10/06/2024
When we opened .gym, I told my clients we wouldn’t be installing mirrors (I had them in my old private studio). A lot of them were skeptical, they were used to gyms with mirrors and had the idea that it helped them with form. I told them just try it out and if you really all miss the mirrors I’d put one up.
After opening the gym without a mirror in sight, no one even noticed. The conversations went something like - “how are you feeling about the no mirrors set up?” and every client responding, “oh! I completely forgot about the mirrors!”
People haven’t missed them, but i’ve noticed how it’s changed our sessions.
1. People barely ever make negative comments about their appearance. Without mirrors to prompt, it just doesn’t come up. In my old spot, when the sun was at a certain angle, I’d hear comments like “wow, I look awful in these leggings” and “can we please do this not looking at the mirror? I don’t want to see myself.”
2. No one’s form has gotten worse. This is no surprise to me, but it is for some. Mirrors do more harm than good. You end up (a) focusing on a moving object (yourself) when ideally you’re focused on a set point, (b) craning your neck to see yourself, which leads to too much movement in the cervical spine (aka the neck - which should remain stable during nearly all exercises) and (c) even if you can see yourself without hurting your neck, it’s usually not at a very helpful angle.
I’d heard others post about the value of no mirrors. I’m theory I always got it, but I honestly didn’t think it would make such an immediate, noticeable impact on clients’ experience.
Focusing on how you feel over how you look is better for self image, your relationship with exercise - and it will lead to better quality movement.
After all, really knowing how it feels to do a move well means much more than knowing what it looks like.