In her 40s, Anne Marie Chaker found herself in one of the hardest chapters of her life—grappling with postpartum depression, a deepening dependence on alcohol, and the collapse of her marriage.
Then, during a hockey tournament trip with her daughter, a chance meeting at a hotel gym with another mom changed everything. That fellow gym-goer handed her the number of a coach, setting Chaker on a path into strength training that would help her reclaim not just her body, but her sense of self.
“Strength training gave me something concrete I could latch onto—and build upon—at a time when so much felt outside my control,” Chaker said. “Lifting weights was a physical way to move through pain, and it demanded presence, discipline, and effort. Over time, I realized that every rep wasn’t just building muscle, it was rebuilding me. I began to feel strong in my body again, and that strength carried into every part of my life.”
It’s a journey she shares in her new book, “LIFT: How Women Can Reclaim Their Physical Power and Transform Their Lives.”
At 50, as she prepares to step into her first professional bodybuilding competition, Chaker spoke with Know Your Value about her book and her unexpected midlife transformation.
Below is the conversation, which has been edited for brevity and clarity.
Know Your Value: What inspired you to write LIFT at this moment in your life?
Anne Marie Chaker: I wanted to share a story that I felt wasn’t being told: That a woman in life didn’t have to wind down, but could actually push harder and discover new strength. And how through this weird sport that celebrated muscles, fake tans, big hair and sparkly bikinis, I had come home to myself. For me, LIFT is about reframing what this season of life can look like. We don’t have to accept the narrative of decline. I wanted to tell the truth about how hard it is, but also how freeing and powerful it can be to rebuild yourself from the inside out. And my book shows you how–and why it’s so important.
Know Your Value: How is strength training changing the way women think about aging?
Anne Marie Chaker: I think it’s helping women reclaim their power. All the research points to this: That women, historically, were never meant to be ‘thin.’ Thinness is a fairly modern construct that has caused women–and society–so much harm. Science shows that women’s bodies were historically meant to be strong and capable. Our natural state is to be strong. Our bodies perform best when we are strong and well fed. Strength training is about expansion. It helps women build muscle, preserve bone, and walk through the world with more power. There’s a growing recognition that we don’t have to fade away—we can actually get stronger with age, not weaker.









