need a "talking to" about exercise 50-60 yo
ImKaren768
Posts: 19 Member
I know all these young people are active. I didn't find the category for even less then sedentary when I set up my profile. I'm 59 and have no desire to exercise. BUT, my weight loss is slowing done. So nag me, tell me I can do it...mostly tell me how you get moving!
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I understand that you have no desire to exercise. Do you have a desire to get up off the toilet? Do you have a desire to fix your own food when you want it? Anything you do, everything you do, uses muscles. As you age, your unused muscles atrophy, and they're not there anymore and you can't use them to do anything. You lose your balance, fall, break your hip, get confined to a nursing home and your family will neglect to visit you. I'm not even exaggerating. The only person who ever will care about you is you and if you don't then having a username account at myfitnesspal isn't going to do you any good when you're stuck on the toilet and your LifeAlert button is in the bedroom.
So get some exercise while you still can.
I have a couple of dear friends who are happy, healthy, and past 90. They still take walks together.15 -
People our age are capable of a lot. I am an ex power lifter who was able to hoist 315 overhead at 68 years of age and I did that sitting down because I had a sore knee. Last month I completed a 100 Km bicycle ride. Now ImKaren, buy yourself some workout duds, join a gym and have at it.
Never compete with anyone other than yourself, Ignore everyone else on the floor, because they are all too wrapped up in worrying about how they look in the mirrors to be concerned about you. Strive to be a little better everytime you do a workout. You will be amazed by your progress.7 -
Exercise is for fitness and health. As a person who deals with a lot of clients over 50, I'll be the first to tell you that I train them differently. I train them more for EVERYDAY functional movements. So if your leg strength sucks, chances are you can't get off the ground well. And that will dictate many times how long your lifespan will be. How about opening a jar? Or climbing stairs? Or just shopping in a mall? If you struggle to do any of those, then NOT EXERCISING isn't going to improve it. Muscle atrophies when it's not used, that's why many people who age become so much weaker and frail. But it's PROVEN that even elder people can significantly improve their physical fitness by just doing a little exercise a day. And it doesn't have to be crazy. So all you have to do is MAKE THE CHOICE.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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I led a sedentary life for 30 years and finally joined a gym with my daughter in 2014 at the age of 55! I started out only doing cardio and wanted to lose 25 lbs or so. I ended up losing over 50 and started powerlifting! I've competed in 5 meets and getting ready in 2 weeks to do one of the biggest meets for me so far. You are NEVER too old to start something new. People tell me all the time how much I've inspired them.10
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I could nag you to death. I am just about 64 and didn't start this until I was 54.
Move, goddamyoumove.
Yes, I know, I didn't like moving , mrs sloth personified- I had never exercised, but the thought of becoming less than who I was made me move, made me exercise, made me lift weights.
I can throw my 7 yo grandson about, I can hike through the ruins of Pompeii in the summer heat, I can build things in the house (drywall) I can build patios to relax on with a glass of wine, I can do all the things life requires, and enjoy an active, action packed vacation.
Do you want to be the person on the side lines, or the person parriciparing.
Try everything, do everything, find your sweet spot.
Cheers, h.
I could have ranted for pages, there are some wonderful fit, friendly women here that are over 60.12 -
Please don't stereotype me. I'm 57 years old and I'm more active than 20 and 30 year olds I work with.
As far as me I just enjoy it. I can scream and rant and Rave at you all I want but it's going to do me no good. You have to find your own personal why of why you want to do it. Once you find that why the exercise is going to be easy and you're actually going to look forward to it.
As far as me I never want to go f****** back to where I was before. Pardon my language but that's the way I feel about it. Oh and just to take away some excuses double hip replacement and arthritic knee that needs to be replaced and an arthritic shoulder that needs to be replaced eventually. I'm more active and physically fit than I was 20 years ago. Find your why and like the commercial says just do it2 -
OP: My mother died a couple of years ago at age 101.
She never exercised or watched her weight. She had various health problems over the years but they didn't stop her. However, when she was around 90 and living alone, she had a couple of fall down incidents which did.
