Trans Olympic weightlifting row: Deb Lovely Acason reacts | The Courier Mail
This is about fairness and an equal playing field.
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I now personally don’t have anything to lose with this change except I lose the joy of seeing my three girls train hard to compete in sport on a fair playing field.
The scientific studies are clear: the biological/physical advantages men have over women are proven.
Testosterone irreversibly changes one’s muscle fibres to the extent of a significant increase in numbers, not just size or strength alone. Irreversible. Long lasting advantages.
We know that testosterone hormones promote more muscle growth and strength, more numbers of muscle fibres and more efficient and effective (quicker!) recovery time.
I trained for most of my 20 year lifting career in a weightlifting club watching young boys come into the gym having never touched a barbell and within a very short period of time lift similar weights to me and then by their mid to end of teenage years easily out lift me, an elite female lifter.
Watching their muscle mass grow and develop so quickly was frustrating to me, but I accepted it because men and women are different and I can’t (usually) do what a man can do because among other things my body has different hormones since birth than a man.
I started weightlifting at age 14 years and started competing at age 15. I have experienced training and competing at the start of puberty, all the way through puberty, then my body got stronger as I got older and increased my body weight (from 75kg to 90kg).
I limited my training when I was pregnant with both my first two girls, and was breastfeeding each of them while getting back into training.
I can’t tell you how much each of these situations affected my hormones levels, my energy and my ability to train and recover.