsantos2005 wrote: »Even if they DON'T want to!
If they don't want to; there is no need to, there are plenty of options available that offer enough resistance to maintain muscle.
Lifting heavy is a specific activity, and though it gives one the fastest and greatest gains, it is not for everyone.
Cheers, h.10 -
@jemhh Thanks for clearing that up for me. Makes perfect sense.1
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