On Beauty

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Given the subjects of the last three days here at FMS, it’s hardly surprising that I’ve been thinking about the beauty of muscular women rather a lot this week, but the ever-excellent Ryan Takahashi‘s excellent recent essay on The “Alternate Femininity” of Female Bodybuilders has also served as a source of today’s musings.

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Mr Takahashi’s essay neatly debunks the myth that female bodybuilders are “masculine” just because their own particular brand of femininity is unconventional before turning more specifically to the concept of “beauty”. They [muscular and non-muscular women] are all beautiful… The only difference is how universally regarded their beauty is, he writes. Most of us can agree that Bar Rafaeli is super gorgeous. But not everyone can agree that Monica Martin is equally gorgeous.

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Now I’m not about to disagree with the man, but I guess it’s indicative of just how far I have immersed myself in the world of female muscle that I had to look Bar Rafaeli up. I had heard the name – I’m not completely out of touch(!) – but I’d never, as far as I knew, seen her before. There she was, in all her conventional beauty. And it turned out that yes, most men do apparently agree that she is, as Mr Takahashi puts it, “super gorgeous”. But not, it seems, me. Quite honestly, she left me cold.

I’ll give you another example. At the place I’ve been working recently there’s a young French female lawyer. The entirety of the male staff at the firm (well, the straight ones, anyway) are utterly smitten with her, and not just because she earns lawyer money! She’s a looker, as they say. But her beauty is a Bar Rafaeli kind of conventional beauty. I’d rather spend some quality time with the girl from the post room who does Muay Thai and who arrives at work all sweaty from her cycle in. I’m a minority of one.

The days when I would worry about this sort of thing are long gone. Why am I different? or What’s wrong with me? are not questions I ask any more. But I am asking myself another question: Suppose I’d never seen Bar Rafaeli or Monica before and you showed me a picture of just their faces. Suppose you did the same with the French lawyer and the post room girl. Suppose I knew nothing about them, that I just had their face to go on. Would I find Monica and Ms Muay Thai more beautiful?

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Is there something identifiably different about the faces of female bodybuilders and fit, muscular women more generally? Do they have (for want of a better word) “stronger” features, perhaps? Or is it more about their inner strength and confidence, and comfort in their own skin revealing itself somehow? Shining through their eyes or something? These are obviously not questions that I’m about to give a definitive answer to, but I will say that if you look at any before & after transformation picture you can see that it’s not just that the newly-muscular woman’s body has changed. The face has changed too. Leaner, yes, of course, but isn’t there something else as well?

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I haven’t always been so exclusive about associating facial beauty with physical beauty. Seven years ago I fell in love with my wife, and that was, at least initially, to do with how beautiful I thought she was. But since she’s got into working out (see FMS passim), I’d say that yes, her face has changed. She’s happier within herself, and that inner contentment is, I think, what’s making her even more beautiful to me.

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I could well be over-analysing. It may be as simple as the fact that fit women have the healthy glow that comes from regular exercise and a clean diet. After all, isn’t the pilates teacher always better-looking than her students?! Nevertheless, I’ve always thought it would be interesting to reverse the experiment mentioned above. Does it work the other way around? Can men whose taste in women is more conventional tell when they’re looking at a muscular woman? If you show a non-female muscle head a picture of just the face of a muscular woman, would he find her beautiful?

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What exactly it would prove if he did I’m not exactly sure, maybe just that the muscle woman you chose was, as well as being unconventionally beautiful, also conventionally beautiful in many ways. And that’s not really the point, is it?! But at least it gave me an excuse to feature the undeniably gorgeous Mavi and Shannon (it’s back to Courtney again now, apparently), which is no bad thing.

So, what is my point?

I didn’t promise one, but I feel I should try to come up with one nevertheless…

While checking out Georgina McConnell‘s Instagram the other day I came across this: The woman who does not require validation from anyone is the most feared individual on the planet. It’s a quote attributed to London-based political writer Mohadesa Najumi (and you can search for more on her if you dare). Now, I doubt Ms Najumi had muscular women in mind when she came up with this little nugget, but she’d probably agree their utter lack of regard for the role society would have them play qualifies them as the “feared individual” type.

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When female muscle fans like me write about the Beauty of the Muscular Woman or whatever, are we not guilty of deluding ourselves that our words, our arguments, in some way “validate” their beauty? If so, I imagine Georgina McConnell and Mohadesa Najumi would accuse us of missing the point entirely. We flatter ourselves that they care what we think. They neither want nor need defending.

And I suspect it is this that I, you, and the rest of the brethren are really responding to. It’s not so much that the muscular woman offers an alternative concept of beauty, and more that she offers no invitation whatsoever for you to judge her beauty at all.

