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Simple reasons why women need weight training!!

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new@gettinbig

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Fitness Tip - Why Women Need Weight Training



Again and again, research has shown that women who maintain a regular, moderate strength training program enjoy a long list of health advantages. Some women still fear that weight training might bulk them up in unfeminine ways; however, as women of all ages realize the benefits of resistance training, negative attitudes about women in the weight room are rapidly fading, according to renowned strength training researcher William J. Kraemer, PhD, of Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana.

Weight training expert and researcher Wayne Westcott, PhD, from the South Shore YMCA in Quincy, Massachusetts, gives 10 important reasons why women need to take strength training seriously:

1. You'll Lose More Fat Than You'll Gain in Muscle. Westcott and his colleagues have done numerous weight training studies involving thousands of women and have never had anyone complain about bulking up. In fact, Westcott's research shows that the average woman who strength trains two to three times a week for eight weeks gains 1.75 pounds of lean weight or muscle and loses 3.5 pounds of fat. Unlike men, women typically don't gain size from strength training, because compared to men, women have 10 to 30 times less of the hormones that cause bulking up, explains Kraemer.


2. Your New Muscle Will Help Fight Obesity. As you add muscle from strength training, your resting metabolism will increase, so you'll burn more calories all day long, notes Westcott. For each pound of muscle you gain, you'll burn 35 to 50 more calories daily. So, for example, if you gain three pounds of muscle and burn 40 extra calories for each pound, you'll burn 120 more calories per day, or approximately 3,600 more calories per month. That equates to a loss of 10 to 12 pounds in one year!


3. You'll Be a Stronger Woman. Westcott's studies indicate that moderate weight training increases a woman's strength by 30 to 50 percent. Extra strength will make it easier to accomplish some daily activities, such as lifting children or groceries. Kraemer notes that most strength differences between men and women can be explained by differences in body size and fat mass; pound for pound, women can develop their strength at the same rate as men.


4. Your Bones Will Benefit. By the time you leave high school, you have established all the bone mineral density you'll ever have--unless you strength train, says Westcott. Research has found that weight training can increase spinal bone mineral density by 13 percent in six months. So strength training is a powerful tool against osteoporosis.


5. You Will Reduce Your Risk of Diabetes. Adult-onset diabetes is a growing problem for women and men. Research indicates that weight training can increase glucose utilization in the body by 23 percent in four months.


6. You Will Fight Heart Disease. Strength training will improve your cholesterol profile and blood pressure, according to recent research. Of course, your exercise program should also include cardiovascular exercise and flexibility training.


7. You Will Be Able to Beat Back Pain and Fight Arthritis. A recent 12-year study showed that strengthening the low-back muscles had an 80 percent success rate in eliminating or alleviating low-back pain. Other studies have indicated that weight training can ease arthritis pain and strengthen joints.


8. You'll Be a Better Athlete. Westcott has found that strength training improves athletic ability. Golfers, for example, significantly increase their driving power. Whatever your sport of choice, strength training may not only improve your proficiency but also decrease your risk of injury.


9. It Will Work No Matter How Old You Are. Westcott has successfully trained numerous women in their 70s and 80s, and studies show that strength improvements are possible at any age. Note, however, that a strength training professional should always supervise older participants.


10. You’ll Strengthen Your Mental Health. A Harvard study found that 10 weeks of strength training reduced clinical depression symptoms more successfully than standard counseling did, Westcott says. Women who strength train commonly report feeling more confident and capable as a result of their program.
 
Great Post!!!!

The only problem is most women reading this board already know this.. So I printed it and will post it at work..Maybe if we can all pass it along to a few other people, we can do our part in making the world a fitter (is that a word?) Place!

Thanks Rocket:)
 
I posted this for a reminder for the vet lady lifters but also all the new gals we get on here just doing a lot of cardio and have misconceptions of weight training and are unaware of the benefits:)
 
great info!

i agree with rocket, so i posted it on the health/fitness section of a beauty board that i peruse from time to time. it may be a waste of time, but lately i've been answering questions for girls who don't know very much at all about diet and exercise. half the time they think i'm crazy, but what the hell, maybe it will help someone get off the sheep diets and try something that actually works.
 
As one of my female client's put it the other day.

"Sometimes I wonder why I train with you, well I was at a Longenberger party this weekend and I realized that my ass was half the size of everyone else's at the party. Now I know why I train...."

W6
 
wilson6 said:
As one of my female client's put it the other day.

"Sometimes I wonder why I train with you, well I was at a Longenberger party this weekend and I realized that my ass was half the size of everyone else's at the party. Now I know why I train...."

W6

ROFLMAOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!:FRlol:
 
Well, I don't want to get big. I just want to lose some weight and tone up.

