“That must be your husband’s,” remarked the mechanic, smiling at me. He’d caught a glimpse of Big Red, my bright and burly 32-kilogram kettlebell (that’s just a smidge over 70 pounds, if you’re not practiced in making quick metric system conversions) buckled up in my back seat for instances when I need to stop and swing.
He was genuinely trying to be friendly, but he was mistaken.
“Nope, she’s all mine,” I replied.
“Oh,” the mechanic responded. “Oh! That’s very cool!”
As a society, we seem to be collectively less taken aback to see or hear about women lifting weights, and more supportive of the endeavor—an indicator of progress as sure as the kind you see in the gym.
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In addition, strength training has shot to the top of the recommendations list for many a mainstream health organization, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; their website recommends strength training for men and women of all ages, listing benefits such as more muscle strength, increased bone density, better balance, weight maintenance, improved glucose control, and arthritis relief, among others. It also acknowledges the benefits beyond the physical, saying that lifting weights “can also have a profound impact on a person's mental and emotional health.”
The advantages of lifting heavy-for-you weights—“heavy” depends entirely on the lifter—are myriad, from a higher caloric burn post-workout to greater loss of intra-abdominal fat to greater muscle definition. The “toned” look that many women are looking for is, in actuality, the building of more muscle and the burning of more fat, so going big—meaning doing anywhere from one to 12 reps with a "heavy" weight—moves you closer to toned than doing dozens of reps with a very light weight.
MORE: The Beauty of Lifting Heavy Weights
And that doesn’t even touch the feeling of capability and confidence that comes with moving big numbers.
There are, unfortunately, still times where we may have to field unfounded warnings about bulking up (my standard response: women don’t have the testosterone levels to get totally jacked unless they lift often and eat very, very big, very, very often), but oftentimes—like in the case of my encounter with the mechanic—the reaction is pure admiration and support. People’s pre-existing ideas about what’s possible shift in an instant, and with every one of these interactions, we transform what it means when a woman says, “I lift weights.”
To be clear, we are not in any way obligated to usher in new expectations, but I like to believe that every time you act as an ambassador for big weights, an angel gets its swings.
It may be a heavy burden, but it’s okay—we are already used to lifting those.
MORE: 7 Trainers Share Their BEST Strength-Training Tips
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Jen Sinkler is a longtime fitness writer and personal trainer based in Minneapolis who talks fitness, food, happy life, and general health topics at her website, jensinkler.com, and writes for a variety of national health magazines. Earlier this year, she authored Lift Weights Faster, an e-library of over 130 conditioning workouts for fat loss, athleticism, and overall health.
Jen works with clients at The Movement Minneapolis, a facility that uses biofeedback-based training techniques. She is a certified kettlebell instructor through the RKC (Level 2) and KBA, and an Olympic lifting coach through USA Weightlifting; she also holds coaching certifications through Primal Move, Progressive Calisthenics, CrossFit and DVRT (Ultimate Sandbag).
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