FitStrong PT, limerick personal trainer, over 40

AGE WELL AND PROSPER

Once upon a time, during the latter years of the 20th century, I was in fact in my 20s. In fact I was also once in my 30s and 40s and now in my 50s I can reflect and have a really good laugh at my 20th century kid self. I think It’s good to laugh at oneself, laugh in awe and wonder at all the things we used to value and put huge amounts of energy into. In hindsight a large chunk of what I used to do in the gym was a total time suck.  But, at the time, I thought I was living the life of a gym God … hahaha.

Back in the late 90s Friday was always arm day. An hour or more pumping the armacondas from all directions and angles to get them huge for an evening of posing in the club with my redbull and whisky! Yes, I did have expensive tastes, as I still do. These days I spend my spare cash on plants for the garden and Ikea products!

Training was influenced by a thing called ‘Flex magazine’ as training certifications didn’t go too deep on the details of getting big and sexy.  My weeks would unfold with numerous hours in the gym working up good sweats, pumps and ultimately quite a few injuries too. Elbow tendonitis, muscle tears, T-shirt tears, hangovers – oh wait, that was the other stuff too!

Yep, the learning curve was steep, mostly through trial and error or curiosity, but back in the 90’s there really wasn’t much emphasis on exercise for longevity. 

What would happen in the future was anyones guess, but no-one really cared when maxing out the bench and squat was the focus on the mind of every gym bro. 

Longevity was not really a talking point in the average gym, but that was about to change with the emergence of new, forward thinking people, training organisations and such. By the mid naughties (2005+) some older, aging trainers started to contemplate the ‘what next’ conundrum. What do we need to do in the gym and life to be able to function better as older and hopefully wiser adults? 

Longevity, living well into our 80s and 90s, wont be achieved by luck alone, winning the lotto or by relying on how we exercise in our 20s and 30s. 

We should not merely want to add years to our lives, but life to our years. 

To add this life to your years you’ll need some practical skills like flexibility, mobility; practical strengths, aerobic fitness and of course good nutrition, sleep and stress management.

I’ll not be going into detail in this post but I’ll draw particular attention to the things I can influence in the gym, like the practical life strengths, mobility and flexibility. 

No one, I guarantee, will be interested in what you could bench press or how fast you could run 5km when you’re 80. 

Your immediate family and peers will be more concerned and impressed by your ability to function. Can you get off your chair, toilet, into the shower, get dressed, drive the car, carry in your shopping, pressing linen into the top shelf of the linen cupboards and all the other domestic stuff life will include. “Oh how interesting” says no one, I get it. This doesn’t exactly describe an interesting gym training session, I know. But to live like a successfully aging adult, we aught to train for the future like a responsible adult. 

A brief outline of a typical gym session for my current over 50 gym members looks like this:

  • Dynamic warm up – much like this video
  • Squatting movements
  • Pressing movements
  • Pulling movements
  • Stability and balance enhancing movements
  • Getting down to the floor and back up with ‘style’ movements
  • Picking up and carrying ‘stuff’ movements
  • Simple flexibility exercises
  • Dealing with dizziness events
  • And quickness (reaction speed and reflexive strength)

To keep the skills contextual we use simple equipment, often times awkward, because life can be just that. A heavy plant pot hasn’t got handles like a kettlebell, so let’s use a medicine ball for example as it is indeed awkward. 

A big component of our gym time over 40 and 50 is intensity. How hard is hard enough? As a basic rule, if lifting weights, ALWAYS finish every set with 2 or 3 repetitions left in the tank. Do not train to maximal effort. Perform and practice numerous sets of 70% efforts. Good things will happen. ‘Maxing out’ will not be your friend. 

Outside of the gym, lifestyle consistency is vital. Go to bed roughly the same time every night and awaken about the same time. As we age, sleep quality and consistency becomes all the more important. A poor nights sleep can ruin the day that follows, adding elements of danger and poor choices. We can and do get away with poor sleep by our own decisions when younger, but we just don’t get away with it once we’re over 50!

Do consider this – nothing good ever happens after 10pm, so go to bed. 

I shall not dive into nutrition today but essentially, if you’re an adult, you really do know deep down that your body functions best on real food. Real proteins, natural carbohydrates and heaps of vegetables and fruit. All the other stuff is play-food. Maybe enjoy some of that every now and again, but it shouldn’t be seen in your kitchen all that frequently. But you know that, don’t you. 

Whilst the ingredients may vary, the recipe is always the same. Simple

KEEP IT SIMPLE, AGE WELL AND PROSPER

With the summer quickly running out – not that we’ve seen much of a summer, I am taking expressions of interest from people over 40 who want to learn how to get stronger and fitter for now, and for the future.

