The Weekly Riff with Louise Green
The Weekly Riff cuts through fitness culture’s noise with real talk from Louise Green — award-winning coach, author, and size-inclusive fitness trailblazer redefining what strength looks like. In a world where most fitness spaces still exclude, this podcast offers something rare: a space that honours all bodies and holds the belief that your body is fully capable of strength, power, and performance — through every season of life, including midlife and menopause.
Each 20-minute episode dives into strength training, body image, mindset, and the deeper layers of showing up for yourself — without the toxic pressure to shrink, conform, or apologize. Louise blends expert insight, lived experience, and raw honesty to explore how we can all train for strength and self-respect, not validation.
Expect conversations that challenge stereotypes, dismantle diet culture, and invite you to rise — as you are, right now.
🎧 Tune in weekly for unfiltered, empowering riffs on what it really means to be strong — in body, mind, and culture.
The Weekly Riff with Louise Green
Episode 17 - Why Barbell Training Changes Everything for Women of All Sizes
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Barbell training is one of the most misunderstood tools in fitness, especially for women and especially for women in larger bodies.
In this episode, I break down why the barbell is not just for elite athletes or smaller bodies, but one of the most effective, empowering ways to build real strength at any size.
We talk about what actually happens in the body when you lift heavy, why larger bodies often have untapped strength potential, and why strength sports like powerlifting and Olympic lifting are some of the most diverse spaces in fitness.
This is a conversation about shifting the goalpost from aesthetics to performance, and finally giving women permission to take up space, get strong, and redefine what being an athlete looks like.
What You’ll Learn
- Why barbell training is more effective than dumbbells for building full body strength
- How larger bodies can have real mechanical and physiological advantages in lifting
- The difference between powerlifting and Olympic lifting, and where to start
- Why strength sports are more diverse than most areas of fitness
- What it actually means to train for performance instead of appearance
Key Takeaways
- Strength is not size dependent, but size can influence force production
- The barbell allows for progressive overload in a way most tools cannot
- There is no single “athletic body”
- Women of all sizes belong in strength spaces
- Performance based training shifts your relationship with your body in a powerful way
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and why this conversation matters
00:25 The biggest myths about barbell training
01:19 What strength sports actually look like today
02:22 Why body diversity shows up in lifting
02:52 The advantage conversation no one is having
03:46 Types of barbell training explained
06:55 Foundational lifts and how to approach them
08:55 Safety, confidence, and getting started
09:25 Barbells vs dumbbells and why it matters
10:21 The science of strength and body mass
11:18 Force production and how bodies generate power
12:01 Fairness and diversity in strength sports
13:23 Redefining the word “athlete”
14:13 Getting started without intimidation
15:06 What strength does for your identity
15:34 Closing thoughts on freedom and strength
Louise Green is an award-winning coach with 20 years invested in working with women of all body sizes. She has coached thousands of women from all over the world, if you're ready take the next step in your strength, check out her coaching program: https://www.louisegreeninc.com/size-strong