FitStrong PT

Start 2026 the Smart Way

The new year sees a lot of people try to jump into their ‘new me’ with strength training or running etc, when their body actually needs some mobility first-off. 

These are awesome goals, ones that I stand by and help my clients develop; but, if you’ve done no exercise over the past month, 6 months or this time last year, there’s a smarter and ultimately a safer starting point.

If you’re feeling stiff, unfit and struggle with every day tasks, adding more intensity right off the bat will usually just compound your problems and end your ‘new me’ goals. 

Mobility training will ready your body, your joints, improve your posture, and actually make your fitness and strength training safer and more realistic.

Mobility training isn’t just stretching as many believe. It’s also not complicated and doesn’t require straps, bands, rollers and expensive gear. Mobility training helps you to regain the movement, control and articulation that your adult joints and muscles are meant to have.

I have a few open time in my schedule so let’s hit the reset button this new year and get you ready for your 2026 goals. 

Reply RESET and let me help you bulletproof your body and your goals. 

Jamie

FitStrong PT

The Only 5 Exercises You Need

For a Strong Life Over 50

Walk into any gym and you’ll see a multitude of ‘stuff’ happening. Stuff is an apt description! Some of it might look awesome, inspiring, frightening or downright weird! Is any or all of it a requirement for optimal or maximal physical health? Do you really need to do dozens of movements to benefit?

I’m a long term practitioner of essentialism, verging on minimalism even. In fact, the most successful program I run is the Amazing 12 transformation program that utilises just five strength movements to create outstanding physique and strength development.

Now, as for the top, essential movements for a healthy, strong and fit life over 50, let’s learn about five essential movements for optimal health and strength.

In terms of adding to our lives productively, we should endeavour to practice movements that will consider our physical design as well as movements that will make us more resilient for our future lives.

What’s this mean? Our design dictates that we should physically push, pull, lift things up from the ground and bend our oftentimes creaky knees to squat down. The 5th I’ll add here will most likely result in a raised eyebrow or two… …Getting down to the ground and learn to move around down there aka ‘ground based locomotion‘.

This brief list of movements might sound like a physical day in the garden. You lift up bags of compost, dig a few holes, plant some new perennials, wrestle the mower around and trim a few of the neighbours branches overhanging your property.

This might also sound like a potential day in the future looking after the grand children (if you’re not there already). Bending over picking up toys or little Liam and Olivia, pushing buggies around the shops, crawling around the floor playing games or heavens knows what haha. The grandparent thing is not quite on our schedule yet, but the Daughter is just starting university, so new chapters are on the horizon for all of us, you included.

To be more tolerant, physically for all the exhausting parts of life, requires practice and preparation. And that’s what an essentialist gym program is perfect for.

Apart from getting physically prepared for life now and the future, strength training also adds to our health. Increased bone density, stronger joints, lowered blood pressure, improved heart health, lowered LDL, lowered body fat, lowers blood sugars, reduced risk of diabetes, decreased risks of developing cancers, decreased risk of developing cognitive decline and associated disorders. Any kind of google search on ‘disease reduction and strength training’ will pop up numerous supportive studies.

Okay okay, I will now get to the good stuff; the exercises I like to promote.

What I’ll do below is briefly introduce the key movements and then go a bit deeper with some video demos. Keep in mind that each key movement is part of a family. Pushing for example includes multiple forms. Squatting too may include a wide variety of options. There is always a solution for every body regardless of limitations or experience.

ONE

Lift stuff up from the floor. Also known as deadlifting or hip hinging, this movement is probably the most common activity of a physical nature that we undertake frequently. For my over 50 trainees, I like to build this in with loaded carrying. This bonus movement is just an add-on to lifting a weight up. Lift and carry for a number of steps and put the weight down.

TWO

Pushing is a vital movement that recruits our upper torso muscles like the chest, shoulders and arms. Done correctly (read safely) any pushing movement should involve the whole body or as many muscles as possible.

THREE

Pulling movements are the act of pulling something towards us from above or from in front of us (or any angle between these). Yet again, done correctly a pulling move will strengthen the upper back and arms but will utilise as many muscles of the body as possible.

FOUR

Squatting is yet another high frequency movement we all perform daily. From sitting down on anything and getting back up to perhaps squatting down to tie your shoelaces unless you’re a cool kid with slip-ons of course; is all part of the squat family.

FIVE

Ground based locomotion is perhaps one the most essential practices an over 50 exerciser should perform. If you came to me and said, “hey Jamie, I’ve only got 15 mins a day to do some strength training, what should I do?” I’d give ground based locomotion as my preference to practice. Number five on this list actually includes two key parts. The getting down act and then the ‘moving around whilst you’re down there’ part. Oh, and then you have to get back up too. Ground based movements include a massive family of activities, but here’s just one quick post I made a while ago. READ ON

Let’s summarise

Push, pull, squat, lift stuff and get down to the ground can be just as simple as that.