I'm doing hi reps, low weights (as she slides the 5 lb plates on the leg press).

I don't want to sweat.

Does my outfit match?

I could never lift THAT much - I don't want to get big (see above)

But I eat ALL low fat foods!

Oatmeal?? YUK! I have coffee for breakfast.

I usually just have some salad with lite dressing.

I'd like the quarter pounder w/ cheese & fries, super size it, ... and a Diet Coke.

............... :rolleyes:
 
now Stick it
into shape
STick it up
get stuck
go forward
move ahead
try not to delete it
it's not too late
to stick it
stick it good!

;) Just checkin - is there a max stickie limit per board?
 
Sassy69 said:
now Stick it
into shape
STick it up
get stuck
go forward
move ahead
try not to delete it
it's not too late
to stick it
stick it good!
:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:


great post /sticky now to send out copies!
 
he he, i got a reply on the beauty board where i re-posted the above article. :D the girl said, of course, she has been thinking about weight training but was worried about getting bulky :smash: so she said after reading it she was motivated to start lifting!! :D :D
 
It's good for women who are in the health profession to remain in shape and weight training especially when you have to transfer or move or lift people.
 
new@gettinbig said:
Fitness Tip - Why Women Need Weight Training

9. It Will Work No Matter How Old You Are. Westcott has successfully trained numerous women in their 70s and 80s, and studies show that strength improvements are possible at any age. Note, however, that a strength training professional should always supervise older participants.


If anyone doubts this, they should take a look at the divine Ms. Christa Bauch, who became a real, competitive BB in her 40s. She looks grrrrreat! She took 5th place in the Jan Tana Comp, in 1995, when she was 48!

It's never too late to look and feel great.

http://www.christabauch.de/

Wyst
 
Re: Re: Simple reasons why women need weight training!!

wyst said:


If anyone doubts this, they should take a look at the divine Ms. Christa Bauch, who became a real, competitive BB in her 40s. She looks grrrrreat! She took 5th place in the Jan Tana Comp, in 1995, when she was 48!

It's never too late to look and feel great.

http://www.christabauch.de/

Wyst


Brenda Kelly is 43 I think and she still looks damn amazing.

Brenda's Site
 
Great post!!
I will also print it and give it to this 26 year old girl that asked me on Sat night, at a night club " How do I loose fat from my arms?" After taking a look at her whole body I politely replied:" You don't, you need to loose body fat from your whole body" because what is the use of having muscle that is covered by a layer of bf.
Eri:)
 
hmm, wow, even I'm convinced :D I'm gonna copy and paste this in the 'working out' forum on the Thin Page, if that's okay? Spreading the word .... ;)

love
mm (who's thinking about buying some *gasp* dumbbells)
 
Re: Re: Re: Simple reasons why women need weight training!!

Sez you. If I could be half as strong and vital as she is at her age, I'd say I'd done a good job. You don't get like that out of "boredome," my friend, you get that way from hard work, no matter what drugs you're on.

What *should* women look like? If we all went by the common "what women should look like" as decided by the majority, we'd all have big tits and blonde hair and long legs and vacant smiles, no doubt. Well, as a smallish, dark, Japanese woman, I may be a little more sensitive to this than most women here (but I doubt it) but I will say this...thank God we don't all look like that...that would be real cause for "boredome." And thank god there are more possible kinds of beauty in the eyes of people with a bit of sophistication than just the omnipresent bouncy cheerleader type (which is fine, but it's not everything).

How about you? Are you the perfect representative of mainstream male beauty? No? Didn't think so. How lucky for you, then, no doubt, that the people around you aren't as close minded as you seem to be, based on this message.

Ms Bauch has said repeatedly in interviews that she was always ashamed of her body growing up, and her small breasts and boyish shape. It wasn't until late in life that she was able to make of her body something that she could be proud of. Thanks for your contribution to the general climate of ignorance and stupidity that makes it so hard to be anything other than a Baywatch babe in today's world.

:)

Wyst
 
Oh how I long for the days when I was 21 and knew it all. Somebody has to love them fat bottomed girls and BOT and I am so glad to hear that there are men like you out there to do it.
 
All men think like you do? And that's a "fact?"

Uh, no.

Just because you say something is a fact doesn't make it so. I think the zillions of guys who sign up for fbb websites, and post on the related NGs pretty much gives that uninformed statement the lie, BOT.

I've been a women for 34 years now, and in that time I've come to realize that the silliest statements of all are the ones that say things like, "all men (or women) think..."

Maybe when you finish growing up you'll get that.

