TED Talks Daily - The wonder of weightlifting | Jaime Seeman
Episode Date: August 6, 2025With humor and hard science, obstetrician and gynecologist Jaime Seeman reveals why building muscle is one of the best ways to combat women’s top health risks. Learn the truth behind three weightlif...ting myths that prevent women from getting serious about strength training — and why your future self will thank you for picking up those dumbbells.For a chance to give your own TED Talk, fill out the Idea Search Application: ted.com/ideasearch.Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyouTEDSports: ted.com/sportsTEDAI Vienna: ted.com/ai-viennaTEDAI San Francisco: ted.com/ai-sf Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hugh.
Women need to get and stay strong, especially as we age.
It's a health risk not to, says obstetrician and gynecologist Jamie Seaman.
In her talk, she shares her own journey from collegiate athlete to mom of three and breaks down why muscle.
mass is crucial to overall health as you age. Learn the truth behind the weightlifting
myths that prevent so many women from getting serious about strength training and get inspired
to start lifting heavy things now.
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As a little girl, I loved playing sports. I also loved painting my fingernails and parading
around my mother's house in her high-heeled shoes. From the beginning of time, I have lived in
contrasting worlds, contrasting and often conflicting ideas about what women should and shouldn't do,
or maybe how we should and shouldn't look.
A pivotal moment came for me
when I was a sophomore in high school.
My mother took me to an audition
for a modeling agency,
and I can't tell you how nervous I was that day
or even what I was wearing,
but I will never forget
the way I felt the next morning.
As I was walking into school,
I got a phone call.
They wanted to sign me.
As a plus-size model,
I was a size 10, by the way.
If I could go back and talk to that 16-year-old version of myself,
I would tell her exactly what my own mother told me that day.
You were built for bigger and better things.
So I turned down their offer, and I went on to play NCAA college softball,
where I was a weightlifter of the year, twice.
I loved being in the gym, and I loved throwing those heavy weights around.
But what I really loved the most was the confidence that my physical strength
instilled in me.
But there was always this nagging feeling,
this sort of whisper in the back of my mind,
and it sounded a lot like the voice on the phone that day,
telling me that I was different,
somehow not ideal,
because I would shrink inside
every time somebody commented on my muscular body.
You see, at the time, the only social media we had
was something called Cosmopolitan Magazine.
And those Cosmo Cover Girls, well, they didn't have a lot of muscles.
Frankly, they looked kind of frail, somewhat unhealthy.
But to the world, they were beautiful, and they were idolized.
And as a young girl, I let that frame the way that I looked and thought about myself.
And this is the problem.
Even though something like weightlifting has a multitude of proven health benefits,
there continues to be a stigma for women
based on cultural and societal myths
about what women should and shouldn't do.
I believe that if we can create a new culture
that shifts the focus from aesthetics to health,
that women's health and frankly everybody's health
could be transformed forever.
Now, I'd like to be able to tell you
that after college, I continued to train really hard in the gym,
ate a perfect diet amidst a family and children,
and a stressful career.
But that is not what happened.
What really happened is I went to medical school.
I survived residency.
I got married and had three children.
And I woke up one day dealing with the same metabolic diseases
that I was helping my own patients manage through medication.
I could see it.
I could feel it.
But I told myself that I would just take care of it
when I had more time.
And so many of us,
let ourselves believe that we have a lot of time.
Now, according to the CDC, the top three killers of women is heart disease, cancer, and stroke.
The major contributing factor to these causes of death is what I call metabolic disease.
And even though our modern, high fat, high carbohydrate, highly processed diets play a major role,
there's one thing that women are not doing across their lifespan
that could tremendously reduce their risk of death.
And that is building muscle.
The data is actually very clear when it comes to resistance training.
So why aren't more women doing it?
The answer lies in three primary myths
that continue to exert a powerful force
and prevent women from doing just that.
Myth number one is that if we lift weights, we're going to get big and bulky.
Women think that if they pick up a 20-pound dumbbell, that they will somehow look like Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Now, I can tell you that it takes years of very serious training and steroids to accumulate that kind of look.
And if you take a look around the gym, you can see that achieving the physique of somebody like the Hulk is actually
difficult even for most men. Now we're all born with a certain genetic potential when it comes to our
muscle size and distribution. But beyond that, it takes years of very serious training and a concerted
effort to build and maintain that lean tissue. Although women have a similar relative natural muscular
potential to men, we're also prone to the same age-related muscle loss. And the medical term for that
is called sarcopenia. On average, after age 40, we lose about 1% of our muscle size. With these
age-related declines, we become weak, we become frail, and the risk of all chronic diseases
starts to go up. In a study, they found the more days' time and effort that women devote
to strength training, the better their body composition is. Myth number two is that weightlifting
as hard, or maybe too hard on our bodies.