I am happy to offer a FREE consultation and movement screen at Urban One on the Dock Road, Limerick. Fill in the form below to get started.

FitStrong PT, group training, movnat, Original Strength, personal training, Strength training

Are you ‘Real-World’ Fit?

Does your exercise support real-world demands?

Much of the time people exercise to accomplish an outcome, a result or even just for the sake of it, because it’s healthy, to burn energy, calories or time!

Whilst just working-out is fine, wouldn’t it be awesome if our exercise endeavours actually prepared us for the physical needs of an active life?

Having bigger muscles might seem like an ideal, but really, when you’re getting old, no one will care how much you bench pressed, how big your guns were or how many insta-likes you had. “What’s instagram”? They’ll ask!

What really matters is how well you will function.

Can you balance, carry heavy ‘stuff’, climb, step up, crawl, run and jump? Can you get to the ground and back up effortlessly?

Strength training with machines, bars and dumbbells and kettlebells are great tools. They will build specific strengths, but they don’t always carry over to the real world apart from building general resiliency. The human skills to move and age with strength, power, purpose and fitness is something that takes a different form in the gym – if indeed a gym is even needed.

At MoveStrong we practice all the usual strength exercises from squatting, deadlifting, pushes and pulls etc but we back these up with heaps of practice of natural movement, real world strength and fitness skills that will support you during the weekend gardening spree, house renovations, that big weekend hike and much more over the coming years.

If you’d like to chat about this and how it fits your lifestyle – let’s catch up over a coffee, mug of tea or a glass of wine, seriously.

I can design you and your family a routine I can take you through at the gym, or make you a follow-along at home routine, with any variety of things you may have lying around. Traditional gym equipment is not a requirement!

Start to think about moving well,  moving often and being useful to your future self.

Jamie

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FitStrong PT

Does exercise help reduce stress?

Part 2

In part 1 I talked about the whys behind my exercise. Today I delve into a great question.

As an escape from stressors, exercise definitely offers something to focus on. Because I often focus on the positives of training, I leave every session feeling better. Feeling good feels good – so finishing a training session feeling good can sometime continue for hours.

Previously though, a specialised focus on certain lifts whilst training for Powerlifting did sway the benefits away from feeling good. An overly specialised training program can push us further into distress and away from eustress. For that reason, I prefer not to program overly intensive or specialised routines for too long. 4 to 6 weeks, two to three times a years proves a suitable duration for the hard and heavy specialised programs while the rest of the year is used to develop well rounded generalisations.

Training hard in high stress periods is never a good idea if longevity is your goal. 

The science of course tells us that endorphins released during exercise makes us feel good. Whilst that’s true, it’s a similar statement to ‘eating makes us healthy’. But we know how that can go wrong.

 

Got any feedback or ideas? Please do get in touch.

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FitStrong PT

Taking the Long Road

 

longevity

Most of us will be privileged to live on this earth for around 80 years or so, give or take a Zombie apocalypse or our politicians hitting the big red button in a temper-tantrum. The key word here is ‘live’. By live I mean to thrive, be strong, fit, healthy and absent of illness and disease. This is in contrast to just surviving which sadly we can observe in greater numbers in this, the 21st century.

While the great diseases of the 18th, 19th and early 20th century are all but non existent, we have growing number of people suffering heart conditions, diabetes, obesity and the cancers to name but a few.

This is not living – this is just surviving. 

We have a choice to lead a healthy life and these days we even have an abundance of resources and teachers who can guide us in the direction of a healthier life. It’s not actually that difficult once you decide to take ownership of your own existence; what you eat, what time you go to bed at and following a routine of exercise.

Living a monastic life void of all treats is not necessary but living a life of good, better and better(er) choices is achievable by everyone.

The simple choices can lead to many health benefits that in the long run, will add up to a better quality of life.

  1. Aim for 7 to 8 hours of sleep a night.
  2. Eat mainly unprocessed foods comprising of proteins, healthy fats and carbohydrate foods that occur naturally.
  3. Walk every day for around 30 minutes. Not brisk. Just walk.
  4. Practice strength training 2 to 3 times a week.
  5. Daily, perform some form of stretching with a movement system you can enjoy. Just a few minutes a day can have wonderful affects.

You can choose to to just hang around until our nations health system has to take care us until death, or you take care of all the little things that add up to health longevity, living and thriving until our final day.

As my good friend Coach Steve Furys tag line goes – ‘Die Mighty’.

Steve Maxwell is another longtime coach with some wise words to share about longevity.

 

Got any thoughts?

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