Fitness After 40: Your Strong Body at 40, 50, 60, and Beyond

Fitness After 40: Your Strong Body at 40, 50, 60, and Beyond

Fitness After 40: Your Strong Body at 40, 50, 60, and Beyond

Fitness After 40: Your Strong Body at 40, 50, 60, and Beyond

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Overview

With Fitness After 40, regain the energy and physique of a teenager in no time.

Your body is getting older, those stairs are looking steeper, and your bones are cracking louder. The unavoidable fact is that your body is aging. However, that doesn’t have to impact your fitness level. Forget how many candles were on your last birthday cake--if you exercise smarter, you can remain youthful, energetic, and strong.

As an academic orthopedic surgeon and internationally recognized authority on active aging and mobility, Dr. Vonda Wright has created a unique medical program designed to target the fitness and performance needs of mature athletes. In this invaluable resource, Wright reveals how anyone can use flexibility, aerobic exercise, and strength training to maximize the benefits of their fitness regime.

You will learn how to:

  • Understand your body, and approach exercise in a new way
  • Maximize your fitness while minimizing injury
  • Gain flexibility--no matter your age
  • Benefit from aerobic exercise
  • Build strength through resistance training
  • Improve balance

Fitness After 40 for all maturing adults includes “20 Minutes to Burn” workouts, a six-week total-body plan, and the latest information on nutrition, injury prevention, joint preservation, and the mind/body connection for all maturing adults.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814449028
Publisher: HarperCollins Christian Publishing
Publication date: 12/19/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 374
Sales rank: 82,487
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

VONDA WRIGHT, M.D., is an orthopedic surgeon and director of PRIMA, a pioneering program for athletes over 40. A prominent authority on sports medicine and active aging, she has appeared on Dr. Oz, The Doctors, and CNN, and has been quoted in The New York Times, USA Today, Prevention, Fitness, and other major media. RUTH WINTER, M.S. is an award-winning science writer and author.

Read an Excerpt

Fitness after 40

Your Strong Body at 40, 50, 60, and Beyond


By Vonda Wright, Ruth Winter

AMACOM

Copyright © 2015 Vonda Wright and Ruth Winter
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8144-4902-8



CHAPTER 1

You Are Strong, You Are Powerful, You Move You!


I love taking care of people. It is pure joy to lead a group of patients from the couch to a 5K race and see their entire perspective on their future change. Their bodies become stronger and fitter, but more importantly, their minds come to believe they can actively control their health with the decisions they make each day. And they are right!

A new generation of mature athletes and adult-onset exercisers (AOEs) are changing the very paradigm of aging. They are not satisfied with a superficial veneer of youth but are remaining youthful on the inside — as well as on the outside — through mobility. In fact, those who push themselves to the next level through competition are more mentally and physically healthy than their sedentary counterparts. Mature athletes and AOEs are a remarkable and growing group of people. They are not waiting for age to overtake them; they are proactively taking steps toward aging to perfection.

After 29 years of taking care of patients and athletes of every skill and age level, I have learned that no amount of education, hand-holding, or even public humiliation (as is commonly seen on TV) will motivate people to make real change in their lives and health. People make change only when they decide they are worth it, and then they move themselves.

You have heard me say it before — 70 percent of your health and aging is controlled by the decisions you make today. You are a powerful force in your own future. Your decision to take control is not likely to happen because it is important to your spouse, your boss, your kids, or your friends. It will happen because you decide that you are important enough to invest the time daily in the decisions that will change your life. You are powerful. You are strong. You move you!


MARY BETH'S STORY

Mary Beth is the wife of my daughter's basketball coach. Every Sunday night for the last two years, she has shown up at practices to organize us, pitch in wherever and whenever she was needed, and generally run the show. She would tell you that — although she managed her family and work — at twice her healthy size, she was not at her best.

Last year, we showed up to begin the season and Mary Beth was different. In fact, I barely recognized her! She looked younger and infinitely more healthy. She had lost 100 pounds. Wow! I was really proud of Mary Beth. And at times like this, I am often seen jumping up and down and hugging someone. Mary Beth had dramatically taken control of her health and future.

