Objectify Her // Lauren Fleshman's Memoir "Good for a Girl" episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 10, 2026 · 54 MIN

Objectify Her // Lauren Fleshman's Memoir "Good for a Girl"

from Babes in Bookland: Your Favorite Women's Bookclub Podcast

What would it mean to build women's sports around women's bodies? This week, my friend Becca returns to discuss Lauren Fleshman's memoir "Good for a Girl". What starts as a running memoir quickly reveals itself as something far bigger: an investigation into the science of female puberty and athletics, the eating disorder epidemic inside women's collegiate and professional sports, and one woman's relentless fight to change a sport she loves from the inside out. We discuss Lauren's unconventional path to running, the ways puberty has been treated as "the one injury a girl can't come back from," the NCAA's staggering lack of policy around eating disorders in women's athletics, Lauren's famous Nike "Objectify Me" campaign, and the ways female athletes are still being failed by the systems built to protect them.This episode is for every woman who was ever told she was good — for a girl. The runners, the former athletes, the moms of daughters in sports, and anyone who has ever felt their body was working against them instead of for them.If this conversation resonated with you, the best thing you can do is share it with a friend who needs to hear it, and rate and review the show wherever you listen. It makes a huge difference!Purchase "Good for a Girl"Other Links:https://www.milesplit.com/articles/211759/dear-younger-me-lauren-fleshman (Lauren's letter to her younger self)Follow Becca's bookstagram: @bookedwithbecca and her new running account: @run.with.beccaSupport the show:On PatreonBuy us a bookBuy cute merchSubscribe to the Babes in Bookland SubstackConnect with us and suggest a great memoir!Follow us on instagram! @babesinbooklandpod Thank you for listening!Xx, AlexTimestamps!00:00 — Intro: Lauren Fleshman's Good for a Girl01:02 — Why did Becca pick this book?03:33 — The book's dedication and opening lines03:57 — How did Becca's running journey begin?05:15 — How do you stay safe on solo runs?07:05 — What would you tell your younger self?08:09 — "You can do anything, Lauren" — her dad's voice in her head09:58 — How do we hold space for people who shaped us for better and worse?11:35 — "Dad was a wild tide, but mom was our shore"12:08 — How do parents give equal love and attention in a big family?13:44 — Beating the boys, and not questioning it17:03 — Why do we still say "good for a girl"?17:51 — Middle school dominance, then puberty hits19:00 — Do we tie our identity to winning?19:50 — Becca's Lauren Fleshman sighting on a race course20:25 — Why are girls quitting sports by 14–17?22:37 — Why does puberty help boys and hurt girls athletically?23:32 — The clash between athletic function and the male gaze25:39 — Finding her running form and making the team27:20 — When did you first realize the boys were pulling ahead?29:30 — How did Title IX change the culture of effort?33:04 — "Puberty is the injury you can't come back from" — what did the captain mean?34:20 — Why are eating disorders so prevalent in the running world?35:53 — Why does the NCAA still have no policy on eating disorders?39:06 — Stanford, Jesse, and asking the hard question up front40:07 — "What made great women possible?"41:19 — Body image and the college uniform42:41 — Equity vs. equality — why "same" isn't fair?43:16 — Why do female athletes peak in their late 20s and 30s, not their teens?45:08 — Going pro on a $60K Nike salary46:04 — Coming heartbreakingly close to the Olympics47:01 — What happened when she emailed Nike's CEO?47:46 — The "Objectify Her" campaign — reclaiming the gaze49:19 — How do you let anger fuel advocacy instead of consuming it?49:56 — Why did she start her blog?50:49 — The granola bar company51:04 — Why did Nike treat her pregnancy like an injury?51:33 — What real change would actually look like for young female athletes?52:20 — Final thoughts: what are we taking from this book? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

What would it mean to build women's sports around women's bodies? This week, my friend Becca returns to discuss Lauren Fleshman's memoir "Good for a Girl". What starts as a running memoir quickly reveals itself as something far bigger: an investigation into the science of female puberty and athletics, the eating disorder epidemic inside women's collegiate and professional sports, and one woman's relentless fight to change a sport she loves from the inside out. We discuss Lauren's unconventional path to running, the ways puberty has been treated as "the one injury a girl can't come back from," the NCAA's staggering lack of policy around eating disorders in women's athletics, Lauren's famous Nike "Objectify Me" campaign, and the ways female athletes are still being failed by the systems built to protect them.This episode is for every woman who was ever told she was good — for a girl. The runners, the former athletes, the moms of daughters in sports, and anyone who has ever felt their body was working against them instead of for them.If this conversation resonated with you, the best thing you can do is share it with a friend who needs to hear it, and rate and review the show wherever you listen. It makes a huge difference!Purchase "Good for a Girl"Other Links:https://www.milesplit.com/articles/211759/dear-younger-me-lauren-fleshman (Lauren's letter to her younger self)Follow Becca's bookstagram: @bookedwithbecca and her new running account: @run.with.beccaSupport the show:On PatreonBuy us a bookBuy cute merchSubscribe to the Babes in Bookland SubstackConnect with us and suggest a great memoir!Follow us on instagram! @babesinbooklandpod Thank you for listening!Xx, AlexTimestamps!00:00 — Intro: Lauren Fleshman's Good for a Girl01:02 — Why did Becca pick this book?03:33 — The book's dedication and opening lines03:57 — How did Becca's running journey begin?05:15 — How do you stay safe on solo runs?07:05 — What would you tell your younger self?08:09 — "You can do anything, Lauren" — her dad's voice in her head09:58 — How do we hold space for people who shaped us for better and worse?11:35 — "Dad was a wild tide, but mom was our shore"12:08 — How do parents give equal love and attention in a big family?13:44 — Beating the boys, and not questioning it17:03 — Why do we still say "good for a girl"?17:51 — Middle school dominance, then puberty hits19:00 — Do we tie our identity to winning?19:50 — Becca's Lauren Fleshman sighting on a race course20:25 — Why are girls quitting sports by 14–17?22:37 — Why does puberty help boys and hurt girls athletically?23:32 — The clash between athletic function and the male gaze25:39 — Finding her running form and making the team27:20 — When did you first realize the boys were pulling ahead?29:30 — How did Title IX change the culture of effort?33:04 — "Puberty is the injury you can't come back from" — what did the captain mean?34:20 — Why are eating disorders so prevalent in the running world?35:53 — Why does the NCAA still have no policy on eating disorders?39:06 — Stanford, Jesse, and asking the hard question up front40:07 — "What made great women possible?"41:19 — Body image and the college uniform42:41 — Equity vs. equality — why "same" isn't fair?43:16 — Why do female athletes peak in their late 20s and 30s, not their teens?45:08 — Going pro on a $60K Nike salary46:04 — Coming heartbreakingly close to the Olympics47:01 — What happened when she emailed Nike's CEO?47:46 — The "Objectify Her" campaign — reclaiming the gaze49:19 — How do you let anger fuel advocacy instead of consuming it?49:56 — Why did she start her blog?50:49 — The granola bar company51:04 — Why did Nike treat her pregnancy like an injury?51:33 — What real change would actually look like for young female athletes?52:20 — Final thoughts: what are we taking from this book? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Objectify Her // Lauren Fleshman's Memoir "Good for a Girl"

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This episode was published on June 10, 2026.

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What would it mean to build women's sports around women's bodies? This week, my friend Becca returns to discuss Lauren Fleshman's memoir "Good for a Girl". What starts as a running memoir quickly reveals itself as something far bigger: an...

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