Guest edited by FMS' Crossfit correspondent, Aiden.
Hello readers,
I have been into female muscle since finding female athletes beguiling when I was about 10 years old, and in those days it would have been female track and field.
This went onto female bodybuilders when I plucked up courage to buy the magazines.
I trained in sports and competed myself, and nearing the end of the first decade of the second millennium I became aware of Crossfit as a training methodology, used it for a while and stopped using it for training as for men it makes weeds but women seem to flourish under the high reps and relatively heavier weights than they are normally exposed to. The bodies that are produced remind me of those of female track athletes of the power field, ie. 100-800m athletes, with well-developed bodies, glutes, thighs, torso and decent arms. Not the pure aesthetic sculptures that female bodybuilders develop but more athletes in the performance sense.
One of the first women I saw was Eva T, she was one of the original Nasty Girls, the original female Crossfitters. An ex-Olympic skier, she had a good chassis.
Enjoy.
Eva on the right
Would you like to be FMS' next Guest Editor? Is there a particular muscle, a particular theme, or a particular woman that you would like to see celebrated on the blog? In fact, is there any aspect of female muscle fandom that you feel we are missing here? Email 6ft1swell@gmail.com to get the ball rolling.
"We are missing here"?
ReplyDeleteIs there more than 1 FMS???
Think of us more as a many-headed monster...
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