The Real Reason Every Woman Should Be Strength Training Right Now
Experts make the case for why strength training is the most important thing you can do for your body—at any age. The post The Real Reason Every Woman Should Be Strength Training Right Now appeared first on Camille Styles.
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I work in women’s fitness marketing, so I’ve been watching this shift happen in real time—though I couldn’t have told you what I was seeing when it started. The weights got heavier, the movements got slower, and women started talking about what their bodies could do instead of what they needed to undo. I noticed it professionally before I noticed it in myself, which is maybe how it always goes with the things that are actually changing you.
I grew up in the early aughts, which means I came of age under the particular cruelty of that era’s messaging. (Be smaller! Be thinner! Take up less space!) For a long time, fitness was just another way to follow the arbitrary rules. What strength training eventually gave me was something I didn’t have a word for until I felt it. The experience of actually living in my body instead of watching it from the outside, waiting for it to be different enough to deserve to be lived in.
That shift is harder to sell than a before-and-after. Believe me, I have experience in trying to do exactly that. And it might be why the industry took so long to catch up. But the conversation has moved to something more interesting—away from aesthetics and toward what will matter to you in your 40s, your 50s, your 70s. The physiological case for strength training is more urgent than most women realize, and it has nothing to do with how you look in the mirror.
What Strength Training Actually Does to Your Body
Here’s what I didn’t understand for a long time: muscle isn’t just the thing that makes you stronger in the gym. It’s metabolic infrastructure. “Skeletal muscle is your body’s primary site for clearing glucose from the bloodstream,” says Christina O’Connor, RD, Director of Healthcare at Pendulum. “The more of it you have, the better your body handles blood sugar, burns calories at rest, and recovers from meals.” It’s one of the most important things happening in your body—and strength training is how you protect it.
It also starts declining earlier than most expect. According to the Office on Women’s Health, we begin losing muscle mass naturally starting around age 30—roughly 3 to 5 percent per decade—with hormonal changes during menopause accelerating that loss. Declining estrogen affects insulin sensitivity, bone density, and the body’s ability to manage weight. “Fat starts redistributing to the abdomen,” O’Connor explains, “which is the kind that drives inflammation and metabolic dysfunction.”
The good news: strength training directly addresses this. Building and preserving muscle creates what O’Connor describes as “more storage space for blood sugar at exactly the moment your body needs it most”—and according to the NIH, resistance training is the primary tool for slowing that process.
Why It Matters More as You Age
The part that caught me off guard, when I started understanding the research, was how early the window opens. The perimenopausal years—typically the 40s and early 50s—are when the conversation gets urgent, but the groundwork is laid well even before then.
“The metabolic choices made during perimenopause essentially set the foundation for the second half of life,” O’Connor says, “which is why more women should be paying attention to subtle shifts years earlier than they are.” In other words: the body is keeping score long before you feel it. Insulin resistance, visceral fat accumulation, changes in how estrogen is processed—all of it can begin during this window, documented in longitudinal research tracking women across these years, accumulating before a single symptom shows up.
What makes this window so significant is the compounding nature of what’s happening. As Senada Greca, personal trainer and founder of WeRise, a strength training community for women, puts it: “During and after menopause, declines in estrogen can accelerate losses in both muscle and bone density.” Less muscle means the body has less capacity to absorb the blow when estrogen starts to decline.
“Getting ahead of these changes through strength training and protein-forward nutrition is significantly easier than trying to reverse them a decade later,” O’Connor says.
How to Build (and Sustain) Your Strength Training Practice
The version of strength training that actually sticks, in my experience, looks nothing like what fitness culture has traditionally sold. No punishing six-day splits, no leaving every session destroyed. Greca’s approach confirms this. “Meaningful benefits don’t require hours in the gym,” she says. “Research consistently shows that even two to three strength training sessions per week can improve strength, muscle mass, metabolic health, and overall well-being.”
The more common mistake, she says, is starting too hard and burning out before the habit has a chance to form. “Many women believe they need to train every day, leave every workout exhausted, or constantly increase intensity to see results. In reality, sustainable progress comes from consistency.” Basically: find the version of the practice you’ll actually keep, and build from there.
There’s also a mental reframe worth making around what progress looks like (yep, I had to make it myself). Greca points to progressive overload—gradually asking your body to do a little more over time—as the principle that separates strength training from other forms of exercise women often reach for.
“Many women spend years focusing on how many calories they burn in a workout rather than whether they’re actually getting stronger,” she says.
Every time you lift something heavier than you did last month, or finish a set you weren’t sure you could, you gather evidence about what you’re capable of.
The Benefits No One Talks About
The physical case for strength training is what gets most people in the door. But what keeps them there is harder to put into a headline. I’ve felt it—the way a consistent practice starts to how your body moves, and perhaps more importantly, how you relate to it. According to Greca, consistent resistance training supports:
Reduced symptoms of depression and anxiety Improved self-esteem and overall quality of life Better sleep, which influences mood, cognition, and recovery Greater stress resilienceBut beyond the physiology, there’s something happening that’s harder to quantify. Every time you lift something heavier than you did last month, or finish a set you weren’t sure you could, you gather evidence about what you’re capable of. Greca calls it building self-trust—and in her experience, it’s the transformation that tends to outlast any physical change. “Women often join because they want to change their bodies,” she says, “but what they gain is so much bigger than that.”
The timeline for feeling that change is shorter than most expect. Many women notice improvements in mood, energy, and stress resilience within a few weeks of training consistently.
The Bottom Line
For a long time, the fitness industry told women to shrink. Now the most compelling research in women’s health is pointing in the opposite direction—toward building, preserving, and protecting the body you’ll live in for decades. That’s a meaningful shift, and strength training is at the center of it.
This post was last updated on June 26, 2026, to include new insights.
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