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Fitness

Lifting Is for Everyone: What A Powerlifting Meet Is Like

What do you picture a "powerlifting meet" to look like? Does it include senior citizens, young women, and teens? Powerlifters aren't all big guys. Read up and check out this photo gallery for proof.

Becca Borawski

Written by Becca Borawski Last updated on Nov 22, 2021

Photos provided by Becca Borawski.

What do you picture a “powerlifting meet” to look like? Does it include senior citizens, young women, and teenagers? Powerlifters aren’t all big guys. Sure, there are indeed big, strong guys, but you don’t have to be one of them to love and practice the sport.

Recently I spectated at a powerlifting event hosted by Breaking Muscle’s own Chris Duffin here in Portland, Oregon. He held the event at his gym, Elite Performance Center. If you’ve never been to a meet, it’s a one day event starting in the morning and usually lasting until mid- to late afternoon. A powerlifting competition consists of three lifts: squat, bench, and deadlift.

There are divisions by age, sex, and weight. There are three judges to call the validity of each lift. There are also various federations and rules about what gear you can wear, but that starts getting a little complicated. All you really need to know as a spectator is that each athlete gets three attempts at each lift and the goal is to have the largest total possible, when your highest successful attempt of each lift is added together.

Now, you might be thinking a powerlifting meet is something you could never do. You might be thinking you’d never be strong enough. For some reason competing in powerlifting seems even a bit more daunting than others sports. At a Brazilian jiu jitsu tournament, you might be one of twenty pairs of competitors out on the mats at any given time. At a powerlifting meet you are up on that platform all by yourself. And there are a lot of big, red-faced guys in funny, tight singlets hanging around. And the numbers – well, there are indeed numbers and depending on what you lift you can easily reference charts and records and decide it means you’re weak, strong, or whatever you want to label yourself.

But that’s silly. What’s great about powerlifting meets and why, if you enjoy lifting weights, you should consider entering in one, is it really doesn’t matter where you stand in any record book. It doesn’t matter if you’re new, experienced, old, big, young, or ridiculously, inhumanly strong. Everybody is going to cheer like mad for you on every lift you do. And you’re going to feel like a badass when you pick something heavy up in front of cheering people. It doesn’t matter if it’s heavy for you or heavy for somebody else. You showed up and you picked it up. And there are enough age and weight divisions, that you just might set some sort of record anyway.

Don’t believe me? Check out the photo gallery below for a sampling of the competitors at the recent powerlifting meet at Chris Duffin’s EPC:

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

powerlifting, olympic lifting, weightlifting, olympic weightlifting

Becca Borawski

About Becca Borawski

Becca found her way to a career in health and fitness through Martial Arts and CrossFit. Originally a music editor for film and television, Becca started studying Martial Arts in 2000. Though she started with traditional Martial Arts it was not long before she discovered Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) and her path was forever altered. She began training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) and Muay Thai and started working with professional MMA fighters, building websites, working on fight promotions, and producing videos.

As a competitor in BJJ herself, Becca wanted to get stronger and fitter. In 2006 she discovered CrossFit and became a student at CrossFit Los Angeles. In only a couple of years she became CrossFit Level III Certified, left her career in the film industry, and dedicated herself full time to coaching. She has since been certified through CrossFit in Olympic Lifting, Powerlifting, Nutrition, Endurance and Kids coaching. She also held an NSCA-CSCS from 2006-2008 and is a certified IndoRow instructor. In addition to coaching adults, she founded the CrossFit LA Kids program in 2010 and taught children aged 5-17.

Becca regularly takes on new sports, which have included indoor rowing, fencing, and most recently, cycling, as she believes it makes her both a better athlete and a better coach. In order to reach more people with her coaching, Becca also created ModernAthena.com – a website dedicated to women in pursuit of physical fitness and self-improvement.

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