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How to invest 3% of your day in exercise to live longer, according to an expert in healthy aging

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How to invest 3% of your day in exercise to live longer, according to an expert in healthy aging

Investing just 3% of your time each day in exercise could help you live a longer, healthier life, a physiologist told Business Insider.

Nathan K. LeBrasseur, director of the Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging at Mayo Clinic, researches healthy aging. He said that “the greatest threats to human health today are lifestyle-related conditions” such as cardiovascular and lung diseases, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, and cancer.

Such lifestyle-related conditions account for almost three-quarters of deaths worldwide each year, according to the World Health Organization — 17 million of which happen before the age of 70.

Dedicating some time to a healthy, active lifestyle when you’re young can help to prevent or delay these conditions, LeBrasseur said.

Some might be disappointed that there’s no secret to healthy aging, no matter how much money “biohackers” throw at the problem. But LeBrasseur said this “should really be viewed as an incredible opportunity that you have such control over your health and wellbeing.”

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He shared the smartest way to invest your time to stay healthy.

Spend 3% of your day exercising

Investing 3% of your income sounds like a “minimal financial

investment,” LeBrasseur said.

Similarly, investing just 3% of your day in exercise is “a minimal investment to have a profound impact on our overall health,” he said.


A man jogging and checking his watch.

Spending just 3% of your day exercising can have huge health benefits, a physiologist said.

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Nitat Termmee/Getty Images



This works out at around 30 minutes of a typical 16-hour day that should be spent doing moderate to vigorous exercise, he said.

Moderate exercise should make you feel “on the verge of being a little short of breath,” he said, or is a five or a six out of 10 in terms of effort. Vigorous exercise, meanwhile, is more of an eight or nine out of 10 and should make you actively fatigued.

Depending on your fitness level, this could involve walking, lifting weights, running, cycling, or swimming.

The type of exercise matters

LeBrasseur recommended doing a mixture of resistance and aerobic exercises — aerobic for cardiovascular, brain, metabolic, and pulmonary health, and resistance to maintain physical function and prevent frailty in older age.

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One 2022 study showed that doing both resistance training and aerobic exercise appeared to reduce participants’ risk of dying from any cause by 32%.

HIIT, or high-intensity interval training, is a good “twofer,” LeBrasseur said, because it features both resistance and aerobic exercises. With HIIT, “you’re definitely taxing your cardiovascular system as well as your musculoskeletal and neuromuscular systems, and there is a clear benefit to that,” he said.

Functional training, featuring squats, lunges, and pulling/pushing exercises, is also beneficial for healthy aging, he said, as it can strengthen the muscles needed to preserve mobility and physical function in older age.

Don’t just be active at the gym

“Being more habitually active and having fewer rest periods during the day is highly beneficial” for health and longevity, LeBrasseur said.

He recommended adding bits of exercise into the day wherever you can — whether that’s parking the car further from your destination, getting up to speak to colleagues instead of emailing them, or going to the grocery store instead of getting a delivery.

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Consider when you don’t move, too, he said. If you work a sedentary job, he suggested getting up from your desk every hour to walk for 10 minutes or doing some pushups or squats.

Start ASAP and pick something you enjoy

“Sooner is always better,” LeBrasseur said. “It’s never too late. Even for 90 year olds, there’s strong evidence that exercise can have clear health benefits on preserving function and preventing exacerbation of disease.”

But the most important thing about physical activity and exercise is consistency, he said. So, pick an activity that you enjoy and can do regularly to reap the benefits.

LeBrasseur runs, bikes, and swims, but said people shouldn’t try to copy him or anyone else. “The point is that I do these things because I really enjoy them and can be consistent with them. If you asked me to do another activity that I had zero interest in, I might do it for a week but then I’d drop off,” he said.

Combining exercise with socializing can also make regular exercise easier because it’s more enjoyable, plus your friends can hold you accountable.

