Three Reasons Why Women Don't Lift Weights
- Endless Reasons Why They Should Reconsider
By Janet Ford, President, PowerFit LLC
Despite overwhelming evidence showing the benefits of weight training,
statistics show women still rely on aerobics and use aerobic fitness equipment to be slim, healthy and young. See NSGA statistics. Resulting joint injuries and
persistent cellulite, however, call for alternative methods
of exercise.
Some may remember the Tufts University research that found
unexpected results from a study performed with women in
their 50s and 60s. The women lifted weights for two, 30
minute sessions per week. After one year, they dropped two
dress sizes without dieting, and their lean muscle mass,
cardiovascular fitness, coordination and bone density
measurements were comparable to younger women in their 30s
and early 40s. Prior to this research, frailty was
thought to be an inevitable part of getting old.
Yet, the promise of youth and body transformation has not
exactly led to a weight lifting revolution in fitness training among women. The
reluctance appears to turn on three factors:
1. Women are uneasy about entering the same weight training
rooms that are dominated by hulking body builders.
2. Women still fear "bulking up," even though it has been
demonstrated many times over that weight training does not
have this effect on the female body.
3. The fitness industry manufactures equipment engineered
for male bodies, often making it difficult for women to
safely begin or advance in a strength training program.
These obstacles should not prevail on women's lives, as
women are particularly vulnerable to osteoporosis, muscle
loss, joint disease, decreased coordination and hunched-over
posture - the very problems that weight training
addresses.
Some solutions include:
(1) obtain home weight training equipment, which will enable
you to exercise in a comfortable and convenient atmosphere
and with exercise partners of your own choosing;
(2) understand that women do not bulk up without the
assistance of steroidal chemicals or extraordinary genes -
for more information, read about the differences between bodybuilding and weight
training; and
(3) find weight training equipment suited to women's needs -
many space-saving, adjustable dumbbells increase in only 2 ˝
lb. increments, rather than the male-sized 5 to 10 lb.
increments. Another product called PlateMate provides magnet weights that attach
to dumbbells, allowing you to advance in weight as little as
5/8 lb. at a time. Resistance bands and medicine balls
provide excellent strength training benefits and come in
varied weights, sizes and shapes to accommodate a woman's
workout program. Workout gloves, especially those with wrist
supports, help women to grab and hold bars more
comfortably.
So check out the other side of pumping iron. Women have the
influence to transform weight training into a practice for
fitness and well-being, rather than a means to compete in
body building and weight lifting sports. For more
information, visit TheFitWoman.com
Author(s):
Janet Ford is an A.C.E. Certified Personal Trainer and co-owner of TheFitWoman.com website of women's weight training and fitness equipment. She is an experienced weight trainer, marathon cyclist, and primary author of The Fit Woman Blog.
This article may be republished so long as links to the author(s) and TheFitWoman.com remain intact.
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