On two separate occasions, she didn't have enough strength to get up off the floor or out of the bathtub. Couldn't even reach the phone to call for help. She was discovered shortly after each incident but these incidents led to her placement in assisted living, where someone could always watch over her.
Her lack of physical strength and conditioning resulted in her being confined to a wheelchair and a bed for the rest of her life. Her caretakers had to lift her from one to the other. They also had to feed her, dress & undress her, change her diapers & wipe her bottom and bathe her.
Despite her physical disability, she was tough and lasted many more years than her doctors thought possible. It was painful for me to watch her slowly deteriorate physically and mentally before she passed and I swore that I would do what I could to prevent that from happening to me.
I spent the past year losing 38# from 196 to 158 and dropping my BF from over 20% to below 9%. I exercise 1-2 hrs a day, 5 days a week, weigh myself daily and log everything that I eat and drink.
I'm 66 now and am in the best shape and health that I have been in many years.
However, based on my family history, I could well live another 30 years or more. I want to remain as physically strong and active as I can until the end and plan to continue to exercise and watch my weight until then.
Hopefully, this story will provide you with the same motivation to exercise and watch your weight as it does for me.
Good luck!11 -
JeromeBarry1 wrote: »I understand that you have no desire to exercise. Do you have a desire to get up off the toilet? Do you have a desire to fix your own food when you want it? Anything you do, everything you do, uses muscles. As you age, your unused muscles atrophy, and they're not there anymore and you can't use them to do anything. You lose your balance, fall, break your hip, get confined to a nursing home and your family will neglect to visit you. I'm not even exaggerating. The only person who ever will care about you is you and if you don't then having a username account at myfitnesspal isn't going to do you any good when you're stuck on the toilet and your LifeAlert button is in the bedroom.
So get some exercise while you still can.
I have a couple of dear friends who are happy, healthy, and past 90. They still take walks together.
Yep, the nursing homes are busting at the seams with people who can't get off the toilet Maybe if they would have been doing some exercise the last 20-30 years it would not be an issue and they would still be at home.0 -
STEVE142142 wrote: »Please don't stereotype me. I'm 57 years old and I'm more active than 20 and 30 year olds I work with.
^^ Totally agree with this. Please don't sterotype me, either.
I'm 63. I love walking and hiking. My car got a flat tire this week. While I was waiting for a new tire to arrive at the car dealer, I walked to the gym, exercised, walked to the grocery store afterwards, and carried my groceries home.
I could have asked a friend to drive me, but why?
I'm glad I can do these things. I am a normal weight for my height. I absolutely do not intend to be an old, out of shape person -- knowing I made myself helpless.
The mentality of thinking you are "old" and can't do things is the way to poor quality of life and early death.
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ImKaren768 wrote: »I know all these young people are active. I didn't find the category for even less then sedentary when I set up my profile. I'm 59 and have no desire to exercise. BUT, my weight loss is slowing done. So nag me, tell me I can do it...mostly tell me how you get moving!
I'm 50 ... so I'm still one of "these young people". My husband is 62 ... I still think of him as pretty young too.
We're both active and have been for years. We met on a long distance cycling event in 2003, and have spent our lives cycling long distances together.
Cycling long distances is my main motivator for keeping my weight down. It's a lot more work to haul extra weight up the hills!
And it's fun! We've travelled and done events in various parts of the world, and met interesting people and have seen lots of things.
I'd rather do that than to sit in my house all the time. Boring!!3 -
ImKaren768 wrote: »So nag me
i can't be bothered i can't even muster the motivation to nag my best friends, so nagging a total stranger over the internet . . . nah.
however, you probably can do it unless there's some kind of physical limitation. and even then you can probably do something else. personally, i don't know if being nagged about anyone to do anything has ever had the slightest effect on me, but if you seriously want other people to take over the accountability and the credit for you getting active, the most effective move would probably be to pay some trainer to call you every couple of days and beak at you about whether or not you've done whatever it is.
for me, an easier path was to block out other people so i could hear my own voice talking to me. it figured out some stuff that i not only like doing, but i actually wanted to do even though i didn't want and still don't want to do 'exercise' as a generic concept in its own right.
in that sense, i've been active one way or another for ages, but i still don't 'exercise' i'm just a couch potato who likes to ride bikes and lift weights.3 -
We can all nag you until we are blue in the face but unless you want to exercise it would be pointless.
