We all have a desire to be skinny and have a ripped body,
but how much does this impact on our lives? And what effect do digital effects
have on our mindset?
It is vital that athletes spend a large portion of their
time ensuring that their body is in prime condition for their sport, but at
what stage does the gym culture take over? Professional sporting organisations
very often have gyms at their training facilities, and the athletes use these
for an hour or so a day. The sporting organisations employ strength and
conditioning coaches to help the athletes to ensure that their body is primed
for their sport. But it is the semi-professional and amateur athletes that have
the most trouble with body image. They participate in their sport, and on the
side they head to the gym to get ‘big’. They get caught up in the gym culture
of society, and focus on getting stronger. But when these athletes go to the
gym, they rarely go for the purpose of developing their sport, they go for
looks.
If athletes can’t have confidence in themselves and their
image, what message does that portray to those that look up to them? As I
mentioned last week about Idols, people hang off everything that their idols do
and say. Whilst this can be positive, it can also be very negative. Children
these days need to be taught that body image is not important. They should just
be out running around with their friends rather than worrying about how they
look. When they see athletes being photo shopped in magazines, and worrying
about their body image, these children are of course going to become conscious
about their own bodies. This should not be happening. Children should be taught
that nutrition is vital, and any other resistance training and cardio training
should be done to ensure better performance in sport rather than aesthetics.
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