TexasLaura
Cathlete
After reading the post "A funny compliment" in this forum, where many Cathletes are commenting on getting compliments on their hard-earned physiques, and how the compliments are more meaningful coming from women, I had to comment on a story I saw on the news last night.
A junior cheerleader from the Univ. of Georgia (Anna Watson) has been getting a lot of attention lately regarding her muscular upper body. She is being made fun of and told that she belongs on the football team, not the cheerleading squad. She has been getting so much media attention that people are saying that there is "no way" she could have attained that on her own and are accusing her of taking steroids. This has been so distressing to her and her family that she has now "scaled back" on her workouts.
I found this very distressing. This girl looks healthy and muscular, like she lifts heavy, might work out with Cathe and might have done STS. She looks like a lot of Cathletes that I have met that have beautiful, hard-earned muscles. That she has gotten so much negative attention that she has "scaled-back" her workouts sends the wrong message---and just when we were starting to appreciate that "strong is the new skinny".
I am so upset about this! (google her-Anna Watson, Cheerleader, University of Georgia)
A junior cheerleader from the Univ. of Georgia (Anna Watson) has been getting a lot of attention lately regarding her muscular upper body. She is being made fun of and told that she belongs on the football team, not the cheerleading squad. She has been getting so much media attention that people are saying that there is "no way" she could have attained that on her own and are accusing her of taking steroids. This has been so distressing to her and her family that she has now "scaled back" on her workouts.
I found this very distressing. This girl looks healthy and muscular, like she lifts heavy, might work out with Cathe and might have done STS. She looks like a lot of Cathletes that I have met that have beautiful, hard-earned muscles. That she has gotten so much negative attention that she has "scaled-back" her workouts sends the wrong message---and just when we were starting to appreciate that "strong is the new skinny".
I am so upset about this! (google her-Anna Watson, Cheerleader, University of Georgia)