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A fitness trainer shares the No. 1 exercise for a ‘longer life’: It has ‘major aging benefits’

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A fitness trainer shares the No. 1 exercise for a ‘longer life’: It has ‘major aging benefits’

Starting at age 30, your muscle mass starts to deteriorate. But there are steps you can take to help fend off the negative effects.

As a personal trainer, strength training is the No. 1 type of exercise I recommend to live longer. Research has even shown that people in their 70s with mobility issues can boost their longevity with a strength-training program.

Some major aging benefits include:

  • Increased bone health: Regular strength training can help reduce the risk of osteoporosis.
  • Muscle maintenance: It allows you to maintain muscle that would otherwise begin to waste away as you get older.
  • Better joint mobility: It improves your range of motion and protects your joints by strengthening the muscles that surround them.
  • Weight management: Building muscle helps boost your metabolism, making your body more efficient in burning calories.
  • Better balance: Improving your balance is critical to helping prevent falls that may lead to injury.

Strength-training exercises for a longer life

My favorite strength-training routine requires no gym or equipment. It do it every day, and the best part is that it take less than 20 minutes.

1. Squats

What it targets: lower body, core, and knee, hip and ankle joints

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Squats help your body perform everyday activities as you age, like getting up from a chair or picking something up off the ground.

How to do a squat:

  1. Stand with your feet a little wider than your hips and your toes facing forward.
  2. Drive your hips back while bending your knees and pressing your feet firmly into the floor, as though you’re about to sit down. Aim to squat parallel, or as comfortably close to floor as you can.
  3. Press your heels into the floor to push up and return to a standing position.
  4. Do 12 to 15 reps.

2. Static lunges

What it targets: hamstrings, quadriceps, glutes and calves

As a unilateral movement (working one side of the body at a time), lunges improve your stability and help correct muscle imbalances by strengthening each side of your body separately.

How to do a static lunge:

  1. Stand with your feet hip-width apart and take one giant step forward into a split stance.
  2. Keep your back heel off the ground as you lower your body, until your knees form 90-degree angles.
  3. Plant your front foot and the ball of your back foot into the mat, and straighten back into a standing position.
  4. Do 10 to 12 reps on each side.

3. Hip bridges

What it targets: glutes, hamstrings, lower back and muscles that support the spine

Hip bridges (also called glute bridges) can open the hips and increase flexibility, improving mobility and helping to prevent lower back pain or injury.

How to do a hip bridge:

  1. Lay on your back with your knees bent. Plant your feet firmly on the mat and place your arms alongside your body flat on the floor, palms down.
  2. Inhale as you push your heels into the mat and raise your hips toward the ceiling.
  3. Squeeze your glutes at the top.
  4. Exhale while you lower your hips back down to the floor.
  5. Do 12 to 15 reps.

4. Planks

What it targets: core

Planks help to strengthen your core, enhancing overall functional strength. It improves your balance and tones the shoulders and glutes.

How to do a plank:

  1. Start with your forearms and toes on the floor and your face looking down at the floor. Keep your elbows under your shoulders and your forearms facing forward.
  2. Engage your abdominals by pulling them in toward your spine, while keeping your torso and hips level and parallel to the floor.
  3. Hold for 10 to 30 seconds.

5. Push-ups

What it targets: shoulders, chest, triceps and core

Push-ups increase upper body strength. They help improve your endurance and stability so you can be steadier on your feet as you age.

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How to do a push-up:

  1. Start in a high plank position with your toes on the ground and your hands on the floor, arms spread slightly wider than your shoulders. Keep your arms straight and hold your body up.
  2. Inhale and slowly bend your elbows, lowering your body toward the floor as you keep your core tight.
  3. Exhale while contracting your chest muscles to push back up through your palms, returning to your starting position.
  4. Do three to 10 reps.

Modified bent-knee push-up

  1. Instead of starting in the high plank position, hold your arms straight but place your knees on the floor, keeping your body on an incline.
  2. Bend your elbows to lower toward the floor, then push your upper body back to the start position.
  3. Do three to 10 reps.

Patricia Greaves is a certified fitness trainer, corrective exercise specialist and nutrition coach. She’s the founder of StrongHer Personal Training, which seeks to improve overall wellness for women over 40. She is part of the Strength in Diversity Initiative, a writer for HealthDay, a wife and a mom to three daughters. Follow her on Instagram and LinkedIn. 

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Fitness

Just one session of exercise can keep your brain supercharged till the next day – Times of India

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Just one session of exercise can keep your brain supercharged till the next day – Times of India

A lot is being said about physical activity these days. The impact of physical inactivity has hit the population so terribly that health agencies have been urging people to include at least 150 minutes of exercise in their weekly routine. The effect of exercise is beyond physical benefits, it boosts cognitive health too.
A new study by researchers from the University College London has said that only one session of exercise can give memory benefits for more than 24 hours.
“Our findings suggest that the short-term memory benefits of physical activity may last longer than previously thought, possibly to the next day instead of just the few hours after exercise. Getting more sleep, particularly deep sleep, seems to add to this memory improvement,” Lead author Dr Mikaela Bloomberg (UCL Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care) has said.

What kind of exercises should we aim at doing?

