@tinabugs77 I'm not being aggressive, I'm being firm.
First, if you are going to claim a body fat percentage, you should at least have a concept of essential body fat enough to realize that below 13% is/was probably not an accurate reading, and would put you in a place of failing health to maintain.
Secondly, yes - this is an issue with something that much of the fitness community is doing. You are one of the people doing it. For most athletic and fitness purposes, discussing body fat is unnecessary. Most people claiming their body fat are claiming a fiction. Most athletes do not have any real idea what their body fat is, because they have not completed a series of accurate testing under controlled circumstances, over a prolonged period of time (DEXA scans every 3-6 months).
62% of female athletes will suffer from an eating disorder or disordered eating (different things). Seeing athletes online promoting their super low body fat contributes greatly to this. It places an importance on appearance and leanness over both health and performance. It reinforces that value comes from our measurements: How low can we get our weight? How low can we get our body fat down? This has nothing to do with strength or fitness. The fact is, trying to stay super lean, or push yourself to the max possible leanness, means sacrificing health and performance almost 100% of the time.
Lastly, If having a low body fat, which 18.4% is, is weighing on you, and if you are so attached to 12.8% body fat being part of your identity, the person you need to speak to is a professional, and not the people checking in on an internet forum.
First, if you are going to claim a body fat percentage, you should at least have a concept of essential body fat enough to realize that below 13% is/was probably not an accurate reading, and would put you in a place of failing health to maintain.
Secondly, yes - this is an issue with something that much of the fitness community is doing. You are one of the people doing it. For most athletic and fitness purposes, discussing body fat is unnecessary. Most people claiming their body fat are claiming a fiction. Most athletes do not have any real idea what their body fat is, because they have not completed a series of accurate testing under controlled circumstances, over a prolonged period of time (DEXA scans every 3-6 months).
62% of female athletes will suffer from an eating disorder or disordered eating (different things). Seeing athletes online promoting their super low body fat contributes greatly to this. It places an importance on appearance and leanness over both health and performance. It reinforces that value comes from our measurements: How low can we get our weight? How low can we get our body fat down? This has nothing to do with strength or fitness. The fact is, trying to stay super lean, or push yourself to the max possible leanness, means sacrificing health and performance almost 100% of the time.
Lastly, If having a low body fat, which 18.4% is, is weighing on you, and if you are so attached to 12.8% body fat being part of your identity, the person you need to speak to is a professional, and not the people checking in on an internet forum.