Too old for working out? When your body really starts going downhill

Working as a personal trainer here in NYC I get always questions like Am I too old to start working out or when am I starting to lose muscle mass?
MUSCLES start ageing at 30.
Muscle is constantly being built up and broken down, a process which is well balanced in young adults.
However, by the time we're 30, breakdown is greater than buildup, explains Professor Robert Moots.
Once adults reach 40, they start to lose between 0.5 and 2 per cent of their muscle each year. Regular exercise can help prevent this. That's why it is very important to exercise on a regular basis.
French doctors have found that the quality of sperm starts to deteriorate by 35, so that by the time a man is 45 a third of pregnancies end in miscarriage. But good news is that with working out and good diet you can reverse that process.
HEART starts ageing at 40.
The heart pumps blood less effectively around the body as we get older.
This is because blood vessels become less elastic, while arteries can harden or become blocked because of fatty deposits forming on the coronary arteries - caused by eating too much saturated fat. The blood supply to the heart is then reduced, resulting in painful
angina. Men over 45 and women over 55 are at greater risk of a heart attack.
Good news here again is that you do not need to eat crap to block your arteries, so you can have a healthy heart for a long time.
BONES start ageing at 35.
'Throughout our life, old bone is broken down by cells called osteoclasts and replaced by bone-building cells called osteoblasts - a process called bone turnover,' explains Robert Moots, professor of rheumatology at Aintree University Hospital in Liverpool.
Children's bone growth is rapid - the skeleton takes just two years to renew itself completely. In adults, this can take ten years.
Until our mid-20s, bone density is still increasing. But at 35 bone loss begins as part of the natural ageing process.
This becomes more rapid in post-menopausal women and can cause the bone-thinning condition osteoporosis.
The shrinking in size and density of bones can lead to loss of height. Bones in the back shrivel up or crumble between the vertebrae. We lose two inches in height by the time we're 80.
No Matter How Old are you, you can get great benefits from weight training. Some people start weight training first in 5o's and end up looking great.
Let's list some of weight training benefits:
1. Weight training tones your muscles which looks great and raises your basal metabolism... which causes you to burn more calories 24 hours-a-day. You'll even burn more calories while you're sleeping.
2. Weight training can *reverse* the natural decline in your metabolism which begins around age 30.
3. Weight training energizes you.
4. Weight training has a positive affect on almost all of your 650+ muscles.
5. Weight training strengthens your bones reducing your risk of developing osteoporosis.
6. Weight training improves your muscular endurance.
7. Weight training will NOT develop big muscles on women....just toned muscles!
8. Weight training makes you strong. Strength gives you confidence and makes daily activities easier.
9. Weight training makes you less prone to low-back injuries.
10. Weight training decreases your resting blood pressure.
11. Weight training decreases your risk of developing adult onset diabetes.
12. Weight training decreases your gastrointestinal transit time, reducing your risk for developing colon cancer.
13. Weight training increases your blood level of HDL cholesterol (the good type).
14. Weight training improves your posture.
15. Weight training improves the functioning of your immune system.
16. Weight training lowers your resting heart rate, a sign of a more efficient heart.
17. Weight training improves your balance and coordination.
18. Weight training elevates your mood.



















1 Comments:
I must say, or ask if you will, "has anyone out there ever been troubled by the query "''are corporations bad for the little people?'" Well, I have been mulling this over with regard to many aspects of my life that just might run parallel to the asspecks in your own life. I'm thinking of comparison. Comparisons such as: mom and pop vs. Walart, Micky Dee's vs. the "hand made" thirteen dollar burger, Bob's Barber vs. Robert Leonard Salon, Costco vs. ...well, shit, versus everyone, and finally, LA Fitness versus ME. With only a passion for working out and a need for somewhere to do so, I all at once, upon entering LA Fitness, was entranced by the multitude of machines, overwhelmed by the number of TV's and bombarded by the over aggressive sales staff. A staff who had, no doubt, done their job undeceivingly(notaword) well, for, upon leaving, I felt as though I needed to see no other Gym. No, I had been inaugurated into the best club in town, or what would be the best in town "in a couple of months." One year later, after paying what any other gym would consider mid-high tier membership rates, the brand new "best club in town," was still under construction, and it was time to move on. Back to the point. Has anyone out there tried to unsubscribe to anything? I hesitate to use specific examples, such as magazine subscriptions with recurring billing, cable TV, cell phone service, internet service, let alone an internet site subscription. But I must ask again "any of these ring a bell?" I know you've been there too, have any of these services been easy, no, user friendly, to discontinue? It seems the more money I save by buying in bulk, signing up for a membership, ordering through the internet, billing it to my credit card, or shopping with my f#$%ing rewards card, the more headache I'm left with when I decide to go elsewhere or just not participate. More to the point, the more I pay in penalties, cancelation fees, paper, ink, gas, and time, a whole lot of time, spent researching how to actually get these companies to stop "conveniently" taking your money, ads up to more than what I was saving in the first place. DOESN"T IT? That is the question, isn't is? Because, (not)sorry to say, I recycle, I'm for sustainability, I think global warming is a fact, I believe the "golden rule" is "do unto others," I proudly ride the bus, and I smell funky come woodstock revue, but I'm a realist, and right at this moment, it's about $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$. It's why we're in Iraq, and I'll go there, because it's why we, and every other f#$%ing (civil)ization, ever decided to conquer, destroy, and rule every/any other group of people just chillin' and not being as bad ass as the king of the mountain. All about the money, so I can understand it when a business like LA Fitness decides to try to make some, by being dishonest and completely conniving. I don't blame them the least bit for being an absolutely poor investment with inadequate customer service, and a contract that the Godfather himself couldn't get Johnny Fontain out from under. No, I'm just upset at myself for not seeing it coming. I mean, the door(reception) girls wore more makeup than my 1992 prom date, the trainers tripped over their own shoelaces, the thermostat was on 85 in the summer and the AC was ON in the winter, and the fucking General Manager of the gym had a beer gut and an obviously poor work ethic. And a BEER GUT. The GM of the fucking place. It's a GYM!! But honestly, I should've seen this shit coming, right? Well, I didn't, and I'm not sure I will next time either. I consider myself to be ahead of my time and above average, as I think anyone, with a positive self image, or negative, or any self image for that or amy matter, does. That said, I think it's quite the feat to see "it" coming, considering there's a whole lot of folks, smartr'n me, working on the whole you "not seeing it coming." So? What? Really? What the crap am I saying anywayl? Am I saying it's not the corporations killing Mom and Pop, but rather the ad execs and corporate lawyers killing the lower-middle class fuckers? Maybe someday i'll say that, but for now I'm really just saying that LA FITNESS SUCKS WICKED ASS. And I mean that in a bad way.
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