Anonymous wrote:In Bodypump, the jerks that take their entire bar loaded with weights over to the racks, and remove their weights right there.
No, you do not clog up the rack area while you unload your bar. You disassemble wherever you were situated, and then bring your stuff over as you can carry it.
Worse, the people who leave their bars there.
ANIMALS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A couple weeks ago I was at the gym at 6:00 a.m. and noticed a woman wearing a full face of makeup, including heavy eye makeup. At the gym. At 6:00 a.m. on a Tuesday. I can see the after-work crowd having makeup on from that day, but who wakes up early to put on makeup *before* going to the gym? My thought is that maybe she has a late-night job, like waitress or bartender, and doesn't wash off her makeup before bed. (but it looks fresh, not stale.)
I thought it might be a one-time thing, but no, I see her all the time now, always with full-on "night-time" eye makeup at the gym at 6:00 a.m. I find that so strange.
(i don't hate her, though.)
I wonder if that's my coworker. Always has the glam eyes (and she recently started working out in the mornings!).
There are people who are always made up if anyone else is going to see them. (Like you, I don't hate the made-up women at the gym; I just find them interesting.)
Anonymous wrote:A couple weeks ago I was at the gym at 6:00 a.m. and noticed a woman wearing a full face of makeup, including heavy eye makeup. At the gym. At 6:00 a.m. on a Tuesday. I can see the after-work crowd having makeup on from that day, but who wakes up early to put on makeup *before* going to the gym? My thought is that maybe she has a late-night job, like waitress or bartender, and doesn't wash off her makeup before bed. (but it looks fresh, not stale.)
I thought it might be a one-time thing, but no, I see her all the time now, always with full-on "night-time" eye makeup at the gym at 6:00 a.m. I find that so strange.
(i don't hate her, though.)
Anonymous wrote:Don't hate, but he is annoying. Walks around with his chest puffed out, wearing 1980's garb, chomping gum with mouth open. He thinks he's hot. He's far from it.
Anonymous wrote:
I never hated her, I only had great compassion and felt helpless.
There was a 4-hour a day woman, who was clearly unhealthy. Skeletal, and was full-cardio for hours at a time. Sometimes she went so slowly and took such effort, it was painful to watch.
The managers were aware of her presence, she was there religiously. They, from my understanding, never took her aside or counseled her out. They were successful in removing someone else who was far, farrrrr worse off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do a group exercise class combining cardio, rowing and strength training. Half of the class is spent on the treadmill doing interval training. There is a guy I see periodically that presents himself working out so hard that he has to jump off the treadmill without stopping it to go get water, catch his breath, maybe use the bathroom. This guy comes across as so intense he has to sit out the stretching at the end and rest. The handful of times I have worked out with him at the same time, it's always the same thing -- he ends up huffing and puffing on the rowers, head hung in exhaustion while the rest of the class stretches.
I don't hate him, I find him very peculiar.
Orangetheory? The people I can't stand are the ones who can't figure out that people want to stay at the same weight station for the different rounds even though you go on the rowers in between rounds. They flit between weight stations and take weights from multiple racks. I don't know why it bothers me that much but it does. It stresses me out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once I was in a yoga class that tends to be very packed every week. A woman came in about 10 minutes late and tried to squeeze in between some people in front of me. The girl who was asked to move - maybe 23 years old - said, "No, I'm not moving. I got here on time. Perhaps you should leave and come back on time next week." The whole class could hear her. I almost applauded. I've always wished I could be the person to put a stop to the people who come in late and disrupt everything in a full or over-full class.
My pet peeve is people who camp out on machines and rest more than they're actually working out, and play on their phones while they rest. I just want to get in, move quickly between stations, do my 25 reps and get out. If someone is hogging one machine (the only one of its kind) for 15-20 minutes, I can't use it and that just annoys me. If you need a single circuit weight station for that long, you are doing it wrong. And yes, I'll ask to work in, but the same people who hog machines are typically the ones who aren't very nice if you ask to work in.
So hateful, so rude - a yoga class? How humiliating! This makes my stomach turn. I have no idea why you find this admirable (or even acceptable!).
For all anyone knows, the woman could have been having the day from hell and was stuck in traffic that made her late to the class. Big deal. Have some compassion!
Some get sick of always having to move to accommodate the person who was late.
If there is clearly no room in the class then the late woman should have gone to a later class or came back to class on time the next day.
I understand the motivation behind what the girl said, but I still think it's rude.
I think it was a bit harsh for a one time late. We all have emergencies/delays happen.
It would be more understandable if the person was making a habit of showing up late and then wanting others to stop what they were doing mid class to "make room" for her.