Fitness
Man, 95, still works out in a gym, shares 5 simple tips for a long life
At 95 years old, David Scott is a regular at the gym, lifting weights to keep his muscles strong — the latest chapter his lifelong health routine.
He works out at Planet Fitness in Dover, New Hampshire, three times a week where he uses weight machines to target his shoulders, arms, legs and abs. For cardio, the U.S. Army veteran also walks several times a week.
“It makes me feel good,” Scott tells TODAY.com about his exercise habits. “The circulation of the blood is important if you get too sedentary. And it’s also good for the mind.”
Scott and his 86-year-old wife, Lydia, live independently in their house in Dover. Both share a lifelong love of sports — the couple met on a bus in her native Italy as they headed to ski in the Alps and struck up a conversation on the ski lift.
“When we got to the top (of the mountain), she said, ‘Let’s go,’ and she disappeared. She skied much faster than me. But I finally caught up to her,” Scott recalls. “For me, it was love at first sight.”
“For me it was, too. Two weeks later, we were engaged,” Lydia Scott tells TODAY.com. They’ve been married 62 years and have three children.
Scott says he’s in good health as he approaches 100. Here is what to know about the almost-centenarian and his advice for living a long life:
Eat a healthy diet
Scott and his wife eat the Mediterranean diet, which is famously healthy for the heart and brain. The menu includes home-cooked meals with lots of fruits and vegetables, some chicken and fish, and plenty of olive oil.
The couple has a garden where they grow salad greens, carrots, zucchini, string beans, edamame, Brussels sprouts, broccoli and all kinds of herbs.
Lydia Scott is the cook in the house.
“I make lots of soups, which I freeze for the winter. Plus, we eat fresh veggies all summer,” she says.
“I also make jams with all the fruits we grow, and I freeze lots of berries for smoothies.”
David Scott’s favorite dish is the “spaghetti that my Italian wife makes,” he says. “I’ve never eaten so well after I got married.”
Vegetable-heavy pasta dishes are a tasty, healthy part of the Mediterranean diet.
For a long life, Scott advises others to stay away from fatty foods and keep alcohol consumption to a minimum, sticking to a bit of wine rather than hard liquor if choosing to drink. He stopped drinking alcohol about 20 years ago.
For dessert, Scott likes dark chocolate, which is rich in polyphenols, or beneficial compounds produced by plants.
Pick the right spouse
When asked about his secret to longevity, David Scott is quick to reply.
“A good wife,” he says without hesitation. “She knows what I need and she’s there.”
Married people have a significantly greater life expectancy and active life expectancy — the number of years without disability — compared to their unmarried peers, with men particularly enjoying the protective health effects of marriage, studies have found.
Married men tend to eat better, exercise more and get more regular medical care than unmarried, divorced or widowed males, according to Harvard Health.
Being married even boosts the chances of surviving cancer, research suggests.
Think positive
But Lydia Scott believes there’s more to her husband’s longevity than their long marriage.
“The secret is having a positive way of thinking and having also a good sense of humor and accepting life the way it is. And not having too many complaints,” she says.
Optimists live longer, studies have found, perhaps because optimism may help people cultivate and maintain healthier habits, and regulate their emotions during stressful times.
Be adventurous
Scott went to Harvard at 16, joined the U.S. Army when he was 17 in 1945, then returned to the university after the end of World War II to graduate with a degree in Greek philosophy.
He went on to Harvard Business School and worked for several companies before he decided to move to Europe.
“I thought I should go to Italy because I like to ski,” he recalls. The bachelor was working in a U.S. factory in Milan when he had that fateful meeting with his future wife on a bus heading to the ski slopes.
He lived in Italy for two decades and traveled to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Nigeria as part of his work before moving back to the U.S., writing about his adventures in a book titled, “My Twenty Years in Italy: How Opera and Skiing Changed My Life.”
Move your body
Scott still remembers being impressed as a 10-year-old when he read a magazine article about a muscular man who said people could become as big as him if they followed an exercise routine.
Being strong has been on his mind since then, especially because he grew up in Chicago in a “rather tough neighborhood,” he says.
He always liked sports, playing football and wrestling in college.
He and his wife love to ski. Lydia Scott also practiced fencing and was on the Italian team. In later years, she did tai chi and qigong — exercises that tap into the mind-body connection.
“Doing sports is very important in our family,” she says. “We were always doing many, many sports and our children are also into sports a lot.”
Fitness
The overlooked key to fitness? Strengthening your joints and tendons
Isometric exercises, like planks or lunge holds, require holding a position for an extended period. In these positions, your muscles are firing, but you’re also working on the alignment of the joint and working the tendon to hold that position, says Wulke. Ho adds that while ligaments and joints cannot technically be trained directly like tendons, you can support their health by strengthening the surrounding muscles and encouraging proper movement patterns.
