How to Maintain Your Youthful Vigor and Slow the Aging Process
by La Rue Briggs
Did you know that a 60-year-old who has been active
can endure more physically challenging tasks than a 30-year-old who
has been inactive? Like a magical elixir, regular workouts help revitalize
your body and keep old-age symptoms at bay.
Old is relative, defined as the advanced years of life when a person
has reached the stage of considerably lowered activity due to fading
vitality and muscular atrophy. Physiological age, however, affects
how frequently and strenuously one should exercise rather than chronological
age. A 60-year-old person who has been athletically active throughout
his or her existence can endure more physically challenging tasks
than a 30-year-old who has been athletically inactive.
Until someone finally discovers the Fountain of Youth (that legendary
spring sought in the New World by Ponce de Leon and other Spanish
explorers) regular workouts remain the means for bringing about those
near-miraculous, all-over improvements to the body. For like a magical
elixir, regular workouts can help to revitalize the body and keep
old-age symptoms at bay.
Through extensive research, scientists have found many positive
results from long-term consistent exercise. A regular exercise program
leads to a higher fitness level which inereases energy. This individual
has less illnesses and health problems, a greater mental and emotional
wellbeing and peace of mind.
Moreover, a vigorous, healthy body aids in protecting one from lesser
mishaps and may be a lifesaving factor in a crisis situation. Being
able to respond quickly and decisively in a potentially dangerous
situation may avert a physically debilitating outcome. This ability
becomes exceedingly important in the degenerative middle-age period
of life.
Now, ideally, the human body should last about 120 years. But due
mainly to inactivity and an unrestrained approach to experiencing
la dolce vita, many hasten the aging process and reduce their age
expectency.
For example, studies show that coronary-artery disease (affecting
the arteries that transport blood to the heart muscle) is two times
more prevalent among inactive than active people. Studies also show
a connection between inactivity and such illnesses as diabetes, ulcers,
high-blood pressure and emotional problems brought on by stress and
anxiety.
In some instances, a defective gene pool is responsible for serious
illness and a shortened life span. Regrettably, hundreds of thousands
of people are descendants of family stock susceptible to scores of
garden-variety ailments as well as to one of the most frightening
killers of our time: cancer. Consequently, these people must be especially
careful about their health to prolong their normal biological ages.
Early detection and treatment of cancer, or any one of countless other
health-robbing diseases, can go a long way in bettering the quality
and possibly extending the length of a person's life.
These days, with the proliferation of health and fitness books and
magazines, more people than in the past know how invaluable regular
workouts are for older persons. They know that strength, endurance,
flexibility, coordination of movement and seemingly unlimited energy,
all of which are taken for granted when we are young, gain ever greater
importance as the years pass by if we wish to be self-reliant for
as long as possible.
Though these physical powers must now be worked for, the output
from this work is well worth the effort; the bottom-line difference
is one of leading either a productive or a nonproductive life.
Nonetheless, assorted natural changes do take place in the body
as it ages and these should be considered when planning workout programs.
However, most of the limitations imposed by aging are more qualitative
than quantitative. That is, one may not be able to perform some functions
at the same high level he once did, but can do so with modifications.
Regardless of age, many undesirable effects of aging can be postponed,
reversed, or prevented through proper exercise. The body's ability
to receive and circulate oxygen decreases about one percent yearly
after the age of 25; but diligently performing an aerobic activity,
such as walking, assists in heightening the amount of oxygen the body
uses, enhances the hearts' working capability and, thereby, raises
the blood supply. Others have found that along with improving their
looks by delaying the effects of aging years, exercise also improves
their mental faculties, as well as the capacity to put their bodies
in motion - to get out of bed and move around unassisted.
With advancing age comes some measure of stiffness in the muscles
and joints. Joint structures injure more easily and muscles may get
weaker and shorter. One must make the effort to maintain the range
of motion in the joints and keep the muscles resilient. This requires
dedication, determination, planning and work.
Strength training, aerobics, stretching and a low-fat, low-cholesterol,
low-sugar diet, will maximize physical and mental performances leaving
a firm, slender, supple physique no matter what the chronological
age.
Specifically, weight workouts assist in preventing muscle and bone
loss. On average, most individuals lose around 3 percent of bone mass
annually. Weight-resistant workouts will help build muscles, tighten
and tone the body, and increase strength as well as restore bone mass
and density.
Aerobic exercises (such as walking, running and swimming) are excellent
for conditioning vital organs, burning unneeded calories and removing
body fat. The combination of these exercises with a good stretching
routine and a sensible approach to eating will aid in bringing about
total-body fitness.
Apply unwavering effort toward achieving goals by exercising for
20 to 60 minutes at least three times weekly. Adding variety to workouts
helps maintain motivation by keeping exercise more interesting and
thus lessening the odds of quitting. More importantly, alternating
workouts lowers the risk of overuse injuries by emphasizing different
muscle groups of the body at each training session. Variety adds to
overall fitness and keeps workouts from becoming redundant and stale.
NOTE: Before beginning any type of physical training, obtain a thorough
medical examination, including your heart, lungs, blood pressure,
muscles, and joints and a resting electrocardiogram (ECG). Your blood
should be analyzed for cholesterol and triglycerides.
© La Rue Briggs - All Rights Reserved. Reprinted with permission
About the author: As a nationally certified
fitness instructor, La Rue Briggs has conducted exercise and bodybuilding
classes for the YMCA and other organizations and was an instructor/trainer
for the Michigan Heart Association, a board member of the Metropolitan
Detroit Health Education Council, and a member of the YMCA Physical
Education Committee. He is a long distance runner, swimmer, bicyclist,
and former physique competitor. La Rue spent more than a decade in
media as a radio talk show host, television moderator, freelance writer,
and model and has written on modeling, fitness, and health. He is
a Detroit native with a BA in English from Wayne State University.
Visit his web
site.
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