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How to make your exercise resolutions stick all year

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How to make your exercise resolutions stick all year

TOWSON, Md. — Any of you thinking about heading to the gym? Did you make a resolution to do so?

According to one National Institute of Health study, by the time next year rolls around, only 58% of us will have kept at it.

Photojournalist Kristi Harper looked into why that may be.

A lot of us are guilty of letting those New Year’s resolutions to get healthy slide away. So how do you keep at it?

Ali True Smith, who owns True Balance Studios in Towson, Maryland has some ideas on how to set yourself up to be fit and active in the long term.

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“I realized this was the only thing that was going to hold me accountable to take care of myself.”

Ali has been in the fitness world since she was 15. She played lacrosse and studied exercise physiology and kinesiology in college. Afterward, she got certified in massage therapy and personal training. She knows bodies. She well knows the struggles that happen with trying to keep a good exercise routine.

“Maybe you took the month of December off because you were sick or injured or something. And then you jump in on January, and you’re trying to lift all the same weights that you were doing before. And then you get sore, too sore, so you don’t want to go back to the gym the next few days. And then you might even get injured, and then you get really discouraged.”

She says the key is taking the gym time to learn what your body needs to get it in its best form.

“There is an all-or-nothing mentality with working out. And people go too hard too fast, and then they can’t keep up with it… If you find guidance on how to properly strength train, you are really slow and controlled and mindful about what you’re doing, what your body is doing, being, you know, very aware of how your joints are moving and making that you’re training your muscles in a balanced way.”

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To help, she made a flip book that shows you what to look out for.

It’s available from Amazon or at her studio. She says you need to figure out the right balance of strength, flexibility, and cardio work. It might sound like a lot, but if you craft your workout, you can fit it into a busy life.

She says, “It really depends on what your personality is and and figuring out, listening to what could work for you and managing your expectations. And setting goals that are attainable and not being too hard on yourself. Not trying too much too fast.”

Remember, you don’t have to jump in and go all out on day one. Spend a few weeks establishing the habit, and you’ll have a better chance of taking that resolution well into the year ahead.

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Fitness

Doing hip longevity lunges daily could help you feel 25 at 65 – here’s why they really work

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Doing hip longevity lunges daily could help you feel 25 at 65 – here’s why they really work

It is possible to counteract age-related mobility decline. Fact. While research shows that hip mobility reduces by 6-7% per decade after the age of 55, other studies show that long-term stretching and mobility after the age of 60 can produce meaningful improvements – and mobility and stretching coach @stretchy.bendy says there’s one exercise everyone needs: lateral lunges with hip rotations.

‘Want to move like you’re 25 when you’re 65? You need this move,’ she says. ‘When you think about your everyday movement, we’re basically moving forwards and backwards. But our hips are made to rotate in and out. When we stop rotating our hips, we get an achy lower back, cranky knees and of course, stiff hips. This move will bring rotation back.’

Here’s exactly how to do it.

Instructions

  1. Stand wide, feet pointing forward, then send your hips back and bend into your right knee.
  2. Check your knee alignment – make sure it’s above your ankle, pointing in the same direction as your toes. You don’t want it to fall in.
  3. While your hips are sinking back, hips squared, take the straight leg and simply go up onto your heel and rotate, so your toes are pointing up, then rotate to tap your toes down.
  4. Continue for 4-6 reps, then repeat on the opposite side.

‘Add this to your daily routine and I promise you’ll feel amazing, age well and move well forever,’ @stretchy.bendy says. And don’t just take her word for it – her followers concur it works. One wrote: ‘I was 83 but after I tried this, I’m 63 again.’

As for how long it’ll take for you to feel a significant difference in your hip mobility, one study on home-based exercise programmes that included daily hip rotation work showed noticeable improvements in hip range of motion (how far your hip joint can move, in all directions: flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, and rotation) after six weeks. Squatting down to pick something up or getting into a chair should feel easier, as should crossing your legs and getting in and out of a car. Any lower back pain should also reduce.

If you do feel any pain, @stretchy.bendy recommends ‘keeping your stance narrower, reducing the depth of the lunge, and skipping the rotation (toe lift)’. ‘Always listen to your body and stay in the ranges that feel strong and supported,’ she adds. ‘And if your physio or medical professional has given you specific guidelines, follow those.’

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 As Women’s Health UK’s fitness director and a qualified Pilates and yoga instructor, Bridie Wilkins has been passionately reporting on exercise, health and nutrition since the start of her decade-long career in journalism. She secured her first role at Look Magazine, where her obsession with fitness began and she launched the magazine’s health and fitness column, Look Fit, before going on to become Health and Fitness writer at HELLO!. Since, she has written for Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Elle, The Metro, Runner’s World and Red.Now, she oversees all fitness content across womenshealthmag.com.uk and the print magazine, spearheading leading cross-platform franchises, such as ‘Fit At Any Age’, where we showcase the women proving that age is no barrier to exercise. She has also represented the brand on BBC Radio London, plus various podcasts and Substacks – all with the aim to encourage more women to exercise and show them how.Outside of work, find her trying the latest Pilates studio, testing her VO2 max for fun (TY, Oura), or posting workouts on Instagram.  

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Fitness

Looking to improve your fitness? Exercise science students looking for volunteers

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Looking to improve your fitness? Exercise science students looking for volunteers

Through the upper-level course Exercise Testing and Prescription, Elon students will work one-on-one with volunteer participants from the university community.

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