When she shared her story with me, I was silent and humbled. After the previous basketball season, Mary Beth's husband had picked up a copy of Fitness After 40 as a present for her. As she was reading it, something clicked inside her. She internalized my message that smart nutrition and mobility could change her life. She realized that she is important and that the small decisions she made each day were important. She could be strong. She could be powerful. She could move to her best health, and she did!


YOU ARE STRONG!

If you have picked up this book, you are at least thinking about what it means to be strong and powerful. No more huffing and puffing on the stairs; no more longing for energy. You want to feel vigorous and have the oomph to do the things you want, not to mention look strong in your clothes. Living this life starts on the inside and moves its way out. And the key is health through mobility.

I want you to understand — before you think I am simply another workout cheerleader in an orthopaedist's clothing — that I realize there can be real barriers on the road to healthy aging. I understand being busy, getting pulled in 20 directions at once, having family obligations, and dealing with financial constraints. I understand the dozens of other very logical (and some not so logical) reasons my patients offer up every day in my office. Here are some of the top excuses I've heard from my patients — and my replies:

• "I run around all day. Isn't that enough exercise?" No! Your heart rate must be elevated for a minimum of 30 minutes a day.

• "I can't afford to exercise." Turn off your cable. Use the money to join a health club, and watch TV there.

• "I think about it all the time, but I don't know where to begin." Read this book and get up off the couch.

• "We have a treadmill and an elliptical machine, but they are covered with clothes." That is the most expensive clothes hanger I ever heard of. You know what to do.

• "Even though I haven't exercised in 20 years, I used to be a Navy SEAL and do incredible physical feats. I can't bring myself to start exercising like a beginner." After 20 years off, your body is like a beginner's. Let's go.

• "The dog ate my sneakers. ..."


When he'd run out of excuses for why he was still sitting on the couch, one of my patients actually told me that his dog had eaten his sneakers. He was one of my favorite patients, and he said it with a straight face. For an instant, I considered him seriously before a smirk settled in on his face and we both burst into laughter. He wanted to be one of those svelte older men who looked and felt younger than the age on his driver's license, yet he had not made a move to get there. The truth is that 78 percent of people over 50 years old cite exercise as the key to aging well, but only 28 percent are currently doing anything about it.

No matter what your excuse or excuses may be, the fact remains that unless you take the time to invest in active aging now, you will likely be forced to take the time to deal with illness in the future. Therefore, let's just put some of the major exercise barriers out on the table and hash them out. The three most common exercise barriers in my patients are "couch addiction," injury, and osteoarthritis.


BARRIERS TO EXERCISE

Couch addiction. Am I serious? Well, not entirely, and yet the habit of spending our lives as couch potatoes is a serious threat. I understand the issue — the lure of sinking into the soft sanctuary of the sofa after a hard day of work. In fact, during the beginning of my residency, I specifically bought my couch with napping in mind. At the local department store, I took flying leaps onto the laps of couch after couch, seeking the perfect place to take my naps. After a 36-hour "workday," my couch provided much-needed relief.

The problem is that too much of a good thing can kill you. According to some of our nation's top physiologists, physical inactivity is a serious health threat and will lead to premature disability or death in more than 2.5 million Americans in the next 10 years. Thirty-five common diseases are made worse when people are physically inactive, including diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke. In addition, women who spend two hours a day in front of the TV have a 23 percent greater chance of being obese compared to women who do not. I wish there was an easy way to tell you how to break the habit of spending hours every evening sitting on the couch, watching TV. You simply have to make a real commitment to "just do it!" (as the Nike advertisements say). If you are a hopeless TV addict, then outsmart the problem and make your living room a home gym.