I was sedentary and obese until, at 51 I felt I needed to take control of my life. I lost 73 lbs and started exercising. I can now run 10k and am doing Insanity and will get back to lifting when my shoulder injury heals. I'm in the best shape of my life and loving it!
Find the best time of the day for your exercise and do something you enjoy ( walking, dancing, cycling whatever YOU want to do) For me it was exercise dvds before work as I had no energy and too many distractions after work.
I want to live a long healthy active life and not be stuck in a nursing home unable to move.
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I was 57, the only exercise I had was walking to work, uk size 20 and growing. Was starting to have difficulty getting in and out of the bath and experiencing hip and knee pains. Then my son announced his wedding and my first thought was I didn't want to look like this in his wedding pictures. Long story short, I joined gym hired a trainer and for a few weeks thought I was going to die and my trainer was the most sadistic person ever, then I realised I was starting to enjoy my sessions, weight was dropping off and I could move easier. I am now 59, working out at least 4 Times each week and walking between 4 and 7 miles each day. Am now uk size 8 or 10 and am determined to be able to do a pull up beforeI am 60. And my confidence has grown in every area of my life, I can dance without worrying what people think, I can go on the biggest fairground rides. Go exercise there is nothing to lose and a whole new life to gain3
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just do it1
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Only you can choose the person you want to be as you get older. Fit, active and independent as you go into your 60's and 70's or keep on doing what you are doing and let the rest of your life be one of diminishing opportunities.
Being in your 50's and never being interested in exercise does not necessarily mean that is the person you have to be for the rest of your life. Start small and do often is the best advice that anyone can give.
Or just say it is too hard and you don't like it and then you can just spend the rest of your life getting sicker and slower and being dependent on unreliable people for the rest of your life.
Just for the record your "young people are active" is just a big pile of denial. I am 45 and am fitter and more active than most people I know. It is not easy at first - but then guess what, it gets to be easy and then you look back at your old life in disbelief.2 -
Don't think of being active and moving as "exercise". Find an activity you DO like (walking, dancing, yoga) and do it every day consistently. You'll be amazed how good and alive it makes you feel.1
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Lots of great advice & info here. I agree with them! I work out 6 days a week, combinations of cardio & strength with some Pilates reformer thrown in. I'm over 50, in really good shape, & manage my physical issues (a bit of arthritis in left knee, shoulder impingements, degenerative disc in my neck), feel terrific. I have long gray hair, wear my skinny jeans, watch the 20-somethings whine @ bootcamp class, watch women younger than me gain more & more weight, use walking sticks, eat crap, never move & get sick all the time. I'm not a saint by any stretch of the imagination, but living a long, healthy, active, productive life is what I want. Sitting & complaining, making excuses & justifications, is not. Nobody else can motivate you; people like those in this thread are too busy living a healthy life to spend time nagging you. Think about the quality of life you want, & then get off the sofa a get it.1
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OP, I hope this thread inspires you because it sure does for me. Several posters I recognize from being long-time MFPer's who always give great insights, advice, and stories worth thinking about. But we're not going to nag because we know it's really all on you. Make the decision and do it; or don't. It's your life.0
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Walk!2
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I'm a little younger than you. Nine months ago, at the age of 44, I lost the roulette spin and developed an obesity-exacerbated condition. Basically, because my legs had to carry too much... me... the veins in my lower legs collapsed (refluxed) and my lymphatic system got a bit crushed, leading to cellulitis, lymphedema, and a weeping wound on my leg that required daily nurse visits and multiple courses of antibiotics over a 10-week period to treat. (The one that helped the cellulitis didn't help the lymphedema. They tried a couple of others before finding the right one. And then it took three courses of that right one).
Treatment prescribed? Compression stockings and weight loss.
But what got me to start exercising? Reverse psychology. See, when I had that weeping wound, the doctors told me to stay off the leg as much as possible. Keep it elevated. Don't walk. Take a taxi to the office six blocks away. I hadn't been exercising much, but I still loved to walk (even if I generally 'rewarded' myself with a Chipwich or potato knish afterwards, negating the calorie burns). By the time the vascular surgeon confirmed that it was not only safe for me to walk again but vital... I was champing at the bit.
