Gendered Workouts. Why?


Does your gym or training program have gendered workouts?⁠⁠
Does your gym or training program say that they are for everyone?⁠⁠
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To me those two things, if both true, are at odds. ⁠⁠
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Some will use gendered workouts to assign a prescribed weight or volume to an athlete. It is said that if you cannot yet do that weight or volume that you can scale or modify to meet your ability based on gender. For some this could be motivating and give them direction for progression. ⁠⁠
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Not everyone fits into the mould of being male or female. As such gendered workouts are not for everyone. They are for those that identify as those genders. ⁠⁠
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We need more inclusive gyms. ⁠⁠
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When we assign genders to exercise, we exclude those that don’t fit a bias. ⁠⁠
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Sure progression is important. But that is the role of coaching. Progression isn’t writing a weight for a gender and saying this is what you can eventually get to based on your gender. ⁠⁠
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Progress based on goals, not gender. ⁠⁠
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How can you indicate the difficulty or intensity of something without using genders?⁠⁠
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I use RPE or Rate of Perceived Exertion. It’s completely individual because everyone perceives events or tasks differently. It’s how difficult something feels to you on a scale of 1-10. ⁠⁠
There are other ways to do this. It could be % of a previous lift. It could be a pace based on a previous measured task. It could be based on heart rate or breathing. ⁠⁠
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It just doesn’t need to be based on gender. ⁠⁠
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If we are going to say we are for everyone, let’s make sure we aren’t excluding anyone. ⁠⁠

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