Pick a movement that fits each description and practice the skills of that movement. You don’t need to train each move to exhaustion in fact that is something quite detrimental to good strength training practice. Best programming entails practicing each movement until your effort may be defined as moderate or 70% of your maximum ability or maybe until you feel you could only perform a few more repetitions safely.

If you’re local to me, I’d be more than happy to build a program for you. I meet people in Limerick and help formulate a routine to practice and this can an ongoing arrangement or an infrequent check up, accountability arrangement.

Don’t think too long about it though, spots are filling up.

Jamie

MoveStrong Strength & Movement

Me doing a wee kickstand squat
animal flow
FitStrong PT

Top 5 reasons to try Animal Flow 

It’s new, it’s exciting and it’s spreading around the world as one of the newest fitness trends. 

Some classes in action

Here are some top 5 reasons why you should try an Animal Flow class and why it’s soooo good.

Animal Flow can be used for a variety of training purposes. It can accompany your normal training as part of a warm up, or as a stand-alone training method. Let’s dive into the top 5 reasons to try it today. 

1. Mobility & Flexibility

A major benefit of practicing Animal Flow is the gain and increase of flexibility and mobility. People often think static stretching is the only way to improve muscular flexibility and range of movement about a joint. With Animal flow, you are consistently practicing dynamic moving, in and out of controlled full ranges of movements and teasing out your strength and flexibility at the same time. 

2. Trunk Stability

Forget sit-ups and crunches – Animal flow consistency uses the ‘core’ trunk muscles to maintain stability and control through every movement of the training session. You will be reminded often about the key points of your posture and how to get the best out of your core for the best and safest workout.

The core muscles encompass the abdominal muscles, pelvic floor, hip flexors and spinal muscles. 

3. Endurance

With a few different ways of training Animal Flow, your muscular endurance can be boosted to improve your overall physical capacity. The flow side of the class will employ various Animal Flow movements and transition from each with particular techniques. This flow is a fantastic way to prevent fatigue in one posture but keep going by moving into a different posture and movement. Interval training can also be practiced by using a few movements individually and training them for time for a few rounds. 

4. Fun

Training is often hard we’ll all agree, but Animal Flow is fun. With no equipment to faff around with you can enjoy just seeing what your body can do, how it adapts and learns the challenges. It’s great fun too to share the experience with a group of class mates.

5. Strength

Moving yourself around the floor with style takes calisthenics to a new level. Moving your own body will build real strength. I love lifting weights, but you should always be able to manage moving yourself too. 

NEW Animal Flow Classes. 

I can run small group training in Limerick as well as one-to-one exploration sessions. Get in touch to start your own Animal Flow.

Jamie

Get Ups
FitStrong PT

Get Back Up

In a 2002 Brazilian study, men and women between the ages of 51 to 80 were followed for an average of 6.3 years. Those who had to rely on their hands and knees to get up and down to the ground regardless of age were almost seven times more likely to die within six years than those who could get up unsupported. Those individuals with poor overall muscular strength and mobility were the the ones who had to rely on using their hands to awkwardly get down and up.

Clearly being stronger has more implications than just being able to carry the shopping in after a grocery shop.

In part 1 we looked at other statistics that looked at mortality and affects on quality of life from falls but in part 2, let’s consider prevention measures.

Getting to the floor should happen in any training session regardless of whether or not it’s an intended exercise but if getting down to terra firma proves a tad troublesome, where do you start?

Even if you’re an experienced strength athlete / trainee, some the drills below will give your body an added edge in being more resilient. How often do you see muscular people moving rather stiff ? Yes, a bit too often. If you move like a robot, some mobility training should be in your life.

Below I’ll demonstrate the strength exercises that give us the ability to move down to the floor and also the mobility exercises to practice that allow us to more smoothly navigate to the floor and up. After that, we’ll take a look at the drills that we practice to move down and up and prepare the body further.

None of these exercises should ever be taken to muscular fatigue or muscle failure but you should feel the muscles doing their jobs. Always stop a set knowing you could do a few more repetitions.

General Strength

Progressing Strength

Practice?

Don’t worry if you haven’t got heaps of time, you can spend as little as 3-5 minutes every couple of days ‘playing’ with these movements. A couple of sets of each move will be enough initially to get you moving and stronger. As the moves in the first video get easier, move to video 2 and play with the moves there. I use the word play to suggest you don’t count repetitions, instead practice each move to make it better. Not sore and fatiguing, just getting better at each.

Imagine lying in a hospital bed with a broken hip, stressing over lost work, medical expenses and rehab afterwards. Not so pleasant…

Now consider just spending 3-5 minutes every couple of days practicing getting yourself stronger. No medical bills or rehab, just getting down to the floor and back up.

I know which I prefer and to be honest, longevity is the number one key objective of MoveStrong  – to help people find longevity.

