southern comfort wrote:
I dont understand why people run with shirts on. Just do whatever is comfortable.
What if running with a shirt on is comfortable?
southern comfort wrote:
I dont understand why people run with shirts on. Just do whatever is comfortable.
What if running with a shirt on is comfortable?
Ecin wrote:
Because I'm trying to avoid round two with skin cancer.
THIS
Berty S wrote:
Ooops wrote:He begged
Would you have felt/reacted differently, if it had been a woman.
Ignore the imposter. I would have felt differently if the person wasn't harrassing me while I was on my daily run in 85 degree heat, male or female. This may sound a little old fashioned but I'm a little picky on who, when, where, I let a person suck on my precious cok.
Logic R Us wrote:
southern comfort wrote:I dont understand why people run with shirts on. Just do whatever is comfortable.
What if running with a shirt on is comfortable?
+1
Bad Wigins wrote:
Mine are made of muscle. Women stare at them. You are inferior.
They're not muscle in anyone. And the women are staring at them because they're jiggling about so much.
In Dallas, I run and race shirtless at least six months a year. The wife pretends not to notice when I return home, but I catch her looking.
runner who professes wrote:
In Dallas, I run and race shirtless at least six months a year. The wife pretends not to notice when I return home, but I catch her looking.
...and laughing.
218er wrote:
The one good trend is that the faster female runners feel comfortable in their sport bras.
The faster female runners don't need sport bras whereas the slower ones do.
Even the "smaller" female elite runners wear sports bras if they wear a T-shirt or have a built shelf bra in the tank....Guess you do not know.....
eieioooooo wrote:
Even the "smaller" female elite runners wear sports bras if they wear a T-shirt or have a built shelf bra in the tank....Guess you do not know.....
The point is they feel comfortable wearing only sports bras (no shirt) because they are "smaller". The same does not hold true for the well endowed.
no it has nothing to do with being smaller, it is more comfortable to wear a sports bra than not while running! Most elite female runners are not 'well endowed" I can not name any.....
kipwin wrote:
tech shirts replacing cotton has reduced the necessity of topless running.
"tech" shirts, if you mean that 100% polyester crap the companies are pushing so hard right now, are total sh.t. or 95% polyester and 5% elastane, not much better.
the only decent shirts to run in are made by surf companies for some reason. maybe because only they "know the feeling" or something, not sure.
but yeah, only time to run with the shirt on is when i'm running with the hs girls i coach. not as comfortable as shirtless, but seems more appropriate.
little lady runner wrote:
no it has nothing to do with being smaller, it is more comfortable to wear a sports bra than not while running! Most elite female runners are not 'well endowed" I can not name any.....
Who said anything about "elite"?
my whole boys team had to wear shirts our sophomore year of HS because some fat girl on our track team complained to her conservative nutjob parents that our glorious runner physiques were making her "uncomfortable"
thankfully the rule got changed
The concept of man boobs as one ages is indisputable. Once you're in your 40s, and often sooner, a man will inevitably blossom. But this does not mean shirts are required when running. I embrace the freedom to let my girls bounce in the breeze. It is quite freeing.
Aren't you worried about ticks when running shirtless on trails?
GTFO out of my country with your saggy, naked body.
ticks wrote:
Aren't you worried about ticks when running shirtless on trails?
The ticks will find other exposed skin if you have a shirt on. The grundle is where you gotta be careful.
Logic R Us wrote:
southern comfort wrote:I dont understand why people run with shirts on. Just do whatever is comfortable.
What if running with a shirt on is comfortable?
I mean if you feel comfortable running shirtless then do it regardless of what you fear other people may think. If you want to run with a shirt then more power to ya. As long as you can get out the door and train comfortably, it doesn't really matter what you wear or don't wear.
southern comfort wrote:
it doesn't really matter what you wear or don't wear.
What if I look like Dov Charney and prefer to train near middle schools in Vibrams and a gold macrame thong?