Passive vs active flexibility: understanding the difference matters
Calisthenics for Women: Addressing the Myths
The myths around women and bodyweight training are persistent and harmful. Let me address the most common ones directly.
Myth 1: women can't do pull-ups. False. Women can learn pull-ups through the same progressive training path as men. The timeline may be longer due to generally lower upper body muscle mass relative to bodyweight, but the same negatives-and-rows approach works equally well. I know multiple women who can do 10+ strict pull-ups.
Myth 2: bodyweight training will make women 'too muscular.' Also false. The amount of muscle gained from calisthenics is modest and functional. The aesthetic changes from consistent calisthenics training are overwhelmingly positive — improved posture, strength, and body composition.
Myth 3: women can't do advanced skills. The planche, front lever, and handstand require strength-to-weight ratio, not absolute strength. Women who develop adequate relative strength can reach these skills just as men can. They're not exclusive achievements.
The practical reality: the training principles are identical. The only meaningful difference is adjusting volume and recovery expectations for hormonal cycle effects on recovery, if relevant.
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