Tag: senior fitness

  • Energy Bite 333 – Crawling

    Some people run. Some walk. But one of the best overall movement practices for seniors is crawling.

    Babies start off by rolling, then crawling. Adults forget how. Yet crawling is one of the most fundamental of human movements. Not only are there a lot of different levels of crawling [progressions] that lead to more difficult moves, the crawling movements themselves have a number of benefits on their own.

    There are the benefits of quadruped and cross-body moments that crawling provides. Plus crawling is an easy starting point for some good arm, shoulder and full body movements that benefit the entire body.

    Let’s begin with the basic crawl. You simply get on your hands and knees and move from point A to point B. Most of your weight is on your knees, hands and wrists. You are using your entire body to move, and the weight pressure on your arms and shoulders are a great benefit for the beginning exerciser. It’s the way babies begin to increase the strength in their tiny bodies. The hard part? Getting down to and up from the crawling position. If you use your bedroom to exercise while in our current “quarantine”, the bed makes a great support to help you get up and down — if you really need it.

    Other animals crawl too. Bears, big cats, and lizards, are a few. While I’m not sure you can really call them “crawls”, in fitness lingo, “bear crawls”, “cat crawls”, and “lizard crawls” represent the high, medium and low levels of crawling and represent the various degrees of difficulty. You can do a quick search using those terms online and see what those crawls actually look like. You will see that they are essentially crawling with your knees off the ground and your torso at a different height off the ground. Lizard crawls are very low to the ground and are the most difficult. Bear crawls and cat crawls are variations of the basic crawl and are relatively easy to do for most seniors.

    If you have been diagnosed with severe osteoporosis, you must be very careful when doing anything more than normal crawling on all fours because of the pressure on your wrists, arms and shoulders. So if bone density is a factor, start with ordinary crawling like a 4 month old.

    An added benefit to crawling is the “cross body” movement involved. While you are not really crossing your arms or legs, scientists who have actually studied the benefits of crawling have shown that crawling provides right and left brain stimulation in the same manner as true cross body movement.

    So, give crawling a try as an exercise. While it seems simple, it can be a great exercise for your entire body. If your spouse or significant other asks what you are doing crawling around on the floor, just tell them you dropped your hearing aid battery and are looking for it somewhere on the floor. That’s what my mother-in-law used to do.

    Thank you for reading.

  • Energy Bite 331 – Do These Eight Things

    One of the suggestions that I received from my post asking for some ideas, two weeks ago, was to write out “5 Tips for . . . “, “6 Secrets to . . . “, “10 Ways to . . . “. I actually started to write a “Tips Book” for Seniors a number of years ago but never finished it. Maybe I’ll be inspired to finish it.

    So here are eight Tips for Active Seniors that you may find useful:

    To Keep Your Aging Body Young, To Look and Feel Better the Rest of Your Life, To Keep Your Body Filled with Personal Energy . . . Do these 8 Things

    1. Move your body. Of course that’s number one. That’s what The Come Alive Project is all about. Keep young through movement. Keep your blood and lymph circulating. Make your muscles strong and keep them that way. Become flexible so you can bend and twist..  Keep your joints free; don’t let them become rusty hinges.

    2. Eat Right. What does that mean? Mostly stay away from processed foods, food really high in Saturated Fats, SUGAR, refined white flour, and so forth. You know precisely what I mean.

      But there is a lot of confusion as to what it the right way to eat. I have said many times before, I lost nearly 40 pounds quickly by simply cutting back on meat a little, increasing the veggies, staying away from junk food, SUGAR. There a lot of diets out there. It’s confusing. But the above worked for me. I lost nearly 40 pounds ten years ago and it’s never come back. Discover what works for you.

    3. Breathe deeply of air and of life. Oxygen is the number one thing that keeps your body alive. You can last without food for a long time. You never have to exercise and you’ll live. Maybe miserably, but you’ll live. But without oxygen, you die. Quickly. Breathing oxygenates your blood which feeds your cells. It provides partial fuel for your Mitlchondria which is the cellular furnace providing the energy to your body for life.

