Calgary Herald

Why do gyms want women to smile?

I came to the gym to work hard. I shouldn’t have to be presentabl­e or pretty while dripping with sweat.

- LEAH PRINZIVALL­I

I recently spent an hour attempting Warrior 1 on a floating yoga mat at a Mexican resort in front of pool loungers as part of an “aqua-fit” workout.

The instructor didn’t remind me to protect my knee or to engage my core. Instead, she wanted me to smile.

We’re living in a world with T-shirts and buttons and mugs that warn, “Don’t tell me to smile.”

Street harassment has long been documented and denounced. If catcalled, some women yell back. But off the streets and in the gym, fitness instructor­s seem uncomforta­ble with a woman who isn’t visibly joyful.

As a fitness writer, I’m privileged to be a perpetual workout student: I’ve done lat pulls in a room cooled to 7 C and crunches while hanging upside down in a silk cocoon.

But I’ve also been directed to turn up the corners of my lips while holding a burning chair pose, grin through shake-inducing dumbbell reps on the barre, and provide a “gran sonrisa” in a spin class in Mexico.

Often the request is issued in the same tone as an actual fitness instructio­n: “Lean back, keep weight in your heels, and smile at yourself in the mirror.”

The only workouts that haven’t called for my smile? Boxing or CrossFit, which are more likely to skew male.

Perhaps the concept of smiling during exercise is tied to gendered stereotype­s of what constitute­s a “hard” workout.

I’m not the only woman who has noticed and been turned off by the request. “I come for the workout,” says New York Citybased fitness hobbyist Natalie Weeks.

She’s not anti-smile — “I truly believe that it is a privilege to move our bodies and we should celebrate that” — but is discomfite­d by what she describes as a level of “aggression” in instructor­s who repeatedly command class members to grin.

Julie Ricevuto, another routine class-goer, says, “Half of the time when I’m working out, it’s early in the morning or after a long day at work — both times in which I’m not exactly in the mood to smile through an exceptiona­lly hard workout class.”

And a friend of mine wryly calls her mid-workout expression “resting gym face.”

Workouts are an opportunit­y to breathe loudly, sweat and generally appear uncomposed in a room full of people who are doing the same.

A visit to the gym is already a series of bodily humiliatio­ns that requires the belief — or the suspension of disbelief — that the person on the next mat isn’t judging you.

A smile cue shatters that illusion, reminding exercisers to stay presentabl­e even while dripping with sweat.

But to smile for someone else’s benefit is a gendered code, one that no woman should be forced to uphold when she’s already holding a plank.

Some instructor­s may mean well — in the “fake it ’til you make it” mode of thinking. It’s widely known that smiling can improve your overall mood in and out of the gym.

But studies about the effect of smiling on a workout have been inconclusi­ve, and some test subjects performed worse when forced to smile.

So why do trainers urge their clients to smile? I turned to some fitness instructor­s for illuminati­on.

Though most stay away from telling their clients to smile, they offered explanatio­ns for why others might do it and better approaches for encouragin­g exercisers.

“I think a lot of instructor­s choose to cue smiling because of their own newness to teaching or nervousnes­s in general. It’s hard to look at a roomful of sweaty people with furrowed brows and remain composed, so I understand where they’re coming from even if I don’t agree with it,” says Jessica Kulick, certified yoga instructor and director at Aligned Magazine in NYC.

“Everyone wears their effort differentl­y, whether that’s by gritting their teeth, crinkling their eyebrows, steeling their jaw or simply looking neutral,” Kulick says.

“Smiling is a pretty unusual reaction to challengin­g physical activity.”

Instead of directly requesting a smile from her students, Kulick encourages them to notice if the muscles have tightened in their faces.

Asking students to smile may “pull them out of their own experience,” agrees Jane Kivnick, instructor at Y7 Studio yoga in Brooklyn.

“It also adds the expectatio­n that we need to be enjoying every moment of the practice. Yoga isn’t necessaril­y meant to feel good all of the time.”

On the other hand, Joanna Ross-Tash, yoga instructor at Sky Ting in New York City, wouldn’t completely rule out requesting smiles.

“If I have a class where the students are facing each other, I might use ‘smile at the person in front of you’ to remind people that they are in a communal practice,” she says, “and that their actions can affect those around them.”

That sense of camaraderi­e is important in the personal training sessions and barre classes of New Jersey-based trainer Nadia Murdock.

“Everyone tends to look at one another in the mirror when I offer that cue and smiles become infectious,” Murdock says. “Before you know it, the entire room is smiling.”

Murdock believes smiling helps ease “the tension in (students’) body language” and helps them complete an exercise more easily.

Patrick Frost, a Miami-based instructor at Barry’s Bootcamp, would rather his students channel anger than happiness, however.

“When my clients are working hard, putting in their best effort and going through the ringer, I’m not expecting it to feel like rainbows and sunshine,” Frost says.

“I’ll actually encourage my clients to take their anger out on me by simply yelling, ‘(Expletive) you.’”

That acknowledg­ment of difficulty, he explains, can release tension from the room — and lead to genuine laughs and high fives as a result. “The trainer has to have some empathy for the moment,” Frost says.

Kelvin Gary of Body Space Fitness in NYC also tailors his approach to the moment and the student.

“It’s up to the coach to be in tune to who they are dealing with, and not force a one-sizefits-all approach to setting energy,” he says.

One place you might think smiles are on demand is in a laughter yoga class. But I learned that, even there, it’s not a good idea to expect or order smiles.

Facilitato­r Jane Grafton says teachers do best to explain to students exactly why they’re being asked to smile, instead of throwing the cue into an otherwise unrelated routine.

“No one can flip physically that quickly,” Grafton says. “I go very carefully. I start off by talking about breathing and relaxing, and I take it step by step. So by the time you invite someone to try laughing, they’re in a stage where they’re mentally prepared.”

And as in so many things, consent is key.

Workouts are an opportunit­y to breathe loudly, sweat and ... appear uncomposed in a room full of people who are doing the same.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Some trainers press women to smile during workouts. Instead, they may get what one woman calls her “resting gym face.”
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Some trainers press women to smile during workouts. Instead, they may get what one woman calls her “resting gym face.”

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