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Build Better Habits With Big Savings on Bowflex Fitness Gear

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Build Better Habits With Big Savings on Bowflex Fitness Gear

Between work, family and other responsibilities, it can be challenging to find time for exercise. But that doesn’t change the fact that it’s important to maintain an active lifestyle for your personal health and wellness. One way you can ensure you get some movement in on your schedule, regardless of the weather, is by investing in fitness equipment for at-home workouts.

Whether you’re adding to an existing home gym or just getting started, Bowflex has plenty of great equipment to help you hit your goals — and right now you can grab the gear you need at a discount. The brand has slashed prices on select exercise equipment by up to $500 and is throwing in free shipping, making it more affordable to snag workout equipment you can access any time. You can take advantage of this sale now through March 31, so be sure to place your order by the end of the month to take advantage of the savings.

Right now, there are a ton of discounts available, including on the popular Bowflex Max Total 16. Regularly $2,499, you can score one for $1,999 right now. That’s a $500 discount. It’s our favorite elliptical to stream your favorite shows thanks to its 16-inch HD touchscreen. Plus, it has 20 levels of resistance even comes with a Bluetooth heart rate armband. Or opt for our favorite heavy duty treadmill, the Bowflex Treadmill 10. It’s $200 off right now, bringing the cost down to $1,799. It has a high weight capacity of 400 pounds and offers incline and decline options.

And for indoor cycling, you can score $400 off the new IC Bike SE, which cuts the cost to just $699. It has a 7-inch color LCD display, 100 magnetic resistance levels, a pair of 3-pound dumbbells and more. Or splurge on the Bowflex Velocore, our favorite exercise bike overall. Both the Velocore Bike 16 and Velocore Bike 22 are $300 off right now, bringing the price down to $1,499 and $1,899, respectively.

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If you don’t have the room for a full home gym, don’t fret. The Bowflex SelectTech 1090 dumbbells can help you build muscle, and it even earned a spot on our roundup of the best workout equipment for small spaces. They’re marked down to just $599 currently. Or snag the best adjustable dumbbells on the market, the 552 dumbbells, along with a stand, as one bundle for just $499. And if you want to invest in one machine to tackle full body workouts in a small space, consider going with the Revolution Home Gym. You can get one for $2,499, saving you $500 on a machine with 220 pounds of resistance that supports 100 exercises.

You’ll find plenty of other options marked down as well, so be sure to shop the entire sale selection at Bowflex to find the right fit for you. And if you’re looking for a wearable that can help you track your progress, check out our roundups of the latest Apple Watch deals and Fitbit deals to find one at a discount. 

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Double squat into a double press — Today's Tip

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Double squat into a double press — Today's Tip

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Shoshana shows us an exercise to work the whole body, including your legs and shoulders at the same time.

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'We need to be really concerned': How fitness influencers are creating 'a false sense of the world' for young boys

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'We need to be really concerned': How fitness influencers are creating 'a false sense of the world' for young boys

“Alright dumba**, welcome to lesson two here at fat f*** university.”

So begins one of the countless fleshy blurs of locally-produced fitness content pumped algorithmically into the feeds of Australian Instagram, TikTok and Facebook users.

It’s the sort of engagement-baiting approach that yields viewers and followers — designed to push men out of some apparent masculine malaise and into retaking control of their body and masculinity, usually via paid workout programs, products or supplements. 

It’s also the type of content increasingly filtering into the phones of teenage boys.

Meme culture is a big part of fitness and gym content.(Supplied: Instagram)
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While there is a more developed conversation about idealised images on social media and body image pressures on young girls, experts say research is less advanced when it comes to boys.

“I think boys are now objectifying themselves like never before and we do need to be really concerned,” said Danielle Rowland, Head of Prevention at national eating disorder charity the Butterfly Foundation.

“The intensity of training advice, nutrition and misinformation is greater than ever.”

Feeds serving up different diet 

When Anthony Lee started high school in regional Victoria six years ago, social media had a different feel to it.

