Strong for What Matters Most đŞPublished on May 13th, 2025 When Kimâs new grandbaby comes to visit, she doesnât think twice about carrying him up and down the stairs. Between visits, she carries a 15-pound weight on those same stairs â just to stay ready.Thatâs the kind of practical, purposeful thinking that defines her approach to fitness at 70. Since joining a gym with her husband, Rick, 74, last year, Kim has lost 25 pounds and dropped a clothing size. But those numbers arenât really the point. âIâm more fit now than I was 10 years ago,â she says. âI want to be as healthy as long as possible.â Kimâs story is powerful not only on its face, but also because of what it reveals. See if you can relate. Grandchildren are a top fitness motivator for people over 50. They want to play on the floor, carry a toddler, or hike with older kids. It cuts through more abstract or even medical reasons. Letâs face it: Nobody wants to be the âboringâ gran, right? Other top motivators include: ⢠Independence: the ability to drive, travel, or live on their own. Staying strong means staying in control of your own life. ⢠Avoiding what theyâve seen: Theyâre determined to age better than parents did. ⢠Managing a diagnosis. A doctorâs warning about blood pressure, diabetes, etc., can get you moving. ⢠Travel and adventure. Letâs go! Staying mobile fuels retirement dreams. ⢠Mental sharpness. Regular exercise protects memory and mental clarity. The âUse It or Lose Itâ MomentKim and Rickâs commitment to fitness started more than a decade ago, born out of a frank conversation about where they were headed. âWe said, âIf we donât do this, weâre going to feel it,ââ she recalls. âIt was very much a âuse it or lose itâ moment.â They knew that muscle mass, balance, and cardiovascular fitness decline with age â but regular exercise can slow or even reverse many of those losses. The key word is regular. Consistency matters more than intensity, especially for older adults. One of Kim and Rickâs biggest advantages is each other. Training with others helps you stick with it. Accountability partners keep us moving when motivation wanes. âOn the days I donât want to go, Iâm always glad I did,â she says. Itâs human nature to underestimate how good weâll feel after a workout. Recognizing that gap â between how you feel before and how youâll feel after â is one of the most reliable tools for getting yourself out the door. For Kim, fitness is key to staying strong enough to live fully â to carry her grandson, climb the stairs without a second thought, and feel better at 70 than she did at 60. Thatâs what fitness is for. Ready to write your own success story? Weâre here to help. Call us today and letâs get you started. |
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With Her New Mindset, She Doesnât Let Anything Stop Her Published on May 13th, 2025 Karen Bridges had a moment of clarity that a lot of people over 50 will recognize. She was having trouble doing ordinary daily things, like working in the garden. Her balance was faltering. Her desk job kept her sedentary all day, and earlier years of being active "off and on" ended with the pandemic. "I hit a wall of reality," the 65-year-old says. "I realized that if I didn't change anything in my life, then...
10 Lessons from People Who Stay Strong Later in Life Published on May 13th, 2025 Spend time around people who remain active into their 60s, 70s and beyond, and you start hearing the same ideas over and over. Theyâre not complicated or trendy, but they sure do work. Here are 10 lessons from folks who age well and stay active, maintaining health, energy, and independence through exercise. 1. Donât wait for life to be perfect Barbara Warren kept competing in track events while waiting for knee...
Strong Women Who Changed the Game Published on May 13th, 2025 March is Women's History Month, so let's look back at a few of the women who paved the way in fitness, health, and sport. Bobbi Gibb, Running In 1966, Bobbi Gibb applied to run in the Boston Marathon and was rejected because women were deemed not "physiologically capable of running a marathon." She hid in the bushes near the starting line and ran anyway, finishing ahead of two-thirds of the men. She came back and ran again in 1967...