Wyst
 
This is a great post, i'm gonna print it out and show it to my girlfriend, at the moment she just does cardio and is afraid of the weights and of getting "too big", i'm gradually convincing her that weights are a good idea, trouble is she is too self conscious to come to train with me so i can't show her how to do stuff properly:( :confused:
Then once i've got her training properly i've just got to convince her that 5-6 meals a day really are better than 2, even if you are trying to lose weight...

Stu.

p.s. Wyst, who are you arguing with/at???
 
Stuey01 said:


p.s. Wyst, who are you arguing with/at???

I can't even remember who it was -- but he got zapped from the board, I guess because he kept hammering on women who take AS, which seems kinda silly on this board. He was just trying to get a rise out of us, I think.

Warlobo took care of that!

Thanks, WL.

Wyst
 
weight training

more women should train with weights so that i dont have to look at any more saggy behinds or cottage cheese thighs or spare tires. chicks with muscle rule! especially my wife
 
Sassy69 said:
Well, I don't want to get big. I just want to lose some weight and tone up.

I'm doing hi reps, low weights (as she slides the 5 lb plates on the leg press).

I don't want to sweat.

Does my outfit match?

I could never lift THAT much - I don't want to get big (see above)

But I eat ALL low fat foods!

Oatmeal?? YUK! I have coffee for breakfast.

I usually just have some salad with lite dressing.

I'd like the quarter pounder w/ cheese & fries, super size it, ... and a Diet Coke.

............... :rolleyes:

OMG ...
YOU VE BEEN TALKING TO MY GIRLFRIEND TOO.. LOL

well she use to be like that but she is slowly getting in the right groove of things, I m keeping my fingers cross and being patient.:D
 
Re: Re: Simple reasons why women need weight training!!

wyst said:


If anyone doubts this, they should take a look at the divine Ms. Christa Bauch, who became a real, competitive BB in her 40s. She looks grrrrreat! She took 5th place in the Jan Tana Comp, in 1995, when she was 48!

It's never too late to look and feel great.

http://www.christabauch.de/

Wyst

OH NO!

This is going to scare my girlfriend out of the wieght room again.
This is what she doesnt want to look like, now i have to explain how it works again , and again, and again,
 
This is a great article, thanks to the person who posted it.

These are the reasons I finally started to use weights.

It's good for women who are in the health profession to remain in shape and weight training especially when you have to transfer or move or lift people.

or when you have to lift the 100 lb rottweiler onto the Xray table ... or when you have to hold the husky that is stronger than two weightlifters (at least it FEELS that way) down to clean its ears or clip its nails ... or when the 100 lb rottweiler is trying to EAT your assistant and you have hold of its neck and somebody is in BIG trouble if you let go ... !! LOL!!

However ...



because what is the use of having muscle that is covered by a layer of bf.

Well ... if I'm not mistaken ... (correct me if I'm wrong) ... You'll still lose fat even if you don't lose it all ... you'll be a stronger woman ... you won't get osteoporosis ... you will reduce your risk of diabetes ... you will reduce your risk of heart disease ... you will suffer less from arthritis ... you'll be a better athlete ... you can do it no matter how old you are ... and you'll be healthier mentally.

Am I the only one who thinks all this is worth nothing unless I have the right "look" ???

Uh, I'll take the health benefits, thank you, even if I never look a BIT different than I look today. When you've seen your grandmothers suffer with diabetes, osteoporosis, and cancer up close and personal, and you've had backaches so bad you couldn't sleep for three nights in a row, and you have a chronic illness and you are PAIN FREE AND NOT IN THE HOSPITAL -- YEAH!!! looks are sort of secondary.
 
Troll, I hear where you are coming from, honestly I do. However consuming excess calories decreases life expectancy ( I can pull up the study for you). Excess bodyfat no longer serves the purpose that it did for our ancestors. As you become stronger and add lean mass it will become increasingly difficult for you to maintain high levels of bodyfat providing that you are eating a nutritious balanced diet. There are many of us on this board who have "crossed over" and by that I mean that our primary focus is no longer on losing the bodyfat but rather on strength. The one thing that we have found is that when we shift the focus our bodies lean out faster. My issue with bodyfat is not so much the way that it makes me look but rather that it is unnecessary and downright uncomfortable and it make doing the activities that I enjoy more difficult. I understand accepting your body at whatever size that it is but there is a difference between acceptance and clinging tenaciously onto fat.:)
 
Well, I'm not going to work overtime to KEEP it there, if that's what ya mean. Obviously life is easier in many ways with not so much of it ... unless you are an Eskimo or something ...

I just find remarks like

so that i dont have to look at any more saggy behinds or cottage cheese thighs or spare tires

to be a *little* bit shallow.

When you have seen people in true chronic pain it makes you a lot more thankful of what you DO have, and less critical of how it *looks.*

That doesn't mean that if I do lose fat in my efforts I am going to go find a way to add it back again however ...
 