Regarding other barriers to exercise, it is true that those of us over 40 who exercise, and even those who don't, face the increased challenge of injury and arthritis. The number of people suffering from these problems is exceeded only by the products on the market promoting pain relief. Yet these two real and troublesome barriers to active aging do not have to be barriers at all. My entire career is geared to teaching athletes and active agers over 40 to be smarter as they avoid being sidelined. I not only treat their current injuries but work with them to prevent future injury and move past the aches and pains of arthritis. I look forward, in the following chapters, to sharing some of the information I give to my aspiring masters athletes and inspiring patients. (The term "masters athletes" describes a broad category of amateurs who remain competitive after college and into their forties, fifties, and beyond. Their goals can include winning the whole race, winning their age divisions, or topping their personal bests.)

Fitness After 40, however, is not just about exercising: It is about awakening the champion — the winner — within you. It represents years of research (my own and that of others) that can mean the difference between simply letting the aging process master you as opposed to making your next 40 years the best yet. Many of the commonly accepted stereotypes of aging are simply the effects of a sedentary lifestyle, not about real aging at all! Getting older does not mean being worse. Yes, there are changes. The truth is that no matter how fit you were at 20, after 40 you are a new you. You are simply not the same person you once were. However, not only can you still feel the strength and vigor of youth, you can perform nearly as well — and perhaps even better — physically than you did 10 or even 20 years ago.

Based on my research with Senior Olympians and as director of PRIMA (Performance and Research Initiative for Masters Athletes) at the UPMC Center for Sports Medicine, your best may be yet to come. In the five years since Fitness After 40 was first published, hundreds of adult-onset exercisers — formerly couch potatoes — completed one of our 12-week exercise programs aimed at helping them get off the couch and finish a 5K walk/run. In our twice-weekly sessions, they received much of the same information found in this book. They exercised together twice a week and individually two to three times per week. To our joy, they repeatedly recount the life-changing experience of rising above their expectations of finishing the 5K race and actually medaling in their age divisions. Talk about feeling vigorous! There is nothing like raising the bar of your personal best to make you feel alive. These AOEs, like you, had the benefit of the experience and wisdom that comes with age. By putting aside their past excuses for not exercising, they took control and got into great shape. Many of our AOEs have continued their lifestyle of mobility and have become true runners. They continue to move themselves to their best health.


THE GOOD NEWS AND THE BAD NEWS

There is good news and bad news when it comes to remaining or becoming active after the age of 40. The good news is that increasing numbers of people over 40 are seeking ways to remain youthful by exercising. A survey of baby boomers — those born between 1946 and 1964 — conducted by ThermaCare, a company that sells a heat pack that becomes warm when applied to the skin, found:

• 40 percent were living healthier lives and were more physically fit than when they were in their twenties

• 67 percent felt 11 years younger than their chronological age

• 57 percent reported being more physically active than their parents were at their age

• 33 percent boasted that they could beat their children in at least one sport


The people surveyed were either beginning to exercise for the first time (that is, they were AOEs) or were continuing programs they were already doing (active agers and athletes).

The bad news is that as we age, our bodies change, and these changes mean we are more vulnerable to injury. Injury is the Number 1 reason why people stop being active and the Number 2 reason (after the common cold) why people go to the doctor. These same baby boomer survey participants revealed that:

• 67 percent suffer from muscle or joint pain weekly

• 73 percent say muscle and joint pain is a bigger annoyance than making sure they remain physically active

• 69 percent claim they were willing to work through their pain to remain active


You will find as you go through this book that I don't believe in the mantra "No pain — no gain." My objective is to help you maximize your exercise efforts by smarter training while preventing the injuries that not only cause pain but keep you out of the game. If you do get hurt, you will find tips in this book on how to recover actively and without making things worse.


TALES FROM TWO AGING MASTERS ATHLETES

Since I began to work with mature athletes and watch the National Summer Senior Games, also known as the Senior Olympics — a biennial competition of a cross-section of ordinary and elite senior athletes (50 years old and older) who compete in 19 different sports — it has been a privilege and inspiration to know athletes such as 78-year-old Cliff Eggink. Cliff is the original "Irongeezer." Irongeezers range from baby boomers to ultraseniors, some of whom are in their eighties and nineties. Far from being cranky couch potatoes, these people have a passion for physical activity and involvement in a healthy lifestyle. They have a dash of "iron" for strength of mind and body to maintain hale and hardy lifestyles amid an increasingly slothful, unfit population.

