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Denise Austin, 67, Shares ‘Quick’ Move for ‘Menopause Belly’

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Denise Austin, 67, Shares ‘Quick’ Move for ‘Menopause Belly’
  • Denise Austin shared an exercise to target “menopausal belly.”
  • The 67-year-old demonstrated a standing core exercise to tone the abs.
  • She explained that the “quick” move helps with “ab strength, back health, and improving balance.”

Fitness pro Denise Austin knows that some women over 50 may struggle with a particular “problem area” that she calls “menopause belly.” Now, the fitness icon is sharing one of her go-to menopause exercises for toning the abs.

“Join me for this quick menopause belly move today!!! Try this core exercise for one minute on each side every day to help that problem area that so many of us have!! Plus…it helps with ab strength, back health, and improving balance!!” Austin captioned the video. “Think of it as ‘Denise’s Daily Habits’…start with this one and then build on it…small, simple steps WILL add up!! Take action and build healthy daily habits toward betting on yourself!! YOU are always worth it!!”

In the video, Austin stands on her yoga mat in a matching workout set and sneakers (we spy the Easy Spirit x Denise Austin Mel EMOVE Walking Shoes in the white colorway!). Imposed on the video is a bit of text that reads: “I’ve gotten through this phase of life happy and healthy, and you can too!”

The “menopause belly” move Austin demonstrates in the video is a variation of a standing crunch. She begins with her feet planted slightly wider than shoulder-width distance apart, her right arm above her head, and her left hand on her left hip. She then lifts her left knee toward the right side of her body while lowering her right elbow to meet it.

“Pull right here and touch—reach and pull across,” Austin says as she performs the move. “Feel as though you’re pulling up and in the abdominals, and you’re tightening up your tummy.” She adds that this move targets the “lower abs” in particular. Per Austin’s caption, she recommends you do this exercise for one minute on each side.

While Austin performs this move without any equipment, easily amplify the exercise by holding a single hand weight in your working arm to add even more strength training benefits.

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Austin’s followers loved the simple, informative video. “Thanks again for the best exercises and advice, which is always positive and inspiring,” one follower commented. “You are an inspiration. Thank you for all you do,” another added. “Love this standing core move!” another chimed in.

But what is a “menopause belly,” anyway? Also known as “hormonal belly,” many women going through menopause experience a shift in hormones causing belly fat. The body experiences a decline in estrogen with the onset of menopause which can “create a shift in body composition which favors fat distribution towards the center of the body, around the abdomen,” Krista Gonzales, M.D., endocrinologist and educator at Pritikin Longevity Center previously told Prevention.

It’s important to note that while adding effective core exercises (like this one from Austin) to your routine may help tone a targeted area, you can’t pick and choose where you lose weight on your body. A balanced approach that includes cardio, nutritious eating habits, and weight training is key to overall weight loss, experts say.

If you’re looking for more of Austin’s top cardio and core moves, check out our favorites below.

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Most Preschoolers Aren’t Getting Enough Daily Exercise, Study Finds

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Most Preschoolers Aren’t Getting Enough Daily Exercise, Study Finds

Key Takeaways

  • Fewer than 1 in 4 preschoolers met daily movement goals in a UK study

  • Kids moved more at daycare, but not enough overall

  • Experts suggest that early childhood activity shapes long-term health

TUESDAY, Nov. 25, 2025 (HealthDay News) — Most kiddos ages 2 to 4 aren’t moving nearly enough each day, even when they attend preschool, a new UK study finds.

Researchers tracked the activity levels of 419 preschoolers in England and Scotland using special activity belts called accelerometers. These devices recorded how much children moved during school days and days spent at home.

Fewer than 1 in 4 children, about 23%, reached the World Health Organization’s (WHO) recommendation of 180 minutes of daily physical activity. Even fewer, only 2.4%, met the goal of at least 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity per day.

Children were more active on days they attended daycare and preschool settings, moving about 15 minutes more per day compared to days spent outside of care.

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But most children were still not active enough overall, either at school or at home.

Boys were more likely to meet activity targets than girls, with 8% more boys hitting the guidelines. Older preschoolers also tended to be more active than younger ones.

Outside of daycare or preschool settings, children from less deprived backgrounds were more active than children from more deprived families.

But when kids were in early care and school settings, those differences mostly disappeared, showing these settings can help reduce gaps in physical activity.

“These findings highlight a critical gap in physical activity among preschoolers,” Kim Hannam, a research fellow at the University of Bristol in England and senior author of the study, said in a news release.

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“While early years settings provide a more active environment, most children are still not achieving the movement levels needed for healthy growth and development,” she added.