My condition is treatable, not curable. But I am doing what I can to avoid future flare-ups. This is weight loss. This is exercise. This is my life quality on the line. Oh, and P.S.? I kind of like what it's doing for/to my body.3 -
Walk, walk, then walk some more. Build up gradually, add 5-10 min per week. Visit a nursing home. If that doesn't motivated you, I don't know what will1
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ImKaren768 wrote: »I know all these young people are active. I didn't find the category for even less then sedentary when I set up my profile. I'm 59 and have no desire to exercise. BUT, my weight loss is slowing done. So nag me, tell me I can do it...mostly tell me how you get moving!
For me, 'how to get moving' is acceptance that it is up to me to take responsibility for my health - both current and future. And, for me, that means doing the very best I can to be healthy - losing the weight I need/needed to, making healthy but not restrictive food choices, and gaining/maintaining the best fitness level I can.
I also am 59 and will be the first to tell you that doing all of that is no guarantee. I am recovering from major surgery to address a health issue that was totally unexpected and outside of my control. However, I firmly believe that my fitness prior to that surgery was, and continues to be, a huge factor in my recovery. Moving forward, no plans to be 'old'!3 -
I'm going to turn 60 in two months. I was in truly terrible shape two years ago when I determined to lose weight and start progressive weight training. I love it - it makes you feel and look good. This may sound negative... but If you depend on being nagged by others in order to get your act together - you probably never will. Do this for yourself - because YOU want to improve your life. Take charge and just DO IT! You can accomplish more than you think.1
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Thank you for this thread. I'm a 66-yr-old couch potato who is just getting her mind around the idea of becoming fit through exercise. I shouldn't be "mobility impaired" at my age!4
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@ImKaren768 Please click this link and don't let age define you and don't use it as an excuse.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10585399/70-lbs-down-67-years-old-weight-lifter-and-gym-rat-lots-of-pics#latest2 -
I think a lot of people missed your sense of humor, which I love! What's with all this SUPER SERIOUS stuff on these responses??? GOOD GRIEF people, lighten up!!
OK, since you couldn't find a category for less than sedentary, I'll give you one: on the way to a life threatening illness! How's that one? That should be motivating. Then you can pick whichever one is seen most in your family: heart attack, diabetes, stroke. If you have a high stress life, plan on one of those in the next year.
How to get moving: well, get a friend, like me, who is in the same boat and has a sense of humor, and work together! I'll be your friend! I'm on here a lot and on Facebook a lot too!! And the best way to get moving: invite people to your house. You will be sweating for HOURS cleaning everything in sight. Add to that some tai chi and some good yoga and in no time you will be more coordinated as well as more limber. It's a GREAT way to start moving. Tai chi burns some of the HIGHEST calories in exercise! Check it out! And the risk for injury is low because the movements are slow and controlled.
So, in summary, find friends, clean house, add at least an hour a day of tai chi and yoga. Of course eat well. You're already starting out with a great first ingredient: a sense of humor.
PS: I had a STROKE at age 49 in front of my classroom of 7th graders. I'm trying to regain my life and I have a long way to go. I speak from experience, and I know that it can help you.5 -
ImKaren768 wrote: »I know all these young people are active. I didn't find the category for even less then sedentary when I set up my profile. I'm 59 and have no desire to exercise. BUT, my weight loss is slowing done. So nag me, tell me I can do it...mostly tell me how you get moving!
Nah, nagging doesn't work. You've gotten excellent advice in this thread, but it's up to you to make the decision, and then follow through on that decision.
I'm 58 in 2 weeks and the only thing that's even slowed down my workouts have been the rotator cuff surgery I'm rehabbing from now (still doing lower body weight exercises with the docs blessing though) and the staff infection I had last year - that stopped me dead in my tracks for 3 solid weeks due to the antibiotics I was on, too ill to exercise.
As others have said, I run circles around the younger folks at work and still play sports with nieces and nephews in their 20s.
