Anonymous wrote:This isn't really "bad behavior" necessarily, but I'm forever confused by women that go to the gym with makeup, or workout with their (longish) hair completely down. I just don't get it. What's the point?
If you're going to workout, you should break a sweat. But maybe they're there just for appearances?
Anonymous wrote:OP, those things bug me too. The other day I went to the gym and wanted to do some ab work on that captain's chair thing. (the only one.) This guy was standing RIGHT in front of it, lifting weights, blocking it. So I figured I'd work out at other stations and wait for him to finish. He stopped lifting a couple minutes later, but "saved" the machine by rolling the weights in front of it. He walked around the gym for awhile.
After I had literally lifted at 12 other circuit stations, he came back to the ab thing and stood in front of it for another 5 minutes without doing anything. Then he did about a minute of abs, then stood around again. While I did another 5 stations.
He and his stuff finally moved away from the machine - literally 20 minutes after he'd taken it over, and with him doing about 1 minute on the actual machine. I've never seen such ridiculous machine-hogging with so little actual workout involved.
I hate it when the grunters sound like they're having sex. It makes me feel like I'm intruding on something private - really uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:It annoys me so much when people sit on a weight machine and play with their phone (not exercising) while I wait to use it.
People at my gym are also known to put a jacket etc on a machine to "save" it while they use an adjacent machine. Anyone else have gym pet peeves?
Anonymous wrote:14:04 here - I understand what "working in" means, and I don't see the point in letting someone "work in" if I'm only going to be on the machine for 2 minutes, with no rest time. I do a full-body workout on about 20 minutes, and on most stations, 1-2 minutes is all I need to do about 25 reps. I would never ask someone if I could work in if they were only on for a couple minutes. I would ask someone if I could work in if I just needed to get in one more station and they'd been on it for a very long time. (otherwise, I will work around that station until it is open.)
I don't need a home gym. I have worked out almost daily for the last 10 years, and most gymgoers don't piss me off. But this is a vent thread about bad gym behavior and I posted the behavior I've recently seen that is outlier behavior.
Anonymous wrote:14:04 here - I understand what "working in" means, and I don't see the point in letting someone "work in" if I'm only going to be on the machine for 2 minutes, with no rest time. I do a full-body workout on about 20 minutes, and on most stations, 1-2 minutes is all I need to do about 25 reps. I would never ask someone if I could work in if they were only on for a couple minutes. I would ask someone if I could work in if I just needed to get in one more station and they'd been on it for a very long time. (otherwise, I will work around that station until it is open.)
I don't need a home gym. I have worked out almost daily for the last 10 years, and most gymgoers don't piss me off. But this is a vent thread about bad gym behavior and I posted the behavior I've recently seen that is outlier behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 14:04 and I've asked in the past, and it hasn't always gotten a good response. People who are machine hogs don't always respond well to being asked. In most cases, I just do other stuff until they are done. I just thought this guy's behavior was obnoxious - blocking a machine (when there are a ton of other places to lift) for that long when it's the only one of its kind.
A couple weeks ago, some kid came up to me and asked if he could work in. I had literally been on the machine for one minute and planned to be on for one minute more. The machine had been unoccupied before I got on, and the person before that had been on for over 5 minutes. So I said "no, I'll be done in about a minute." He tried to get me to reconsider, and I wanted to say, "why didn't you use it when it was unoccupied?" It really annoyed me. In the time it took for him to ask me and for me to say "Just a minute", I could have been halfway done.
I don't think you understand what "working in" means. It means that when you are done with your set, you get up during your rest time and he uses the machine for one set, then you switch back and forth until one of you is done. If you are only using a maching for 2 minutes than you probably aren't doing it correctly.
Also, with the guy blocking the maching I would have asked "are you using this right now?" If he's not, I'm not sure how someone can save a machine. If he says yes, then just say, "okay, I'll wait" and stand there. He should then feel obliged to either use it himself or let you use it.
Anonymous wrote:This isn't really "bad behavior" necessarily, but I'm forever confused by women that go to the gym with makeup, or workout with their (longish) hair completely down. I just don't get it. What's the point?
If you're going to workout, you should break a sweat. But maybe they're there just for appearances?