    4. Stand up straight. Good posture is critical for a healthy life. When you hunch over, you put crimps in your body. You choke off your air supply by crimping your chest cavity. Good posture keeps your attitude positive and affects the way other people perceive you.

    5. Find a purpose and go after it. Get clarity on your purpose. Make a plan to go after it and — Execute the plan. Mine? Help Seniors understand and achieve a healthy and fit body and attitude to get the most out of their senior years.

    6. Accept your current reality for what it is. Then BECOME WILLING to create the new reality you want. Ask yourself: “Who am I?” Ask yourself: “Who do I want to be?”. Take an inventory of yourself, being  brutally honest with yourself.

    7. Learn to live life on life’s terms. Life throws a lot of “stuff” at us. Like unexpected viruses. We all need to learn to live with them. They shall pass.  If you think changes need to be made, start with yourself. See number 6 above.

    8. Stay positive. There are enough negative people on earth, don’t be one of them. Lift yourself up and lift up the people around you. People like to be around high energy, positive people. They don’t like to be around toxic, negative people who drag you down with them.

    Hope you find those suggestions useful. Thank you for reading.

  • Energy Bite 330 – Clarify the Confusion

    Most seniors don’t want to be bodybuilders or performance athletes. Yet most seniors are presented with exercises and diets that seem to promote building large muscles and losing weight to the point at which you have minimal fat on your body. There is virtually nothing about fitness as part of your overall lifestyle.

    Yes, bodybuilders have huge muscles and very low fat. And most marathoners are thin and look malnourished. Neither are necessarily healthy.

    The problem for seniors who want to just be healthy and fit, but not go to extremes, is that there is very little good information available to satisfy that need.

    There are lots of exercise programs for seniors. They say all sorts of different and confusing things. Most don’t touch on lifestyle and only talk about the fitness end of it. The best I have seen that DOES include lifestyle factors, is Younger Next Year, by Chris Crowley and the late Dr. Henry Lodge. It has the best advice I have seen to date for Seniors about keeping fit and staying young, and is the closest I have seen to my own thoughts and theories on Health and Fitness for Seniors. It’s still not good enough.

    Another good resource about staying fit and living young is Making Old Bodies  Young, by Bernarr Macfadden. This book was originally published in 1919, and is very “old school” about health and fitness. That’s one reason it’s so good. Many of Macfadden’s principles, thought of as “far out” in the 1900s are just now being validated by science.

    There is still a lot of confusion, particularly on the weight loss and diet side. Most of the dietary plans out there work short term and some are arguably, dangerous. But they are only useful for a while. Most of those programs are not long term solutions and most people on them revert to their original weight over time.  Keto, Whole 30. Vegetarian, Vegan, Paleo, etc.  The list goes on and on.

    I was successful in losing weight using The South Beach Diet, by Dr. Arthur Agatston. I lost 40 pounds and never gained a bit of it back. It promoted neither low fat nor low carbohydrate. But it did stress the right fats and carbs and was what he called “Low Glycemic”. It worked for both me and my wife, but I have no idea whether it would work for you.

    So, what’s the answer?

    Stay tuned. Over the next few weeks, I’ll share ideas that have worked for me to go from 200 pounds to 160 pounds and be in the best shape of my life, starting at age 70 and still continuing today. I’ll include and share ideas from people I have interviewed and studied for well over a decade. The goal is to provide ideas and guidelines, but not specific dictates about what is best for you. As Bruce Lee said so well, “Take what you find useful, discard what is not, and add what is uniquely yours.” Great advice!

    As a side note: I’m neither a Medical Doctor nor a Psychologist. I earned an NASM Personal Trainer Certification a decade ago with a designation as a Senior Fitness Specialist. I am letting them lapse this year because I have never actually used them, and I am 80 years old after all.

    Anyhow, I hope you will find the upcoming material useful, and I thank you for reading.