So, how long do you want to feel like you do?0 -
If you are on Facebook check Adriana Miranda in her 60's and for me I role model of where I want to be in her age :-)0
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I'm 61, and I don't relate to the idea of "doing exercise". Weak character that I am, I just like to have fun.
The trick, for me, was that as an inactive, out of shape, obese 46-year-old desk-job IT professional recently out of cancer treatment (6+ months of surgery, chemo, radiation, etc.), I found something active that was really fun: On water rowing. More about that later.
I'm not saying that you should row, necessarily. Maybe you should find a fun aqua-exercise group, or take up line dancing, or hike to bird-watch, or go to an ultra-chill relaxing yoga studio, or resume a childhood hobby like (I dunno) ice skating, or learn to kayak, or take golfing lessons, or learn tai chi, or .... or ... or ....
You need to decide what sounds potentially fun for you, and try it out. If you're not sure, take some beginner group classes, and commit to attending a full session of any class before giving up on it, even if it feels clumsy and impossible at first (as long as it doesn't actually hurt you in some way, of course). In my experience, anything complicated enough to stay fun in the long run is going to be somewhat daunting in the first session or two. Introduce yourself to the instructor, make clear that you're open to tips or modifications that will help you.
I go to my Y regularly. There are people of all ages and fitness levels. No one is out of place. Most people are friendly (a few are shy ). I've made friends there . . . and gym friends tend to be ones who'll want to do other fun active things with us - double win.
So, around 15 years ago, I learned to row. It was fun, but hard & scary. First, we worked on rowing machines. Just walking upstairs to the room was hard: Whew. I wanted to be able to kinda keep up, so I started doing Richard Simmons low-impact aerobics a couple of times a week, in between weekly rowing sessions.
And so on - wanting to do this fun thing better got me to do other things to be a better rower - off-season spin classes, weight training, stretching and yoga, swim lessons - not all at once, but over time, to improve my rowing ability. Most of them turned out to be fun, too! And I met more people doing them, we became friends, they turned me on to other fun active things we did together - virtuous cycle: More fun!
In season, I row 4 days a week, and take spin classes two days, plus do occasional bike rides and weight workouts. In Winter, I do some rowing machine, some swimming, and usually up the length & regularity of weight workouts.
This last Friday, I was out in a boat - one of those long skinny ones like in the Olympics, though ours was slower - with rowers who are 80-something, 71, 70, and (!) 26. Who's the least fit? The 26 y/o.
The 80-something guy rows every single day most of the year, for an hour or more. He also goes on regular bike rides - dozens of miles at a time. Guy's got washboard abs.
The 71-year-old woman - you'd swear she's maybe 55 - rows with me 4 days a week, lifts weights several days a week, takes multi-mile walks with her rambunctious dog, goes to pilates class (taught, not just to seniors, by her 71-year old husband, who has one knee replacement & one hip replacement) twice a week.
The 70 year old woman rows 3 times a week, goes out with a walking group most other days, and weight trains.
All of these people are strong, vital, active, generally healthy (one has osteopenia), energetic, and at a healthy weight. They take few or no medications. They seem to have no problems with daily life activities, including fairly challenging ones.
I also hang out with a group of mixed media artists in their 50s and 60s. Let's consider the 4 of them I see most often. Other than one who does pool exercises twice a week, they are very inactive. Two are severely obese, with mobility problems. One is substantially overweight, only one at a healthy weight.
They have problems with mobility. One gasps audibly from the exertion of walking from her handicap parking spot into the restaurant where we meet. Two are diabetic or prediabetic, take medication for high blood pressure and more, and sometimes struggle with side effects and drug interactions.
Most of them have difficulty with at least some daily life activities like yard work or heavier housework. They ask their adult children for help regularly with routine things.
These kinds of examples seem pretty graphic and instructive to me. I like all of these people, and they all have great character traits and I value them all as friends. But when it comes to choosing my future, I'm pretty clear which of these two groups I want to emulate, and it's pretty obvious to me how to do it.
We don't any of us have guarantees about our futures, but we do have choices. And choices have consequences. So, your call about "exercise".
Apologies for the novel. I feel pretty strongly about this.10
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