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Do you have sore hips? I asked a pain specialist why this happens and how to improve it

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Do you have sore hips? I asked a pain specialist why this happens and how to improve it

Hip soreness is a terribly common issue—it’s something that I certainly suffer with—so I’m always trying to get to the bottom of where this soreness originates from and what you can do about it.

According to Dr Shady Hassan, MD, an interventional pain and sports medicine physician and the founder of NefraHealth, immobility is the root cause of this discomfort.

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“No Pain No Gain” May Be Wrong: Science Says Slow Eccentric Exercise Builds Stronger Muscles

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“No Pain No Gain” May Be Wrong: Science Says Slow Eccentric Exercise Builds Stronger Muscles

Modern exercise culture has spent years glorifying exhaustion. The harder a workout feels, the more effective people assume it must be. Sore muscles became badges of honor, while gentle movements were often dismissed as ‘not real exercise.’ 

A man lifting a dumbbell. Image credits: Andres Ayrton/Pexels

However, according to a new study, some of the most efficient ways to build muscle strength may happen during the slow, controlled moments people usually ignore—walking downstairs, lowering weights, or carefully sitting into a chair. 

Study author Kazunori Nosaka, who is the director of exercise and sports science at Edith Cowan University, argues that eccentric exercise—a type of muscle action that occurs while muscles lengthen under tension, may offer a more practical alternative. Its opposite, concentric exercise, is the shortening (lifting) phase where muscles produce force to overcome resistance.

Instead of demanding maximum effort, these movements appear to train muscles while placing less stress on the body.  

“The idea that exercise must be exhausting or painful is holding people back. Instead, we should be focusing on eccentric exercises which can deliver stronger results with far less effort than traditional exercise – and you don’t even need a gym,” Nosaka said.

Muscles work differently on the way down

The study examines decades of earlier research on eccentric exercise rather than presenting a single laboratory experiment. It focuses on a simple but often overlooked detail of human movement, which is how muscles behave differently depending on whether they are shortening or lengthening.

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When someone lifts a dumbbell, climbs stairs, or rises from a chair, muscles shorten as they generate force. Scientists call this a concentric contraction. Eccentric contractions happen during the opposite phase—when the muscle stays active while stretching. 

Examples include lowering the dumbbell back down, descending stairs, or slowly lowering the body into a seated position. According to the review, muscles can tolerate and produce greater force during eccentric actions while using comparatively less energy and oxygen. 

“Eccentric contractions are distinguished by their ability to generate greater force than concentric or isometric contractions, while requiring less metabolic cost,” Nosaka notes.

Researchers believe this happens because muscles act more like controlled braking systems during lengthening movements, resisting gravity rather than directly overpowering it. As a result, people may gain strength without putting the same level of demand on the cardiovascular system. 

This difference could make eccentric exercise especially useful for individuals who find traditional workouts physically overwhelming.

“Eccentric exercise training provides numerous benefits for physical fitness and overall health, making it suitable for a wide range of individuals from children to older adults, clinical populations to athletes, and sedentary to highly active people,” Nosaka added.

Gravity may be doing more training than we realized

To support this argument, the study brings together findings from several earlier research works. For instance, one study from 2017 tracked elderly women with obesity who repeatedly walked either upstairs or downstairs over a 12-week period. 

While climbing stairs is normally considered the tougher workout, the women assigned to walk downstairs showed stronger improvements in measures including blood pressure, heart rate, and physical fitness. The results suggested that resisting gravity during downward movement may provide a surprisingly powerful training effect.

YouTube videoYouTube video

The review also discusses eccentric cycling, where participants resist pedals driven backward by a motor instead of pushing them forward in the usual way. 

Although the movement feels unusual and requires concentration, earlier studies found it improved muscle power, balance, and cardiovascular health while feeling less exhausting than standard cycling workouts.

