Don’t you hate it when you go somewhere and someone tells you that you’re too good-looking to be there?
Happens to me all the time. I can’t go to supermarkets, restaurants, bars or even university without being told to turn around and take myself back home. It’s really very annoying and means I have had to become very familiar with online shopping.
Okay, as you’ve probably guessed by now, I’m joking. I have never been denied access to a place for being too good-looking. Please, I’m not Miranda Kerr.
But in all seriousness, a woman from the US has been making headlines this week, with the news that she was kicked out of her gym for being too toned.
Tiffany Austin, a woman from North California, was at a gym called Planet Fitness in California. She’d recently been in a car accident and, as part of her recovery, was attending the gym regularly to keep fit. That particular day, Tiffany decided to head to the gym wearing leggings and a cropped halter-neck, spaghetti-strap top, which left her midriff exposed.
Tiffany had been on the treadmill for about 15 minutes when a staff member approached her and said that Tiffany was intimidating people with her toned body and the gym had had a few complaints. The staff member then offered her a t-shirt that the gym would provide for her.
Top Comments
I caught a guy masturbating to me while I was doing sit ups and I've routinely had guys tell me or say within ear shot that the weight room is no place for a woman.
I just looked up Planet Fitness and their slogan is "No Gymtimidation, No Lunks". Basically, they are a gym with a dress code against skimpy gym wear and 'showiness' that may intimidate other gym users.
Now, I'm not sure how I feel about their style and ethos; on one hand, I think people should be free to wear what they want to the gym and feeling intimidated by other gym users is your own issue, not theirs but on the other hand, I think it's great to have an environment where less confident, perhaps less fit gym users can feel comfortable working out with like-minded people without feeling embarrassed or intimidated.
So I may not be sure about how I feel about Planet Fitness in general BUT they make it pretty clear what they are about.They have a video about it on their homepage, they have slogans about their ideals plastered all over the gym walls and equipment and it's a reasonable assumption that there is some sort of dress code in their Ts&Cs.
Tiffany looks fantastic and if she wants to wear more revealing gym wear than some, she should go for it; just not at a gym with a policy and/or ethos against it.
(And yes, the gym should work on how they handle these situations. They could have just said that crop tops/singlets are against the dress code.)