“Our study highlights the need for coordinated strategies between policymakers, educators and families to support early childhood physical activity.”

University of Bristol professor Ruth Kipping, warned that low activity in early childhood may affect long-term health.

“Low levels of physical activity in early childhood can impact on children’s healthy development and increase the risk of a range of chronic conditions in later life,” she said.

“Early years settings play an important role in promoting physical activity and reducing inequalities, especially as government-funded childcare expands. However, the low proportion of children meeting activity guidelines highlights the need for continued investment and research to support healthy development in the early years,” she added.

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The study was led by the University of Bristol, working with researchers from the University of Birmingham, University of Glasgow and Cardiff University, and was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).

It was published in the Journal of Physical Activity and Health on Nov. 24.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on child activity.

SOURCE: University of Bristol, news release, Nov. 21, 2025

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What This Means For You

If you have a young child, finding fun ways to keep them moving, even in short bursts, can help support their health in the long run.

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Is this crazy, solid marble exercise bike Black Friday’s wildest fitness deal? Probably… so here’s what you should actually buy instead

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Is this crazy, solid marble exercise bike Black Friday’s wildest fitness deal? Probably… so here’s what you should actually buy instead

Picture an exercise bike in your head for me real quick… got an image in your head? Good. Now chuck that image away and instead picture an enormous, 85 kilogram disc of polished marble, with horns, and miraculously a saddle and pedals. Now we’ve reached the very design-forward Ciclotte Exercise Bike, which by some miracle, is discounted down from a heady £14,000 to… uh, a still-unaffordable £10,500.

I’ll be honest with you, despite a saving of £3.5k this isn’t a deal that’s going to sneak into our Black Friday Bike Deals hub, or even our list of the best exercise bikes, but it has got me thinking if you did have 10 grand to drop this Black Friday, where you should splash your cash and still get an aesthetic indoor training setup that doesn’t fall short when actually training.

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Kids’ fitness classes teach much more than exercise

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Kids’ fitness classes teach much more than exercise

On Monday and Wednesday afternoons, boys and girls trickle into a bare-bones gym that sits between Old 41 and Route 41 in Bonita Springs.They’re dressed in exercise clothes, and are ready to get started on their warmups.

34 kids are enrolled in the program, known as Wilson’s Fit Futures. It’sfitness classes for kids, ages 11 through 17. They’re all fully funded through the end of 2026, thanks to fundraising and donations.

Jacob Guzman of Naples is 16 years old and homeschooled. He says his favorite part of the classes is leg day, which helps his basketball game.

“Because I’m a basketballplayer, sothat would help a lotforthe jumping, the vertical jumps, and it has improved over since I’ve been here,” said Guzman.

Jacob’s mother, Angielly Betancourt Guzman, says her whole family is learning more about nutrition because of the education Jacob brings home from class.

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“He’s like, my coach told me I should be eating such and such,and the protein. So we are all learning in our house,”she said.

Jacob Guzman (l.), 16, and his mother, Angielly Betancourt Guzman, at Ionic Fitness, where Jacob takes classes at Wilson’s Fit Futures.

The program is the brainchild of Donnie Keller, owner of Ionic Fitness, where the classes take place.He made the program free to make it accessible to all families.

“I wanted to give back to people who didn’t have the money for $200 a month for the kids. I started lifting weights at 12 years old, and obviously it changed my life. I’m a gym owner. The goal was to not create other gym owners, but create kids that learn to work out the right way, and hopefully learn to love it and continue to do it forever,” said Keller.

The program teaches much more than working out, though.

Keller remembers meeting several of the students for the first time.

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“They all shook my handand they gave me a very weak handshake, didn’t look me in the eyes. I was like, when you shake somebody’s hand for the first time, look them in the eyes. Shake my hand, and don’t squeeze it like you’retrying to break my hand, but give me a firm handshake. Like you’reconfident with who you are,” he said.

Betancourt Guzman appreciates the influence of Keller and the other coaches on her son.
“It’s like he has found a bunch of uncles and family, and he enjoys the fact that he’s learning about weight training, nutrition, plus socializing as well.This program has kind of shaped him—it’s been shaping him—into more of, I will say, a dedicated person. He watches more how he’s replying, or how he’s talking, because he’sexcited about coming to the program.”

Keller named the program for Doug Wilson, a personal training client of his who died in his 60s after a lifetime of poor health habits. He had told Keller he wished he’d learned to take better care of himself earlier. It inspired Keller to offer Wilson’s Fit Futures to the young people of Southwest Florida.

Keller said:“While they’re exercising, they’re going to get stronger, faster, healthier. That’sgoing to happen. But I want them to enjoy it, so they continue to do it forever.”

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