Another important part of the review addresses muscle soreness, one of the main reasons eccentric exercise never became widely popular outside rehabilitation settings. People often experience delayed onset muscle soreness, or DOMS, after unfamiliar eccentric workouts. 

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“Unaccustomed eccentric exercise is often associated with muscle damage characterized by delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) and a reduction in muscle force-generating capacity lasting more than a day. However, this effect diminishes or at least is attenuated when the same eccentric exercise is repeated (known as the repeated bout effect),” Nosaka explained

Many eccentric exercises require little or no equipment. Slow squats into a chair, heel-lowering movements, controlled wall push-ups, or even maintaining posture against gravity can activate eccentric muscle work. 

Moreover, some studies referenced in Nosaka’s review suggest that just a few minutes of these exercises each day can still produce measurable improvements in health and strength.

The future of fitness may feel less punishing

The findings challenge the mindset surrounding fitness itself. Many people abandon exercise routines because they associate physical activity with pain, fatigue, or lack of time. Eccentric exercise suggests that effective movement does not always need to feel extreme. 

If future research continues to support these findings, eccentric exercise could influence far more than gym routines. It may reshape physical rehabilitation, elderly care, injury recovery programs, and public-health recommendations aimed at increasing physical activity among sedentary populations. 

These exercises also place lower demands on the heart and lungs while still strengthening muscles. They could help people who are unable or unwilling to follow intense training programs.

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Nosaka suggests that “we should establish eccentric exercise as standard practice, and make it common, accessible, and widely accepted as the ‘new normal’ of exercise to improve life performance and high (athletic) performance.”

However, this does not mean eccentric exercise is a universal replacement for all forms of physical activity. The current paper is a review of previous studies, and its findings still need to be validated through experiments and large-scale clinical trials.

Nosaka also notes that “Future studies should investigate mechanisms underpinning the effects of eccentric exercises in comparison to other types of exercises (e.g., isometric exercises, concentric exercises, aerobic exercises),”  

This could help scientists design safer and more personalized exercise programs for different age groups and health conditions.

The study is published in the Journal of Sport and Health Science.

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Flexibility expert recommends doing this for three minutes daily to improve mobility

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Flexibility expert recommends doing this for three minutes daily to improve mobility

Longevity is something of a buzzword right now, and the idea of living better for longer is undoubtedly appealing. Mobility is a key component of this.

By definition, mobility is the ability to move freely, something that tends to deteriorate as we age. But there are simple things we can do to maintain it.

One of them is “joint flossing”, a daily practice recommended by experienced coach and mobility specialist Darren Ellis.

“Mobility is a conflation of strength and flexibility,” he says. “I always used to believe that strength was the foundation of everything in exercise. But if you’re strong and you can’t move through a decent range of motion at certain joints, you’re still suffering.

“When you reach down to pick something up from the floor and it seems further away than it used to be, you suddenly realise how crucial mobility is.”

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Below, Ellis explains how to use his three-minute joint flossing protocol to help ease stiff joints and improve your ability to move.

How to try joint flossing

The body works on a rough “use it or lose it” basis. If you rarely move a joint through its full range of motion, the tissues around it can become tight, stiff and sore. The natural remedy for this is gradually reintroducing movement in the affected areas.

“The easiest place to start when improving mobility is to get the joints moving more freely with some simple joint circles,” says Ellis. “I sometimes call it joint flossing because, firstly, you are flossing nutrients through the joint by promoting blood flow in this area, and secondly, it’s something you should do regularly.”

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You start with neck circles then work your way down your body from your head to your toes, as shown in the video above – if something can move, you move it.

Ellis recommends doing five to 10 repetitions per body part, using a controlled tempo and a range of motion that feels safe and comfortable for you.

“There’s no need to force anything,” he says. “You’re just giving your body a chance to move again.”

Doing this consistently will improve your physical capacity and mobility, allowing you to return to other movements and exercises over time.

Read more: Five stretches you should be doing every day, according to a flexibility expert

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