“In Year 7, it was just basically a way to keep up with your mates,” he said.

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Young man wearing white shirt stands in dappled light beneath tree with river and grassy banks in the backgrounf

Anthony Lee says social media came to mean something very different by the end of high school.(ABC News: Jeremy Story Carter)

By the time he finished Year 12 last year, the feeds of his classmates had changed. So too, the surrounding culture.

“There is a growing problem with men having that feed of perfect body content,” he said.

“There are people who will see influencers on social media and say, ‘I’ve got to have bigger arms, toned legs, I got to have calves the size of mountains’.”

Two screenshots of instagram posts featuring content by young men about going to the gym

Engaging with fitness content online will generally see a user receive more and more of that type of content.(Supplied: Instagram)
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Linger on one Instagram reel showing off a set of dumbbell exercises, and you’ll likely get five more videos zeroing in on how to get “boulder shoulders”, or some protein-heavy diet advice from a shirtless influencer.

Josh Ward travels to schools in Sydney and around regional NSW, hearing from young boys as part of his work as a facilitator for men’s mental health organisation Tomorrow Man.

“There’s been a huge jump in the last two to three years in the amount of boys opening up in workshops around their body,” he said. 

Man stands at front of classroom presenting to group of young boys seated on plastic chairs.

Tomorrow Man facilitator Josh Ward runs school workshops around ideas of masculinity and mental health.(Supplied: Josh Ward)

Mr Ward believes there’s no coincidence it’s occurred alongside a “big spike” in the amount of fitness and gym influencer content turning up in their feeds. 

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“If someone was in school walking around with a fitness mag in their pocket, bringing it out every recess or lunch, you’d think ‘that is some strange behaviour’. But that’s what [teenage boys] are celebrating now,” he said.

“The danger for young people is they don’t realise they’re actually the pioneer generation in terms of that exposure.

“In the last five years there’s been a crazy amount of fitness content, but that’s just what they’ve always been exposed to, so they don’t realise how strange it is.”

‘It creates a false sense of the world’

For many teenage boys on the path through puberty, working out in gyms has long represented an accelerated part of the journey into manhood.

Images of muscle-ripped celebrities and athletes serving as aesthetic inspiration, if not an unattainable physical ideal, is nothing new either. 

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A man rests with his hands on the floor of a gym, with dumbbells near him and a woman walking past.

Going to the gym can be an important and healthy part of puberty for teenage boys.(ABC News: John Gunn)

But it’s the nature of that exposure — the type of content and the saturation of it — that has experts concerned. 

“It’s that ‘in-your-face, all-the-time’ aspect of it,” said Associate Professor Ivanka Prichard from Flinders University.

“It’s seeing something on Instagram when we’re perhaps not in that frame of mind, making a comparison to this really fit person and have that influence the way we might feel about ourselves.

“We’re fed a whole range of things through those algorithms that we would never have had exposure to before and would never have sought out.”

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Two screenshots of instagram posts featuring content by young men about going to the gym

Experts report seeing digitally altered and AI-generated images in fitness content.(Supplied: Instagram)

Multiple experts the ABC spoke to reported seeing digitally-altered and even AI-generated images of supposedly naturally-fit bodies on social media.

Ms Prichard, a former fitness instructor whose research sits at the intersection of psychology, social media and exercise science, believes the constant barrage of perfectly sculpted bodies could destabilise the mental health of some teenage boys.

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Always Typing On The Keyboard? Try This 3 Minutes Exercise To Relieve Your Wrist Pain!

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Always Typing On The Keyboard? Try This 3 Minutes Exercise To Relieve Your Wrist Pain!
This video provides an easy and effective way to prevent wrist pain and injury. In just three minutes, viewers can learn simple exercises that can help improve flexibility and relax the muscles in the wrist. No equipment is necessary to complete these exercises, making them perfect for those who are always typing on the keyboard. With regular practice, viewers can keep their wrists healthy and free from pain.
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