Wulke often programs training days with a mix of goals for her athletes: “high” days for muscle and strength development and “low” days focusing on alignment, isometric holds, and mobility. But most people don’t have enough time to dedicate separate days for joint-specific work. Instead, try integrating these movements into your existing strength training sessions. Consider adding a few sets of isometric holds during your warm-up or as a finisher.
(Is cracking your joints bad for you?)
During your workouts, focus on the eccentric phase of your movements. Slow down and maintain control throughout the exercise to help you ensure proper form. You can also use higher reps and lower weight to reduce the risk of overstressing connective tissues.
Last, Hinson recommends incorporating low-impact exercises such as walking, cycling, Pilates, water aquatics, and yoga. “Taking care of and improving the structures that make the joints stronger and more flexible—it really will pay huge dividends in keeping [people] out of my office and away from injury,” he says.
Fitness
Avoid doing these gym exercises now! Orthopaedic doctor reveals exercises that do more harm; the answers may shock you
Did you know that some popular exercises that we all do at the gym to stay fit and healthy may be doing more harm than good? Dr Venkatesh Movva, an orthopaedic doctor trained in Sports Medicine, sat down with Ranveer Allahbadia for The Ranveer Podcast, where he talked about the exercise one should avoid at the gym. The answers will surprise you.
(Also Read | Ranbir Kapoor ‘decides to clap’ in between his pullups. Guess how Alia Bhatt reacted?)
Avoid doing these gym exercises now!
In the clip shared on The Ranveer Show Podcast Instagram page, with the caption, “Dr Venkatesh on Which Exercises you should Avoid in Gym?”, Ranveer asks Dr Movva which exercises he would recommend gymgoers to avoid as an orthopaedic doctor. He suggested three exercises which are quite popular among gymgoers aiming to get fit, lose weight or stay healthy. According to him, one should not do overhead exercises, deadlifts, and crunches.
Dr Movva stated in the clip, “Overhead, heavy [exercise]. I mean, you can go stretch, but no military press, number one. Number two crunches; avoid them. Number three, deadlifts. (sic)” To this, Ranveer replied, “So, I’d replace the military press because it’s for the anterior delts with just front raises.” As an alternative, Dr Movva suggested people to ‘bend down’ during such exercises. “You can go bend down, raise it [weights], rather than overhead (sic),” he said.
While Ranveer, a fitness enthusiast himself, said that he would replace crunches with planks, Dr Movva suggested ‘planks and bridges’.
Lastly, for why one should avoid deadlifts, an exercise you must have seen many celebrities doing at the gym and fitness influencers pushing their followers to include in their routine, the orthopaedic doctor said, “I see more injuries than benefits with the deadlifts. If you are really well-trained and have a good muscle balance, do it. But if you are trying to get better, that’s one thing you may want to avoid. Because the risk of injury is very high. There are so many other exercises that you can compensate without doing these things.”
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.
Fitness
Woman who shed 54 kg shares 7 back and bicep exercises that helped transform her body
Carrying excess fat in your back and arms can cause health concerns for many. Sorting out this issue is important, not just for how you look, but also for your general health and ability to move around easily. If you are on a weight loss journey and looking for exercises to help you target these areas, worry not. We have found seven exercises to help you develop and tone your back and bicep muscles. The routine was shared on Instagram by Meredith Hutson, who shed 120 lbs (approximately 54 kg) naturally. Check out the exercise that helped her transform her body.
(Also Read | Avoid doing these gym exercises now! Orthopaedic doctor reveals exercises that do more harm; the answers may shock you)
Back and bicep workouts to try
In the video, Meredith suggested exercises like the Smith machine or barbell mid-grip rows, outer curl into Zottman curl, cable rear delt fly, straight arm pulldowns, reverse seated rows, cable hammer curls, and cable lat pulldowns. She also demonstrated how to do each exercise in the clip and showcased modifications she added to make the routine effective.
The fitness influencer also had an inspiring message for those trying to lose weight or tone their muscles. She said, “Nobody saw my potential the way that I did…” Check out the exercises.
According to Meredith’s video, each exercise targets different areas in your back and biceps. Talking about the Smith machine or barbell mid-grip rows, she said that the exercise targets your ‘middle back for a balanced development’. For the Zottman curl, she modified the exercise by adding an outer curl, which helped her target the long head of her biceps and forearms.
While the cable rear delt fly exercise (a personal favourite of the fitness coach) targets the real delts, upper back muscles, traps and rhomboid, the straight arm pulldown helps work out the rhomboid and ‘big muscles’ on the back, thus helping create the V shape.
As per Meredith, the reverse seated rows also target the rhomboid along with the traps, biceps, rear delts, and the ‘main muscle in our backs that helps us in doing pulling movements’. Lastly, the cable hammer curls work the entire upper arms ‘focusing on the front of the arms and the outside of the forearm’, while the cable lat pulldowns target ‘lats, rhomboid, traps, and biceps’.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.
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