Troll, I am serious about checking out the PL board. If your goal is to get stronger, and not worry so much about dropping that last couple of pounds of fat, you may find this more to your liking.
 
You mean the powerlifting board ... not the platinum board, right?

Right ... of course.

Ya gotta forgive us totally new people who don't know nuthin'.

Actually I have more than a couple extra pounds of fat.

But I do not weigh 300 lbs as some people around here seem to think I do ... :confused:

I suppose I look something like JenniferBFL chick's before photo, with a little more fat below the waist. (Read: Butt ... Thighs.)

I can't say I haven't seen ANY results, though. My workouts are getting easier to do ... and I have more energy throughout the day and don't feel so sleepy and tired all the time anymore.

Every little bit helps ...
 
I've seen Christa Bauch pictures and as a male bb I can only respect the very hard work she put in, from a bb perspective she looks very complete/proportioned and those quads are simply stunning. I think this is the looks a NATURAL -male- bb should shoot for.

I wouldn't date this chick tough. I WOULD date Inge de Bruijn , who is the gold medaillist olympic swimmer and featerus a very trained / toned body while preserving some lovely female qualities.

And no, unless you are like Christa and have a serious "obsession" (hers was the small boyish looks, well she is a big boy now) and train year round like a chemical assisted animal , there is not much change (worry ;-) of becoming like this when you pick up a weight...

Gees, if it would be that simple we guys could get away with 2 times a week doing triceps dumbell kickbacks for 30 reps

Especially females who naturaly have lower testosterone levels should focus on heavy compound movement to GET ANY RESULT AT ALL! Maybe 1 out of 30 females is a genetic freak and may start getting more muscular than intended, but than again you can always LOWER intensity and train LESS should this rare event happen. Me for example I rarely train arms, cause they would become too big (easy) in relation to the rest of my body and mess up my proportions. Delts however I have to bust my ass to keep them going ...

So send this girl into the gym 3 times a week for a full body workout doing the big lifts for low reps and on the OFF days some high-intensity-interval-training cardio...
 
Me? I can't do any big lifts ... yet. ;)

And no, unless you are like Christa and have a serious "obsession" (hers was the small boyish looks, well she is a big boy now) and train year round like a chemical assisted animal , there is not much change (worry ;-) of becoming like this when you pick up a weight...

Oh, I KNOW that. At this point I'm just worrying about getting started. I'd never actually worry about looking like that.

But you gotta respect her for the work that she's done, tho.
 
Thanks for the post. I have been looking for a good article to show my sister in law, in order to convince that weight lifting needs to be the center of you diet routine.

Nuatica
 
I've cut & paste your write up and forwarded to some of my friends & family members ... maybe this will give them a little more inspiration to start lifting.
 
Hi y'all. This is my first post here.

I've lifted weights on and off since I was a kid. I started with my dad at the Y when I was 15. I'm now 36, and determined to reclaim my body after having two children and nursing for almost six years straight (I weaned my youngest almost two years ago). While I wish that I'd been more consistent with weight training, I'm thrilled to now be committed to it (and to have access to the equipment), and I'm beginning to see and feel the rewards. Pregnancy really stresses out the abs, which, once they're weak, give the back problems (esp. when carrying a large-for-her-age four year old who likes to get piggy-back rides!). And of course my pecs need some serious work to lift up these empty milk bags that are my breasts.

The cosmetic benefits of this work is like the icing on the cake for me. More important are the increase in strength, the benefits to bone density (I recently watched my mother care for her mother-in-law in the last year of her life as osteoporosis took her...not a nice way to go), and also the improvement of joint health. (My knees and hips are out of whack...I'm doing yoga as well as weight training in hopes of straightening them out.)

Seeing those ladies in their forties is inspirational.

I'm very glad to meet all of you and look forward to learning from and being inspired by your successes.
 
Hello,
I'm new to elitefitness.com. Thought I would tell everyone a little about me. I am a 39 year old mom of 5. I started training in 1999 with a personal trainer when I was IMO a fat bitch. I worked out 5 days a week and made great progress until I broke my leg at the gym doing plyometrics then one thing led to another and i stopped working out. I can now kick myself for not getting back into the routine because I am back where I started. I have started working out doing 5 sets of 10-15 reps of squats, flat bench, cable rows, military presses, and crunches on day 1 and deads, incline bench, pulldowns, cable upright rows, and leg lifts on day 2. I am starting off slow because I am also in nursing school fulltime. I will do this routine for 3 weeks then increase workout days to 4 days per week. I am also keeping track of what I eat for one week and so far it isn't very pretty. With 5 kids trying to find foods that everyone will eat isn't easy. Any and all advice would be appreciated.

Rdcamma
 
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