When it comes to women and strength training, the myths are loud, and the science is often drowned out. To set the record straight, we sat down with Lindsey, a board-certified family nurse practitioner with over 16 years of healthcare experience and a specialization in hormone optimization, peptide therapy, and lifestyle medicine. Lindsey brings a rare combination of clinical depth and athletic credibility: she’s a certified health coach through the Integrative Women’s Health Institute, and is currently completing her doctorate in lifestyle medicine at Florida State University. In partnership with Joi + Blokes, we asked her the questions women are actually Googling, to help debunk common myths that are out there and get the answers that you deserve.
MYTH #1: „Lifting Weights Will Make You Bulky”
TRUTH: One of the biggest fears women have when starting strength training is that they’ll suddenly become „too muscular.”
The reality? Building large amounts of muscle is incredibly difficult for women because we simply don’t have the same levels of testosterone as men.
What strength training actually does for most women is:
- Increase lean muscle mass
- Improve body composition
- Create a more toned and defined appearance
- Support healthy aging
- Improve metabolism
Many women are surprised to find that the scale may not change dramatically, but their clothes fit better, they lose inches, and they feel stronger than ever.
Muscle doesn’t make you bulky, it helps create the strong, lean physique many women are actually trying to achieve.
MYTH #2: „Cardio Is Better for Weight Loss”
TRUTH: Cardio has benefits for heart health and endurance, but when weight loss is the goal, strength training is often the missing piece.
Here’s why: Muscle tissue burns more calories than fat tissue, even when you’re resting. The more muscle you maintain, the more metabolically active your body becomes.
Strength training helps:
- Preserve muscle during weight loss
- Improve insulin sensitivity
- Support healthy hormone function
- Increase resting metabolic rate
- Improve long-term weight maintenance
Many women spend years doing more and more cardio while eating less, only to find their progress stalls.
The goal isn’t choosing cardio OR strength training.
The most effective approach is often a combination of both, with strength training serving as the foundation for a healthy metabolism. Think of muscle as your body’s metabolic currency.
MYTH #3: „Women Should Lift Light Weights with High Reps”
TRUTH: Somewhere along the way, women were taught that lifting tiny dumbbells for endless repetitions was the best way to „tone.” But muscles don’t know if you’re male or female, they respond to challenge.
To build strength, improve body composition, and increase muscle mass, women benefit from progressive overload just like men do.
Progressive overload means:
- Gradually increasing resistance
- Challenging your muscles
- Building strength over time
- Continually giving your body a reason to adapt
„Heavier” doesn’t mean lifting the heaviest weight in the gym. It means choosing a weight that feels challenging for YOU while maintaining proper form. If the last few reps feel difficult, you’re likely in the right place.
Strong women aren’t created by staying comfortable, they’re created by progressively getting stronger.

MYTH #4: „Weightlifting Is Bad for Cortisol”
TRUTH: Many women hear the word cortisol and assume exercise is automatically making it worse. The truth is that exercise is a stressor, but not all stress is bad.
The body actually becomes stronger and more resilient when exposed to the right amount of stress followed by adequate recovery.
Strategic strength training can:
- Improve stress resilience
- Enhance blood sugar regulation
- Improve sleep quality
- Support healthy hormone function
- Increase energy and mental clarity
The issue isn’t usually the workout itself.
The issue is when women combine:
- Chronic life stress
- Poor sleep
- Under-eating
- Excessive exercise
- Lack of recovery
In those situations, the body can struggle to recover. When programmed appropriately, strength training is often one of the best tools for improving overall stress resilience—not worsening it.
MYTH #5: „The Scale Going Up Means Lifting Isn’t Working”
TRUTH: The scale only tells you one thing: your total body weight.
It tells you nothing about:
- Muscle gain
- Fat loss
- Body composition
- Strength improvements
- Inflammation changes
- Water retention
- Overall health
When women start strength training, it’s common to see little change, or even a temporary increase, on the scale.
At the same time they often notice:
- Clothes fitting better
- Inches lost around the waist and hips
- More energy
- Improved strength
- Better posture
- Increased confidence
- Better metabolic health
The goal isn’t simply weighing less. The goal is becoming healthier, stronger, and more resilient.
A stronger body with more muscle often weighs the same, or sometimes more, than before, while looking completely different.
That’s why progress photos, measurements, strength gains, and how you feel are often much better indicators of success than the scale alone.
MYTH #6: „Creatine Is a Supplement for Men – It’ll Make Women Bloated and Masculine”
- Strength and power
- Lean muscle development
- Exercise recovery
- Brain health
- Cognitive performance
- Healthy aging
One of the biggest concerns women have is bloating.
MYTH #7: „You Can Spot-Reduce Fat by Training a Specific Body Part”
- Genetics
- Hormones
- Age
- Stress levels
- Overall calorie balance
- Hundreds of crunches won’t specifically burn belly fat.
- Leg exercises won’t specifically burn thigh fat.
- Arm workouts won’t specifically eliminate arm fat.
- Strength training
- Adequate protein intake
- Consistent movement
- Stress management
- Quality sleep
- Sustainable nutrition habits
MYTH #8: „Lifting Weights Damages Your Joints – Especially Your Knees”
- Improve knee stability
- Reduce joint pain
- Support healthy cartilage function
- Improve balance and mobility
- Lower the risk of injury as we age
- Poor exercise technique
- Progressing too quickly
- Ignoring pain signals
- Existing mobility limitations