What does women lifting weights have to do with gender parity?
A lot more than you might think.
Every single rep of every workout we do in the gym is a step forward for womankind and International Womenâs Day brings this into sharp focus.
IWD is a celebration of the contribution to our world that women make and a reminder of the issues that women still face in society today – issues that affect us all, men and women.
What happens in the gym might seem far removed from some of the issues IWD highlights – issues like being prevented from going to school because of a lack of sanitary protection or because you were married when you were a child.
But, take another look and youâll see that the choices we make about how we exercise and who we tell about it affect the world on a much larger scale than just earning us a fit booty and a ticket to the gun show.

Every time youâre seen pumping iron or heard talking about it, youâre educating the observer and listener that this is something that women do.
Every time you tweet that youâre off to @UPFitness or post on Instagram that youâve been at @UPFitnessLive, youâre challenging preconceptions and changing peopleâs expectations of women.
When James Brown and Betty Jean Newsome wrote Itâs A Manâs Manâs Manâs World, they had a point. (Hey, I bet you didnât know that a woman wrote the lyrics to that song, did you?) It really would be nothing without a woman or a girl [sic], but it also kinda is a manâs world.
The human world is patriarchal in construction; you donât need a history lesson from me to know that.
But donât worry, there isnât a sinister group of men called The Patriarchy who have secret meetings plotting the repression of women (as far as I know). Itâs more a case of us all being where we are and being able to decide where we want to go from here.
There isnât a plot to keep women on the treadmills and out of the weights section, but at the same time women arenât universally encouraged to lift and itâs still seen as the domain of men (and some unusual women).
So, this is the situation we find ourselves in. So now we move on to deciding how weâd like things to be.
Enter: Ultimate Performance Women. It isnât the pink corner where we put the ladies. Itâs an invitation to women to become part of Ultimate Performance.
We have this doorway labelled ‘women’, because we know that doorways marked ‘women’ are necessary, even in this day and age.

Things that are not labelled as being for women are still automatically thought of as being for men.
You just donât see men being referred to as male personal trainers or male soldiers. But female personal trainers anyone? Lady pilots, surgeons and chefs? We do it all the time and we donât even realise. Even me, and Iâm a feminist.
For a variety of reasons, women are less likely than men to put themselves forward for something, especially when itâs something that isnât expected of them. Ultimate Performance is a great place for women to train and work and we want to show women that theyâre invited to be a part of what we do.
At Ultimate Performance, we donât pay women less than men, we donât charge them less than men, and women donât have any less of a chance of career progression than their male colleagues. We also employ lots of women away from the gym floor (and weâre not just the cleaners and receptionists either).
Weâre not hiring women or encouraging them to join as clients to make up some sort of quota.
Ultimate Performance is a good place to work and train where youâll be respected and encouraged alongside your peers irrespective of your sex. The gender parity that International Womenâs Day is striving for is right here.
If youâre a client, your gender is just one of a whole raft of facets that inform our choice of trainer, training style, programming and nutrition planning that we give you.
The fact is, we really donât care what sex you are – weâre interested in what you can achieve and weâre interested in working with you to make that happen to your best ability.
Will we always need UP Women? Hopefully not, but as long as women are told that the world of lifting and bodybuilding gyms isnât for them, weâll be here, flying the flag and opening the door.
Manchester trainer Emily leading an education session on the effects of insulin on the body.
