Alison Dahl

Alison Dahl Iron Maidens Fitness helps women in Norfolk create the body they love for the life they want. With Alison is a caring, dedicated, and motivating coach.

Alison is a Certified Personal Trainer through the National Academy of Sports Medicine. In addition to working with one on one with our clients, Alison is the founder, owner, and instructor of Iron Maidens Fitness. After spending over 13 years in sales, management, and communications at a large tech company, Alison is thrilled to finally marry her two loves: fitness and helping people. Alison is p

assionate about helping clients shift their mindset away from the latest fad diet or other erroneous fitness information and towards getting leaner and stronger, using food as fuel, and feeling confident in their bodies. She is known for her high-energy, results-driven training sessions, and she loves getting deep with her clients to tailor their experience to their individual needs. Having struggled with injury in the past, Alison is has learned to effectively integrate high-intensity work with core stabilization. She is dedicated to training her clients through safe, effective movements, and she loves working with all fitness levels!

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909 Hanover Avenue
Norfolk, VA
23508

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Our Story

I’m Alison, Founder of Iron Maiden Fitness. And my passion is helping women be strong and confident so that they can live their best lives. This is important to me because for a long time I was caught up in insecurities and fear – definitely not being the best version of myself. And much of why that was stemmed from body image issues. Getting stronger and healthier was the catalyst for some big life changes, which is what ultimately led me to help my Iron Maidens do the same.

When I was a child, I identified as the chunky girl. I had muscular legs and was always looking down at them and wishing they were skinny like some other girls I’d see – never realizing or appreciating how amazing it is to have a strong athletic body. I legitimately thought over and over for many years that getting to my ideal body weight would have some magical effect on my happiness and life would literally be perfect.

As you can imagine, this led to a hyper-focus over my body as I got older. Being thin became an obsession. I remember a period in high school when I restricted myself to 800 calories a day, and food consumption became the one thing I felt I could truly control in my life. I spent hours, days, weeks and months obsessing over every bite of food, until one day, I “slipped” and ate a brownie at a school function. I was so distraught that I drove home and made myself throw up. This pattern continued for a while. I’d try to be “good” on my highly restrictive diet, but when I “slipped” I’d find my way to the restroom and “take care of it.” I eventually reached a point where the stress of this lifestyle and obsessing over food and exercise consumed me – and I was depressed. I came clean about my eating habits to my family and began therapy. Thanks to my therapist and the support of my family, I found my way back to a healthy relationship with food, but getting to a consistently healthy place took time. It actually wasn’t until much later in my adult life that I truly became at peace with it all.