You see, even as women, if we make a decision to go work out, we're more likely to choose
the cardio equipment.
But let me dispel this myth.
Strength training meets you where you're at.
The first day you're in the gym, you're not going to be doing a 500-pound back squat.
It's about being stronger today than you were yesterday.
But we don't have the same role models when we walk into the gym.
When we walk in and we see this man with multiple plates on the bar and he's making crazy
faces and even crazier sounds, it's not very inviting to most women.
But you see, women actually have an advantage over men in certain parts of our life.
We make more estrogen than men.
And estrogen means that we don't fatigue as fast and we actually recover faster, which means
that we can handle more volume in weight training without overtraining.
Myth number three is that weightlifting is for the boys and aerobics is for the girls.
You've seen it when you walk into the gym, this big room of treadmills, ellipticals,
and stair climbers filled with women.
But in the Journal of Exercise Science, they found for every woman that was using the free
weight section of the gym, there was 27 men.
This disparity continues to make it difficult to foster health for women across their lifespan.
Resistance training happens to be the only non-pharmacological intervention that has been to consistently shown to offset these age-related declines in skeletal muscle mass, strength, and power.
This cannot be achieved on a treadmill.
The male bias in gym culture is literally everywhere, and it's time for us.
us to counter it. All humans have muscles. Muscles make us healthy. Muscles combat the top
three killers of women. Resistance training meets you where you're at. We think that we need these
fancy machines and free weights to build muscle. But in a 2021 study, they examined a population of
women, 65 and older. They put these women through body weight and resistance band training, three
times per week for 16 weeks. And do you know what they found? In the treatment group, these women
improved their strength, improved their functional fitness, improved their grip strength, and even
improved their gait speed. The amount of work required to see benefit is actually quite small.
You can lift weights. You can lift your groceries. You can lift your children. Or when you're
first starting, you can even just lift your own body weight.
It's my mission to make sure that women live a long and healthy life.
And that means building and maintaining their muscle.
What made me realize the urgency of my own health problems is when I lost one of my best friends
very suddenly at the age of 29.
And there I stood face to face with my own mortality.
I was weak.
I was tired.
What was missing?
Something that I had literally wished away after college.
Muscle.
I knew I had to get back into the gym and start training again,
but I had to get over the fact that through my formative years,
society told me that muscles were for boys.
Two years after I set out to regain my health,
I competed on a show called Titan Games with Real Everyday Heroes.
And in that same year, I competed at the Mrs. America pageant.
Doing both of these things in the same year was my attempt to shatter the cultural stereotypes that continue to tell us that muscles are just for men.
So let me leave you with a very clear call to action.
Start lifting heavy things now.
Nobody can do it for you, literally.
Your older self will thank you.
or if you are your older self, it's never too late.
This is not about aesthetics.
This is about health.
And physically strong women are healthy women.
Thank you.
That was Jamie Seaman speaking at Ted X Greenhouse Road in Houston, Texas in 2023.
If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at TED.
slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today's show.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman,
Brian, Lucy Little,
Alejandra Salazar, and Tonzica Sarmar Niven.
It was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan,
additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Ballerazo.
I'm Elise Hu, I'll be back tomorrow
with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
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The last time I nicked my finger, I threw on a bandage, took care of it right away.
But when I brushed my teeth and saw blood in the sink, I shrugged it off.
It's time we stop ignoring our gum bleeding.
Use Colgate periogard to significantly reduce gum bleeding and inflammation.
It helps fight bacteria that can lead to early gum disease and improves gum health with daily use.
So just like you take care of your cuts, help take care of your gums with Colgate periogard.
Healthy gums, confident smile.
is brought to you by Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe.
With Wise, you can send, spend, and receive up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps.
Plus, Wise won't add hidden fees to your transfer.
Whether you're buying souvenirs with pesos and Puerto Vallarta, or sending euros to a loved one in Paris, you know you're getting a fair exchange rate with no extra markups.
Be smart. Join the 15 million customers who choose Wise.
Download the Wise app today, or visit Wise.com. Terms and conditions apply.
Thank you.