Thousands of women denounce their harassers on social networks under the hashtag #GymCreep

02/26/2023 at 09:04

TEC


TikTok has become a kind of wall of complaints for many girls in which it is revealed that harassment and sexualization are still a reality today in public spaces such as the gym

a girl performs squats concentrated while record a video for social networks. Behind her, a man can’t stop looking at her. Shamelessly. intimidating. He even interrupts her to give her unsolicited advice. After politely refusing him, the girl continues with her practice. But the man is still there looking at her. The awkwardness of the situation is felt even through the screen. He is a ‘gymcreep‘ (a gym voyeur) and she, unfortunately, is not an isolated case. Like her, thousands of women have begun to publicly expose the harassment to which they are subjected in the gym on social networks under the hashtags #GymCreep or #GymWeirdo.

A few years ago, the male gender almost exclusively inhabited the dark areas of free weight of the gyms. The female presence in that space was rare, almost non-existent. The liturgy that surrounds the lifting of irons, the grunts and the testosteronic environment exerted natural barrier, almost repellent, for many women. The rise of fitnessof the healthy lifestyle, the entrance of the muscular female bodies in the canons of beauty and the banishment of sterile and unfounded myths about the effects of weight training on the female body have led to the access of more and more athletes in these spaces.

“Ten years ago it was rarer to see women in the gym beyond the age of dance classes or gymnastics. Now it is commonplace. Even so, in society there are still gender roles social networks in which men for many years have seen themselves above women and that leads them to have inappropriate behaviors & rdquor ;, explains Anna Villanova, sports sociologist at INEFC Barcelona.

@fit_with_heidi Don’t sit there and tell me you’re not doing something when I have proof. ? #gymtok #fittok #influencer #viral #trending #tiktok #fitness #gym #gymgirl #fyp #fypシ #foryou #foryoupage #gymcreeps ♬ Real As It Gets – Lil Baby

Empowerment in social networks

It has been with the rise of social networks and the empowerment that many girls have begun to share content on the internet about their workouts and routines. They record their workouts and share them on social networks like Instagram, YouTube or TikTok to motivate other people and drag them into an active life. Is public exposureFurthermore, it has brought to the forefront a series of behaviors that until now many women suffered in silence: the bullying in the gym

“This harassment is a reflection of today’s society in which there is still sexual violence and that is transferred to all areas, including the gym,” says Vilanova. Harassment is one more symptom that shows that society is still patriarchal, as when by the simple fact of being a woman who trains, some men feel the need to correct or give advice. “Paternalistic behavior in training is another patriarchy symbol& rdquor ;, sums up the sociologist.

The hashtags #GymCreep and #GymWeirdo accumulate tens of thousands of videos. They have become a kind of wall of complaints for many girls in which it is revealed that harassment and sexualization are still a reality today in public spaces such as the gym and sports practice. “The fact that more and more women choose to publicly expose these situations it’s partly due to the MeToo movement, that has caused voices to be raised against these attitudes that previously could even be normalized& rdquor;, argues Vilanova.

bullying mockery

In this sense, much work remains to be done to create awareness. Since the networks also house the opposite model with mocking videos of this phenomenon alleging that “there is nothing wrong with looking & rdquor ;.

In this case, the video is recorded in a humorous tone. Of mockery A guy trains his biceps sitting on a bench when suddenly a girl starts training in front of him. He covers his face with his hood until it prevents you from seeing. “It is not going to be that I say that I look at her & rdquor ;, she says in a hesitant tone. The denunciations to the onlookers seem to him a lie. A feminist exaggeration. Most likely it is even one of those who they watch.

“It is unjustifiable. If it bothers you, your rights come into play and that person has no right to look at you. You must be able to ask him not to do it & rdquor ;, she assures. “Breaking the silence is the way to stop the violence & rdquor ;, ditch Vilanova.

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