If you’re interested in investing your time further, please reach out and let’s work something out. 

What do you think? Got any suggestions, thoughts, opinions or stories to share? Please do get in touch.

 

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

Minimalist Training for Over 40s

Feeling Stiff and Not Strong, Not Fit?? Feeling like being over 40 is over the hill???

It’s time to Get ‘Connected’.

With this simple 6 week training program you’ll meet your body where it is rather than commence an unrealistic routine un-matching of your current abilities. You’ll nourish your body with healthy movement and stepped progressions and before you know it you’ll be baffled at how well the training carries over into your everyday activities.

Message me to get on the access list.

Jamie

PS It’s going to be just €10 or 17 bucks until the end of the year!!!

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FitStrong PT

6 WEEK PROGRAM FOR BUSY PEOPLE

CONNECTED

Moving better, moving stronger, moving more often are all traits of being a healthy, functional and useful human. Launching very soon is my new program, aptly called CONNECTED.

It’s a minimal, essentialist program that’s designed for you busy folk who don’t have time to get to the gym never mind look out your training gear.

This 6 week program needs:

  • no equipment,
  • Just up to 30 minutes per session
  • 3 sessions per week.

The program launches very soon and for subscribers, it’ll be real cheap.

I’ll deliver the full program with an easy to follow PDF that includes full tutorials for each of the 7 movements we’ll practice. I’ll include appropriate regressions and progressions. I’ll lay out how you can build the program to develop your full body strength and fitness. And more of course…

Get in touch with me sign up 🤟

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FitStrong PT

Summer Strong Body

You might be dreaming of being in the best shape of your life this summer; feeling stronger, fitter, faster and much more confident in yourself. 

You could keep dreaming or you could do something about it. 

In just 10 to 14 weeks you can most definitely make a shockingly outstanding change in yourself. 

Take a look at some of our 12 week transformations and if you can see yourself in these before and afters AND if you’re willing and ready to commit to yourself – let’s talk. 

Whether you want to feel great for a holiday, want to get strong, need to learn about sustainable healthy eating, want to feel really fit and able for any challenge, our programmes can help.

If you are ready to change your life, get strong, fit, lean and more confident, shoot me a message below.

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FitStrong PT

Free Calisthenics

Building a useful body capable of easily handling any daily challenge doesn’t necessarily mean hitting the weights.

Calisthenics aka body weight training is a very rewarding style of training that requires essentially no equipment – well, maybe an exercise mat for comfort and a pull up bar can be a handy addition but it’s not essential to start.

With a minimalist approach and the right variety of movements you can achieve great results. In a typical session lasting anywhere from 10-60 minutes you can train every part of your body and practice many functional and useful movements. Many fun movements too.

One of many great benefits of utilising calisthenic training is that you get to learn how to operate your body rather than a gym machine.

Now, before you start switching off thinking this style of training is for the seasoned exerciser, believe me when I say it’s the perfect place to start as a beginner. Yes, experienced gym goers can incorporate calisthenics into their routine, but a beginner will benefit hugely by learning about how to move themselves before moving themselves plus a barbell or the big ol red hack squat machine in the gym.

I recently started a calisthenics class in TBB Raheen (Limerick) and it’s great to see it gaining traction.

Every week we practice the skills that allow us to be stronger in various leg, trunk, pushing and pulling movements. Not quite pistol squats and pull ups just yet, but all the pre requisites for building these.

What I would like to do is share some of the essentials of bodyweight training in a short series of emails to those interested.

Each week I’ll share one movement to learn and practice. We can gradually gradually build this collection of movements into a nice little training programme too.

If this is for you, email me and let me know if you’re a beginner or if you have a little experience.

movewithjamie@gmail.com

Jamie

FitStrong PT

Introvert Fitness

Most people think of personal trainers and they imagine outgoing, noisy, loud, high five giving individuals who thrive in the business of a big gym.

A pretty scary, distracting, tiring place if you’re an introvert!

None of this with me haha

Whilst I do get to train people in a big busy gym, I also get access to an awesome studio… just perfect for me… the introvert in the room.

There are strategies to coping with being the introvert in the jungle of a big box gym. These start with having an efficient, well written programme.

I’m known as the passionate trainer who goes all-in to help everyone I train but, I thrive in less busy environments.

Stephens testimony Graduating the Great 8

Without sounding like a dating app lol, this is kind of a call-out to all introverts who’d like a trainer who isn’t going to drive them mad with high fives, fist pumps and shouting around the gym.

If you are looking for training under the guidance of someone who’ll take you on your strength and fitness journey with chat about Lego, sci-fi, good food – sure give me a text or email. I know how awkward a phone call can be!

PS if you’d like a FREE 12 week Bodyweight challenge, just ask. It’ll be a free download on the site soon enough but if you’d like to grab it early – email me below.

Jamie

Tel: 0894462653

Email: movewithjamie@gmail.com