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I started this post yesterday, and today, while having lunch with a colleague, the pretty young French lawyer came up. I confessed she didn’t do it for me. “Is it an ‘I’m married so I don’t talk about how hot some chicks are’ thing?” he wondered. Not at all, I said, and then I confessed I found the post room girl much more exciting. “Oh,” said my colleague, “You like chicks with the fuck-you attitude.” Shit, I said to myself. I’ve been blabbing away on this subject for hours and there it is, all succinctly put. Damn!

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Enjoy!

FMS vs Ryan Takahashi: The Conversation I

Today, Female Muscle Slave and The Adventures of Ryan Takahashi are posting, simultaneously, the first of a series of Q&A ‘conversations’ had between the authors which explore different aspects of our mutual love of female muscle…

So, I guess we should begin at the beginning. Who was your first female bodybuilder? And how did you react?

FMS: For me it was Carolyn Cheshire. She was the first female bodybuilder I ever saw. I must have been 13 or 14 maybe – it’s funny I really can’t remember exactly when it was, but I can recall every detail of ‘the experience’! Carolyn was making an appearance on a popular science show, a show I watched every week just out of interest (and in those days we had only 3 or 4 channels in the UK, so there wasn’t much choice). So, I’m watching as usual and this week it’s about how muscles work or something, and suddenly it’s ‘Ladies and Gentlemen, Carolyn Cheshire…’

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She comes onto the set through the audience in an orange posing suit, and I was immediately – and I MEAN immediately – transfixed. I remember how bronzed she was, tanned to absolute perfection and glistening with oil. And she had muscles. And she clearly liked her muscles because she didn’t stop flexing them until the applause died down and the presenter introduced her properly. And after the introduction, she did a lot more flexing.

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How did I react? Well, let’s just say Carolyn was by far the most ‘exciting’ woman I had ever seen. I was 100% excited, yeah. She was beautiful, glamorous in a kind of American (ie. exotic!) way, and she radiated vitality and, above all, confidence. And I had never seen a woman with a body like hers. So strong, and so so sexy. Definitely ‘not normal’. But she was showing it off, pretty much all of it, in a studio full of strangers – not to mention the whole country’s living rooms – with total self-assurance.

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My excitement quickly turned to utter intoxication. I hear my heart pounding. I feel the throb between my legs. I get a huge rush of adrenaline. And even if I wanted to, I couldn’t stop watching her. I can’t stop looking at her muscles. For the first time, I was feeling what I call ‘The Madness’.

RT: My first ever memory of seeing a female bodybuilder was opening up the 1999 issue of the Guinness Book of World Records and seeing a full color photo of Cory Everson. The picture wasn’t the most sexually appealing of her because it was a contest photo, but that image just burned into my 12-year-old memory. She looked freakish, unhuman and completely different from any woman I’d ever seen before. Like all pre-teen boys, traditional underwear and bikini models – in all their bony, skinny glory – caught my attention. But Cory Everson totally altered my paradigm. My perspective of the aesthetic diversity available within the human female form radically changed for good.

My reaction was a mixture of awe and mild disgust. Her oiled physique, bulging muscles and vascular body slightly repulsed me because I’d never seen anything like that before. But my eyes could not turn away. I intrinsically knew that although I didn’t exactly find her “attractive” in the traditional sense, I knew I had stumbled upon something special, something that would make me look at women differently. I always found myself sneaking peeks from that book and looking at that photo years and years later. There was something about Ms. Everson that burned into my mind. Her body was grotesque, but so damn appealing. Today, I don’t find bodies like that gross anymore. Of course not! But at a very tender pubescent age, my hormone-charged brain struggled to process the unique sexuality Ms. Everson exuded from that singular image.

What is your favorite female muscle-related fantasy? And why do you think you find this so appealing?

RT: Like most female muscle fans, we have many fantasies about our lovely ladies. For me personally, my favorite consists of me and a small army of strong female muscle warriors fighting alongside (in either a post-apocalyptic world or a nondescript medieval kingdom) against a vicious enemy. This enemy could be zombies, other muscular warriors (both male and female), interplanetary space aliens, killer cyborgs attempting to take over the world, dinosaurs, etc. The exact circumstances change, but I can’t stop fantasizing about me and my legion of gorgeous muscular Amazons battling in action.

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Many men who love strong women have fantasies related to domination and submission. Not me. While I don’t knock that sort of thing as being “ridiculous” or “just not my thing,” my personal female muscle fantasies don’t have anything to do with me being dominated or me doing the dominating. Instead, I value these strong women as allies and, more or less, equals. Besides, after a long, epic battle to save the human race from total destruction, how else will I and my hundreds of beautiful Amazonian warriors pass the time?

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I’ll let you fill in the rest! But rest assured, it would be pretty amazing!

FMS: I’m going to seem like the smart arse who gets granted a wish by the genie and his first wish is to have an unlimited number of wishes! I totally agree about having a lot of fantasies, and I guess my favourite fantasy is I get to have them all, simple as that.

