Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most important is to get your body moving on a daily basis. Consistency is most important; build habits of movement into your lifestyle.
Once you’ve done that, then you can implement other exercises. Personally, I walk minimum 12,000 steps per day, lap swim 3x per week, Peloton strength workouts 4x week. I’m 54 years and and 121 pounds (same as I was 30 years ago).
OP here. Thanks for posting. I have a Peloton and have literally never gotten on it. I know about the other workouts but never figured out how to access them. I think I will try. I feel terribly guilty about that Peloton gathering dust.
DP
Is there a Peloton program you recommend for a 50yo beginner for strength training? Some are a bit intimidating!
Anonymous wrote:You start with walking 10k a day, lifting 2-3x a week and yoga on days you don't lift for mobility, strength and balance.
That's 45-min to one hour of exercise a day on top of walking 10 k.
You start slow and build up. Feel free to add swimming, cycling etc. to the mix.
Sometimes I do my walking in the pool -it's call aqua jogging and it's awesome. https://runnersconnect.net/coach-corner/aqua-jogging-for-runners/
-signed a 52-y-o in pretty good shape woman
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most important is to get your body moving on a daily basis. Consistency is most important; build habits of movement into your lifestyle.
Once you’ve done that, then you can implement other exercises. Personally, I walk minimum 12,000 steps per day, lap swim 3x per week, Peloton strength workouts 4x week. I’m 54 years and and 121 pounds (same as I was 30 years ago).
OP here. Thanks for posting. I have a Peloton and have literally never gotten on it. I know about the other workouts but never figured out how to access them. I think I will try. I feel terribly guilty about that Peloton gathering dust.
Anonymous wrote:I'm over 50, with a BMI of 34, and even when I was quite thin I never had any strength. (Anyone remember elementary school, taking the "President's Physical Fitness Test"? I was like 5th percentile.)
I want to get into shape, or at least better shape, and don't really know where to start. I was inspired by the I-love-barre post, but pretty sure I wouldn't be able to do it. I've hired a personal trainer 3x over the past ten years or so, and twice I felt like they didn't really know what they were doing and once I had a trainer that was really good but not at all interested in me and it was clear and it hurt my self esteem and I quit seeing him. None of them gave me anything to do between sessions. So that didn't really work well. I did love hot yoga, but that was over ten years and 50 pounds ago, and I know my body won't twist into those positions now (well, not that it did all that well back then either).
Help? Where to start?
Anonymous wrote:You start with walking 10k a day, lifting 2-3x a week and yoga on days you don't lift for mobility, strength and balance.
That's 45-min to one hour of exercise a day on top of walking 10 k.
You start slow and build up. Feel free to add swimming, cycling etc. to the mix.
Sometimes I do my walking in the pool -it's call aqua jogging and it's awesome. https://runnersconnect.net/coach-corner/aqua-jogging-for-runners/
-signed a 52-y-o in pretty good shape woman
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please ignore the walking advice. You will never get inshape simply by walking. Add 10 to 30 second busts of jogging into your Walks. Do 4 minutes of walk and then a short burst of jog. Cycle through this until you can hold the jog for 30 seconds.
After you find this more comfortable, make every other burst an "all out" sprint. If you can do just 5 seconds, do 5. But cycle up over weeks until you get to 30 seconds
Add light dumbell compound exercises 2twice a week.
Keep going.
Your body will make changes to handle the additional demands you put on it over time.
OP here. This has been my experience with walking, unfortunately -- that even with a lot of it, it just isn't enough. I'll try what you suggest -- I did it once in the past and was able to work up to 20-25 min jogs. Would love to make it back there, but feeling intimidated given a few extra years and pounds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please don't shoot the messenger. OP, I hear your struggle. I *have* your struggle. Please don't attack the poster who noticed that you quit -- you have quit (for valid reasons or not). But we are old now (I'm in my 50s too). Losing weight isn't like when we were 32 and it would fall off. You're not going to start jogging like you did in 1997 and be a hottie in a couple of months. Please think of your challenge as two parts: 1 losing the weight & 2 getting in shape. Go make an appointment with your doctor about the weight. You need the support. Listen to whatever the doctor's recommendations (and possible treatments) are. As for the exercise, the other posters gave good advice. Start slow, but be persistent. My personal story was that my doctor had to help me with the weight loss (yes, Wegovy). That started the process. Exercise finished it. That was 70 pounds ago. Think of it as two separate issues.
So 50's is old now?
Anonymous wrote:Please don't shoot the messenger. OP, I hear your struggle. I *have* your struggle. Please don't attack the poster who noticed that you quit -- you have quit (for valid reasons or not). But we are old now (I'm in my 50s too). Losing weight isn't like when we were 32 and it would fall off. You're not going to start jogging like you did in 1997 and be a hottie in a couple of months. Please think of your challenge as two parts: 1 losing the weight & 2 getting in shape. Go make an appointment with your doctor about the weight. You need the support. Listen to whatever the doctor's recommendations (and possible treatments) are. As for the exercise, the other posters gave good advice. Start slow, but be persistent. My personal story was that my doctor had to help me with the weight loss (yes, Wegovy). That started the process. Exercise finished it. That was 70 pounds ago. Think of it as two separate issues.