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5 Female Weightlifters To Follow On Instagram For Fitness Inspiration

2nd March 2022

2nd March 2022

By Shivraj Bassi

Instagram isn’t all photos of avocado toast and cat videos. It can be just the place to find serious inspiration for your next workout. It's also the home of the iconic community of women weightlifters. Oh yeah. 

Whether you’re a seasoned lifter or are just getting started, it can be tricky to find motivation - especially the sport is traditionally male-focused.

Finding someone who looks like you succeeding and giving their all could be the difference between giving weightlifting a proper go and giving it up completely.

Thankfully, the platform boasts a wealth of strong women who really know their way around a gym. We’ve assembled some super inspiring female weightlifters for you to channel during your next workout. Female weightlifting is a great source of weightlifting inspiration regardless of your ability, as some of these bad ass women are the best in the game.

Check them out... 

Sohee Lee

 

If you want not only incredibly well thought out workouts but to find out the science behind why and how they work, Sohee is the influencer to follow. She has a masters degree in psychology and is a certified strength and conditioning coach and nutritionist, and is currently completing a PhD in Sports Science. 

Her posts focus on debunking female weightlifting myths and breaking down exercises for her followers, empowering them to make their own choices. Male, or female. 

QiQi H

 

For some self-love women weightlifters inspiration, QiQi H is the one. Her lifting started as a bid for a healthier lifestyle, so her content is very relatable and covers cardio and HIIT as well as heavy lifting. 

For a dose of sunshine in your feed, she can’t be beat. Plus her workout outfit are truly goals - you’ll be inspired to up your weightlifting inspiration and leggings game. 

Nancy Gonzalez

 

Not everyone who’s into female weightlifting is at the ideal point in their journey, and Nancy understands that. She focuses on the process more than the end result, which is a healthy, positive attitude to take. 

Her uplifting captions are exactly what you want to read on a day when you really don’t want to step foot inside a gym. Her account will help you to remember the reason you started lifting in the first place. 

Sophie Butler

The very definition of inspiring, Sophie shows that there’s excuse for not following your passions. She continues to post her fitness journey and tips after injuring her spine during training in 2017. 

Now, her grid is full of routines that will prove you can lift heavier weights than you ever thought you could. Definitely one to follow. 

Courtney Pruce

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Courts (@courtneypruce)Courtney’s account focuses on a whole-body approach to women’s weightlifting, encompassing nourishing foods and flawless fitness routines. She was a dancer before becoming a personal trainer, and grace runs through everything she does. 

 

Courtney hosts online fitness classes and her infectious positive energy will put a smile on your face and motivate you to lift heavier, work harder and always give your best. 

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The Ingredient We Almost Didn't Put In The Energy Booster
There's a question we ask about every ingredient before it goes into a product. Not "is this trending?" Not "does it look good on the label?" Just: does the evidence actually support putting this in? Most of the time, that question is straightforward. Either the research is there or it isn't. But occasionally you land on an ingredient where the science says yes and something else gives you pause. That's where formulation gets genuinely interesting. Beta alanine was one of those decisions. What Beta Alanine Actually Does Most people who've taken a pre-workout have felt beta alanine without knowing it. It's the ingredient responsible for the tingling sensation you get in your face, your neck, your hands. That feeling has a name: paraesthesia. It's harmless. But it's also the reason we nearly left beta alanine out. Before I get to that, the science. Beta alanine is a non-essential amino acid. On its own, it doesn't do very much. But inside muscle tissue, it binds with another amino acid called histidine to form something called carnosine. And carnosine is where the real work happens. During intense exercise, your muscles produce hydrogen ions as a byproduct of energy production. It's the build-up of those hydrogen ions, not lactic acid as most people think, that causes the burning sensation and the drop-off in performance. Carnosine acts as a buffer. It mops up those hydrogen ions and delays the point at which fatigue kicks in. The research on this is substantial. A 2012 meta-analysis published in the journal Amino Acids, covering over 40 studies, found that beta alanine supplementation consistently improved exercise capacity, particularly in high-intensity efforts lasting between one and four minutes. The effect size was meaningful and reproducible. This wasn't a promising pilot study. It was a decade of accumulated evidence pointing in the same direction. In practical terms: more reps before failure. More output before you hit the wall. Sustained performance over a longer window. So why the hesitation? The decision we almost got wrong The tingling. Not because it's dangerous. It isn't. The paraesthesia from beta alanine is a well-understood pharmacological response and there is no evidence of harm at the doses used in supplementation. But we had a real concern: if someone takes The Workout Blend for the first time and feels an unexpected tingling in their face, and nobody told them it was coming, we've just lost their trust. Possibly permanently. The easy path was to leave it out. Plenty of pre-workout formulas do exactly that, either because they're being cautious or because they want a smoother consumer experience. No ingredient, no explanation required. We talked about it a lot. And the conclusion we kept coming back to was this: removing an ingredient with strong evidence because it might confuse people is not how we want to make formulation decisions. That's the same logic that leads brands to include ingredients with weak evidence because they're more familiar, more comfortable, more sellable. The answer wasn't to remove it. The answer was to be upfront about it. The tingling means the beta alanine is working. It's a real physiological response to a real ingredient doing a real thing. If we believe in the science, we include the ingredient and we explain what's happening. That felt like the right standard to hold ourselves to. What the rest of the market does Most pre-workout formulas fall into one of two categories.The first is the stimulant-heavy formula. Stacked with caffeine at doses that produce a short spike, a noticeable crash, and not much else underneath. These sell well because the immediate sensation of energy feels like evidence that something is working. It often isn't, not in any meaningful physiological sense beyond what caffeine alone would do. The second is the proprietary blend. A long list of ingredients with no disclosed amounts, making it impossible to know whether any of them are present at doses that match the research. Proprietary blends let brands list an ingredient without committing to a dose that would actually work. Both approaches optimise for perception. Neither optimises for performance. What I'd recommend The Energy Booster (soon to be renamed to The Workout Blend) contains beta alanine alongside citrulline malate, which supports nitric oxide production and blood flow during training, BCAAs at a 2:1:1 ratio to safeguard lean muscle, and natural caffeine from guarana for sustained energy without the spike you get from synthetic sources. The formulation is built around what the research supports at doses that match the evidence. If you feel the tingling the first time you take it, that's the beta alanine. It's normal, it fades within 20 minutes or so, and it's a sign the formula is doing what it's supposed to do. Read more
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