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I want to be a muscle woman’s man. The whole thing. Train with her, eat with her, just be with her.

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And the sex. Yes, I imagine, I fantasise there would be a lot of it. In my mind muscle women are the horniest women alive. So there would be more than I’ve ever had with any other woman I’ve known, and I have had a bit. There would be a lot more in fact. Yes, of course I want to worship her, to submit to her, but not only that. She’s a woman, sometimes she’ll want me to be a man, to be dominant and strong with her too. All in all, I want us to explore both our sexualities as fully as possible.

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I want her to compete, so I get the whole contest prep deal too, watching her body change, the muscles emerging as she diets, watching her get more defined, more perfect every day. I want to be there for her, through that incredibly demanding process. And I want to be there to witness her moment in the spotlight. Give her all the help she needs, be it practical, emotional or anything else. And when she’s got herself that trophy, I want to give her a night worthy of her achievements, a night to remember.

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When we’re out in public, I’d watch people react to her. I’d defend her if they were rude, but mostly I’d revel in the admiration they gave MY hot and sexy muscle woman.

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I’m greedy, I want it all. Holidays, body hair, mood swings, aggression, self-doubt, self-love, sweat, the chicken breasts, the protein shake farts, watching her muscles swell, feeling her muscles swell, massages, the things in the fridge that are not legal, the single-minded determination…

And best of all would be if I was her man BEFORE she got into it. And you might have read on my blog that the wife IS getting into lifting. Lately I’ve been pinching myself to check it’s really happening. Suddenly, I’m faced with the prospect that (at least some of) my fantasy is actually happening!

to be continued…

What’s your answer to the above questions? Comment below if you care to share. Or perhaps you have a question you would like to pose the authors? Again, comment box below or email either 6ft1swell@gmail.com or ryantakahashi87@yahoo.com and we’ll be sure to discuss it in future installments of the conversation.

Favourites Fortnight

Fiction

I enter the backstage pump up room – even the name of the place, the word “pump”, makes me want to work and strain and grow. I am perfect, contest ready, not an ounce of excess on me, all powerfully engorged, sensuous muscle.

So ready, every nerve so close to the surface… I can feel and flex and command any muscle on my taut, ready succulent physique to ripple and flex and swell at will. I’m a musclegirl and I’m ready for the stage…

Yes, I thought you’d like it to. Read the rest of Cindy Andrews‘ amazing pump room fantasy (or is it a fantasy?) on The Adventures of Ryan Takahashi.

I certainly have not been the same since I did…

Enjoy!

Swell Digs: The Adventures of Ryan Takahashi

Or, to give it it’s complete title…

THE ADVENTURES OF RYAN TAKAHASHI
AND OTHER WRITINGS BY A SEATTLE ASIAN-AMERICAN GUY

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I admire quite a few bloggers. I’ve mentioned PumpItUp’s Female Muscle, the longest-running UK-based female muscle blog many times before here. Area Orion is a fantastic place for news, gossip, female muscle history, and of course, the fantastic female muscle morphs. Insane Muscle Girls, now on Tumblr, focuses on the sexier side of female muscle, while from the US, El Mariachi’s Erotic Female Muscle pays homage to the author’s favourite women in his own special way. BIG Female Bodybuilders from the UK does what it says on the tin, and Muscle Woman Quixada from Brazil will introduce you to women from, well, Brazil.

Some of these blogs were part of the inspiration for me to start FMS, all of them are highly recommended, but with the utmost respect to those bloggers, there’s only one blog concerned with muscle women and the men who love them that I read purely for the quality of the writing, and that blog is The Adventures of Ryan Takahashi.

Unsurprisingly, given the subject matter, ‘Ryan Takahashi’ is a nom de plume. He claims to be a marketing copywriter – the blog providing him with a creative outlet – and I can’t see any reason to doubt that, because whether he’s writing the fictional adventures of his alter ego or his essays about female muscle, he does it, in my opinion anyway, quite beautifully.

But it’s not just HOW he writes that Swell digs. It’s also very much WHAT he writes, particularly in his ‘essays’ about muscle women, men who are attracted to them, and the perceptions of female muscularity in society. When I first came across the blog, reading essays such as What’s So Alluring about Female Bodybuilders?, or The Strangeness of Having a Female Muscle Fetish, I felt like I was reading my own thoughts put into words. Perhaps you will find the same thing applies to you should you read them.

And these essays have, again, just my opinion, got better and better. His most recent posts on the subject, Top Ten Misconceptions about Having a Female Muscle Fetish, and Female Muscle and Masculine Insecurity are among his best work.

Whoever ‘Ryan Takahashi’ actually is, he has a gift. And one of the ways he’s chosen to use his gift is to write about how it feels and what it means to be a female muscle head today. I can’t imagine a better spokesman.