"At 61 years," Cliff says, "I started trying to be healthy. I stayed off the medication and got out of the couch potato syndrome. Then everything just evolved. I had to push myself." Cliff did push himself. In 2005, at age 68, he was the oldest participant in the Ironman Arizona Triathlon competition. An Ironman Triathlon is 2.4 miles of swimming, followed by 112 miles of biking, followed by 26.2 miles of running. Cliff is inspiring as a competitive athlete, but so is my father, who just wants to be the best he can be for his physical and emotional health.

My father, Gene Wright, a former high school principal and entrepreneur and now a personal trainer, says:

I made a decision early in my life to always be physically functional, emotionally stable, and personally happy. I did not want to be limited physically. Most of the adults that I knew could not move easily, abused themselves by their lifestyle choices, aged quickly, and developed the "aging mobility syndrome." Most were unhealthy and had a long duration of physical dependence before they died.

I love life and living. I want to enjoy it for as long as I can. To me this seems worth working for. I am committed to being mobile. Throughout my life I have always been active and enjoyed running. I greatly enjoy running races. I enjoy the experience associated with them: the people, the places, and the things involved. I have participated in 5Ks, 10Ks, half marathons, and marathons. I still run and enjoy it.

During my 60 years of running, I have noticed some changes. My running efficiency declined from smooth, fluid, and flowing to labored and halting. My stride shortened and my pace went from six to 10 minutes per mile. My enjoyment while running (on a scale of 1 to 10) went from 8–9-10 to 3–4-5. It became hard and unpleasant to run. It became impossible to set another PR [personal record] at any distance.

At age 65, I sort of woke up and said, "Hey, fellow, if you want to run, things have to change." I needed an overhaul. I needed to rework my thinking, my conditioning routine, and my goals. In the years since, I have made both physical and mental changes. These were neither instantaneous nor easy.

Up until age 65 or so, the only conditioning program I had was to run every day, as hard as possible. I ran between 30 and 60 miles a week, every week. I raced (any distance — from a 5K to a half marathon) probably every other week. My motto was: "Get your shoes on, and hit the road, Jack, and don't look back." It was "go baby go," "don't miss a day," and "miles, miles, miles." My complete workout was devoted to running. During this period, I noticed that I was injured more and more and running less and less and frequently hitting the doldrums. It took longer and longer to recover.

This idea that I had to train harder, more intensely, and continually did not work. While I had been doing this for 40 years, it was no longer an effective strategy. It actually tore me apart. I needed to train differently. I needed to be smarter about my training.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Fitness after 40 by Vonda Wright, Ruth Winter. Copyright © 2015 Vonda Wright and Ruth Winter. Excerpted by permission of AMACOM.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments, xi,
Introduction, xv,
1 You Are Strong, You Are Powerful, You Move You!, 1,
2 The New Science of Aging, 19,
3 Fitness at 40, 50, 60, and Beyond, 55,
4 Move and Be Stronger, Smarter, and Happier!, 63,
5 Giving Your Mobility a F.A.C.E.-Lift!, 73,
6 F — Flexibility, 83,
7 A — Aerobic Exercise, 115,
8 C — Carry a Load, 143,
9 E — Equilibrium/Balance, 195,
10 The Six-Week Jump Start to Mobility Plan — Your 20 Minutes to Burn, 209,
11 Maximizing Performance and Minimizing Injury, 231,
12 Healing with Steel, 259,
13 It's a Waistline, Not a Wasteline — Your Guide to Smart Nutrition, 271,
14 "In the Mouth of the Wolf" — Creating Your Mental Edge, 311,
15 When the Shoe Fits, Wear It, 321,
A Closing Word on Your Fitness After 40, 335,
Further Resources, 337,
Selected References, 345,
Index, 351,
About the Authors, 361,
Free Sample Excerpt from No Sweat by Michelle Segar, Ph.D., 365,

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