A while back, I spoke to a group of people at
an Active Adult Community about the mental and physical requirements of
staying healthy, fit, and firm over the age of 50. I
explained that they had to incorporate the following three things into
their lives to do so: a positive mental attitude, a fitness program
built on strength training, and a healthy diet designed around balance
and moderation.
I
feel as though I’m qualified to speak on the subject because I’m an ACE
certified personal trainer with over 20 years of experience in the
health and fitness industry. Most importantly, I’m 57 years old, and as healthy and fit as I have ever been. So, I can speak
on this subject not only from scientific facts, but also from my
experience (proof in the pudding).
A Positive Mental Attitude
I think a positive mental attitude about aging is the first and most
important step to staying healthy, fit and firm as you age. I believe
the mental vision you have of aging is what you become. Your body
renews itself every 11 months, and that means every cell in your body is
replaced. I think that if you visualize yourself as becoming weak and
frail as you age, your body conforms to this image over time.
Contrarily,
if you imagine yourself as healthy and strong as you age, your body
continues to renew itself according to this vision. I always visualize
myself as healthy and strong.
A Fitness Program Built On Strength Training
I
believe strength training is the most important form of exercise you
can do to stay healthy, fit and firm if you are over the age of 50.
Beginning
in your 40s you naturally start to lose muscle mass, and if you don’t
do anything to combat this process you can lose as much as a pound of
muscle each year. This is not good because muscle is that active
component of your body that burns most of the calories you consume.
Also, muscle is what gives your body that fit and firm look.
Strength training has been proven to minimize and in some cases to
reverse muscle loss due to aging. Therefore, I recommend that you build
your fitness program around strength training. A
good strength training program should consist of exercises that target
all the major muscle groups and should be performed 2 to 3 times each
week. I’ve been weight lifting all of my adult life and I’m as strong
and muscular as I’ve ever been.
A Healthy Diet Built Around Balance and Moderation
I was asked by one of the attendees if they could eat fried chicken? I
responded by saying that you can eat anything you desire if you do it in
balance and moderation with everything you eat.
I believe balance and moderation in your diet is the best solution to
long-term weight management. If you balance the amount of protein,
carbohydrates and fat in your diet and practice portion control you can
eat what you want. Fad diets don’t work in the long-term because they
are too restrictive as to what you can and cannot eat.
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