Calgary Herald

TRY HEAVY LIFTING

John Briley discovers you’re never too old to regain that lost muscle — even at home.

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Pandemic life has a way of revealing our weaknesses. For those of us of a certain age, I mean that literally. If you are feeling like certain household activities — toting groceries, hoisting children, moving furniture, carrying laundry — are more difficult than they were in the past, you aren’t alone. And you aren’t imagining it.

For me, it started a few years ago, when I noticed that lifting an air conditione­r, carrying a child up to bed or bringing in a load of firewood seemed harder than they once did. I summoned excuses for each difficulty (“Darned kid gained 20 pounds today!”), but now, at age 54, I’m ready to concede: I simply can’t lift as much as I once could.

Starting sometime in our 30s (the data isn’t precise), we lose up to eight per cent of our muscle mass per decade, a decline called sarcopenia, along with up to 30 per cent of our strength and power. This leaves us weaker, less mobile and — especially after we cross age 50 — more vulnerable to injury from falls and similar accidents.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Men and women can regain some of that lost muscle mass and, importantl­y, stay strong enough to enjoy youthful activities well into their winter years, experts say. The key is strength training.

“I have people who start in their 60s, 70s and even 80s,” says Jordan Metzl, a sports medicine physician at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. “Building and maintainin­g strength is one of the most important things you can do at any stage of life, and it’s extremely important after age 50.”

Why? Strength training improves your “economy of movement,” Metzl says, meaning the amount of energy you expend to complete a task, and it “off-loads joints, so you can do the same amount of work with less pain and lower risk of injury. You’re essentiall­y getting more juice out of your muscles.” Metzl is personally vested in this quest: He has run 35 marathons, competed in Iron Man triathlons and says he aspires, even as he approaches his mid-50s, “to keep going forever.”

But what if your marathons are measured in Netflix episodes or you just need to jump-start an engine that’s been accumulati­ng rust for years? Again, you’re not alone, says Dixie Stanforth, associate professor of instructio­n in the University of Texas at Austin’s Department of Kinesiolog­y and Health Education.

“Most people are profession­al sitters,” she says. As a result, many muscles in the front of our bodies — namely our hip flexors and chest muscles — become short and tight. That shuts off signals to their correspond­ing anterior muscles — the glutes and upper back — to keep working, so those areas become weak and inhibited. All the sitting we’re doing at home could be making things worse.

The first thing to do if you’re starting or resuming strength training, says Stanforth, a 60-year-old personal trainer and “avid athlete,” is to target major muscle groups, especially the glutes and back.

“Glutes are tremendous­ly important, because they activate the ‘rear chain’ of the body and can produce a lot of power for movement,” Stanforth says. Rear chain muscles are critical for posture, balance, running, jumping and — yes — lifting heavy things. To strengthen those muscles, Stanforth says squats, rows and leg presses are all good, because they engage the core and require movement in multiple joints.

She advises strengthen­ing front-facing muscles (chest, abs, biceps and quadriceps, for example), but also devoting extra time to stretching them because of how tight they become in our daily, desk-bound lives. “Many people might consider a 1:2 ratio of exercises” — that is, double your strengthen­ing time for rearchain muscles — “but all of the major muscles (including biceps, calves and triceps) should be trained.”

And, before you even ask: Just about every exercise you can do in a gym you can do at home — albeit with some modificati­on. Homebound strength exercises

Building and maintainin­g strength is one of the most important things you can do at any stage of life ...

that don’t require equipment include squats (with or without weight); chair dips; pushups; pull-ups; planks; lunges; burpees; and step-ups. If you have canned goods or empty milk or drink containers (a gallon of water weighs approximat­ely eight pounds), you can use them for strength training.

Both Stanforth and Metzl recommend building muscle by performing a high number of reps of a lighter weight — i.e., one you can lift at least 15 times before failure, the fitness term for can’t ... do ... one ... more.

As for how often to train, the weekly guidelines for generally healthy people age 50 and older aren’t any different from those for other demographi­cs: Strength train two to three days, engage in aerobic activity at least five days at moderate intensity, or at least three days a week at high intensity, and perform a stretching routine at least two days a week.

Metzl takes this up a notch by incorporat­ing high-intensity interval training (or HIIT) — short, punishing bursts of activity usually lasting 30 to 90 seconds with recovery breaks in between. “I do HIIT with people in their 70s and 80s,” he tells me. “We all change over the decades, but I don’t want people to be afraid of intensity.”

For those who can perform them, Metzl suggests burpees, jump squats and lunges, which he says deliver full-body functional training. “Burpees utilize every muscle in your body. They’re high intensity and tremendous­ly effective.” And, Metzl says, you’ll still reap a benefit from burpees if you opt to step — not jump — your feet back when dropping into the pushup position at the nadir of the exercise.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Strength training improves your “economy of movement,” says sports medicine physician Jordan Metzl.
GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O Strength training improves your “economy of movement,” says sports medicine physician Jordan Metzl.

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