The aim of this study is to examine women’s bodily experience in the Swedish snowboard scene and how different gendered spaces can contribute that through a theoretical framework of feminist phenomenology and affect. The study further examined how various physical and metaphorical spaces contribute women’s experience of belonging. The data were collected through semi-structured interviews and analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. The results indicate that gendered norms of women are central to understanding how women’s bodies are capable to move. The result show that women experience, both exclusion and inclusion, regardless of how snowboarding is performed. However, women feel more inclusion in femaledominated contexts and in male-dominated contexts when they are actively invited to participate. Inclusion is not merely about be welcomed; it also involves being challenged through language and expressions.