By Amber Elizabeth Dodzweit

HOW THE FITNESS INDUSTRY IS LYING TO YOU

Scandals break out all the time exposing professional athletes and their use of performance enhancing drugs. We all gasp in astonishment that our favorite heroes would ever dare use illegal substances. In an instant, their untarnished façade comes tumbling down into a pile of used steroid needles. We relied on these role models to represent the superhuman, to show us that the impossible is possible and to act as a marker for what the human body is capable of. Then, when we realize they cheated we’re left only with cynicism and disappointment…feeling completely fooled and betrayed.

 

As the fitness industry continues to infiltrate more and more homes throughout the world and leave an imprint on the mainstream marketplace – I believe that the “wild wild west” antics that go on behind the scenes need to begin to not only become exposed but monitored.

 

Lets take this from the top. A star struck aspiring fitness model attends the Olympia in Las Vegas this coming September. As they stand in line with sweaty palms waiting to take a picture with their favorite fitness personality they rehearse their opening “hello” and envision their pose for the photo. As they near the front of the line and see in the flesh what they’ve only seen on their vision board at home, they are in awe. Every muscle and every vein is on display as they snap the photo with their larger than life fitness celebrity. Our little “fit-fan” has now bought the entire line of supplements from the company that endorses their fitness hero. They kill themselves in the gym everyday, sometimes twice a day and the mirror never…ever…begins to reflect anything close to what they saw that day. They now have two options…Quit or reach for the substances that they know will give them the results they want. The substances that their dream body has been taking all along.  Steriods, GH, off –the-market fat burners, Testosterone, you name it. Our industry isn’t shy about promoting bodies that are science experiments. I mean look at that pump, CLEARLY it’s the pre-workout….#BS

We’re flat out lying to people. It’s not the pre-workout, it’s not the fat burner, it’s not their workouts. More fitness personalities than I want to admit are dipping into black-market type methods to get them results that they then claim are from their endorsed supplements. Meanwhile, our fit-fans are going broke buying anything and everything they can to achieve even a quarter of what they see.

Imagine if there was a list of every fitness celebrity using illegal substances that was available to the public., including plastic surgery “additions”.  Imagine if these personalities were tested at random in order to be held accountable to the example they’re setting for people all over the world. I think maybe the results you hope to achieve would then make a lot more sense. Listen, to each their own- you want to basically take another form of crack-cocaine to stay lean? Go on with your bad-self, but don’t dress like a wolf in lambs pajamas and claim it’s all natural. Own your methods so those that look to you have full disclosure on what it takes to look the way you do.

When runway models back in the earlier 2000s began showing up to walk fashion shows looking emaciated…guess what happened. PEOPLE SPOKE UP. Diane Von Furstenberg refused to let them walk at NY fashion week with out an acceptable BMI, agencies overseas established guidelines the models had to follow, and at the end of the day when they didn’t adhere to the new set of rules…they weren’t used.

Fitness has existed in it’s own niche for years now. Stringer tanks and roid-induced “backne” will never ever disappear (although I wish they would). But with more eyes than ever looking to fitness for direction, we should all be taking more accountability for our messaging both in and out of the public eye. Next time you take your scissors to your favorite fitness magazine to add to your vision board…ask yourself If they’re playing you as the fool.

 

AMBER DODZWEIT

 

 

16 comments

  • Thanks for your frank “pep” talk! I’ve been lifting for 2 years now, I eat pretty friggin’ clean, and get my sleep. What’s started me down the road of scratching my head is that my size hasn’t changed much. I am leaner and have less fat but I’m not “bumpy”. It’s so confusing that I hired a trainer, am about to hire a nutritionist, started taking more supplements and still nothing. I could go to the gym more and eat more salads but that’s not feasible. Thank you for validating that it’s not for my lack of effort and I am staring at a lot of fake and unhealthy people (though not 100% of them I’m sure). Keep it up!

    Tasha S on

  • Kudos to you Amber- I wish a lot more would change in the industry; steroids and their psychological side effects need to be addressed as well. We seem to be moving forward in some aspects of health like the importance of juicing and plant based nutrition but steroids still have such a hold on people. The bottom line is that people are insecure of whom they would be without steroids, what they would look like and have a serious disregard for the negative physical consequences, like being sterile.

    Vivian Russo on

  • Thank you. I’ve always admired you. So the question is how do we stop the fitness from becoming like the modelling industry?

    Eka on

  • Well written! As fitness experts I am so glad we are starting to shine light on the “cheaters” in this industry. Generally people think young women have it hard fitting into the perfect female body, but there is an incredible trend for you men to dive early into steroids to look like their heros… This vid is a kid who’s coming out and admitting it’s not “supps” that make you build but actually reveals his entire steroidal stack!
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=XTVWrknCISE

    AZ Fitness on

  • Very valid article. Thank you.

    Natalie on

  • correction – I meant to say that I’ve been an athlete for 15 years. I’ve been using the clutch system for about a year or so.

    andrea on

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