“Moderate or vigorous activity means anything that gets your heart rate up – this could be brisk walking, dancing or walking up a few flights of stairs. It doesn’t have to be structured exercise,” the researcher has said.
For this study, the researchers examined 76 people aged 50 to 83 with moderate to vigorous physical activity than usual on a given day. They observed that these individuals did better in memory tests the day after. They found that less sitting hours and more hours of deep sleep contributed to this. The participants wore activity trackers for eight days and took cognitive tests each day.
“The study is among the first to evaluate next-day cognitive performance using a “micro-longitudinal” study design where participants were tracked going about their normal lives rather than having to stay in a lab,” the University has said.

Yoga Asanas to Improve cognitive well being and emotional functioning

The findings of the study have been published in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.

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Plod and Pedal: Missoula exercise group getting you outside every single day

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Plod and Pedal: Missoula exercise group getting you outside every single day

MISSOULA — As the new year nears, so do resolutions.

For those looking to dedicate themselves to fitness, a Missoula group gets you running or biking every day. No exceptions or you’re out.

MTN met with the founders of Plod and Pedal to learn the purpose behind the project.

After a holiday challenge got them moving, in 2018, coworkers Ryan Mellem and Josh Pierce decided to run outside every single day.

“I’m like, we should try to run 1 mile a day, every day for the entire year. And he’s like, really?” Pierce detailed.

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For the first year, they got some other co-workers in on the plan.

“Started talking about it with other people and they’re like, well, I would do that,” noted Pierce.

Everyone anteed up $20 and there was one rule, if you miss a day you lose the chance at the prize pot. “You miss a day, you’re out,” said Pierce.

Five years later, Plod and Pedal is running strong and the person with the most miles takes home the prize.

Mellem explained, “There have been some people that have done one discipline every year since then. We’ve had multiple people that have stayed in it the whole time.”

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The rules are: sign up on Plod and Pedal’s website, start on New Year’s Day, run a mile in under 15 minutes, or bike 3 miles outside each day, and if you miss a day then you’re out until the next year.

171 participants started 2024. As of November, the total is down to 105.

“Since 2018, I’ve run outside every single day. At this point, it’s not a decision, it’s just what am I going to put on to do it,” stated Pierce.

For many in the group, some hailing from around the country and some across the world, they feel being able to move is a gift that shouldn’t be wasted.

“You get the body for a certain period of time and it’s nice to use it. We’ve all done things that we never thought were possible before,” offered Mellem.

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Plus, the Plod and Pedal founders are passing on the gift of exercise to the next generation.

“So, allowing our 3-year-olds to go for a run with us, and keep it under that 15 minutes, was a huge part. And even to this day, they’re like, have you ran your mile yet?” Pierce told MTN

To learn more about Plod and Pedal or sign up, click here.

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Aldi’s new fitness range includes an exercise bike for £79.99

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Aldi’s new fitness range includes an exercise bike for £79.99

If you want some kit to help you hit your fitness goals in the new year, Aldi (of all places) might be the best place to look thanks to its new sports and leisure range.

While I’ve long since stopped being surprised by the contents of its middle aisle, I was impressed by how affordable the products are. There’s an exercise bike for just £79.99, yoga mats for £5.49, and a selection of resistance bands for only £2.49 each, hitting stores from 29 December.

An exercise bike for less than £100 is a rarity, and though I’m yet to test the range, all the hallmarks of a solid product are there – perhaps this is why Aldi has limited purchases to one per customer. The bike has a simple LCD to display basic metrics, a belt-driven 6kg flywheel, a sturdy steel frame and a centralised knob for adjusting the resistance.

(Aldi)

But, as a fitness writer, the most exciting inclusion for me is the free weights – you’ll be amazed how much you can do with just a single kettlebell and a few foundational exercises. If you’re looking to exercise at home in the new year, sending your health, fitness and strength levels soaring in the process, I think these should be your first port of call.

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From 2 January (these specific items are running a little behind schedule), you can pick up a 6kg or 8kg kettlebell for £7.99, and a 10kg or 12kg kettlebell for £12.99, which is incredibly cheap compared to the competition – Amazon’s 6kg kettlebell costs a around £14, at the time of writing.

Don’t expect a cast iron build for this price. These ‘bells have a plastic body and are filled with sand, but they still have a wide handle for kettlebell swings and an ergonomic shape suitable for explosive exercises like cleans. They’re also priced so reasonably you might consider picking up a few weight options, or an equally weighted pair for more versatility.

(Aldi)

If you’re after a metal finish, you’ll find it in the adjustable dumbbell set, which costs £19.99. Each set comes with a central steel bar, a selection of 2kg and 1kg cast iron weight plates and a couple of spring collars to lock them into place.

Like the kettlebells, it might be worth picking up a pair to widen your training horizons. Then you can adjust the weight of the dumbbells to suit different strength training exercises, helping you build muscle at home. Or, if you want a set weight dumbbell for more dynamic workouts like HIIT classes, you can pick up a 5kg rubber-coated pair for the same price.

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The range is available in-store from 29 December. So, if you’re after a bargain, you’ll have to be quick. Then the only challenge is carrying your new weights home.

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