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Clearly, your body changes as you age. I learned this lesson years ago when my son was three years old. We started him skiing, and he loved every minute of it. When he fell, he tumbled onto his behind, jumped right back up, and skied down the hill like nothing had happened. He was pure rubber and resilience.
However, I was 53 years his senior that year. I did an inadvertent 360-degree twirl on the slopes myself. His mother saw me and immediately asked if I had broken my wrist, wondering when I could return to surgery. The difference between a flexible young body and an older body is critical. Consequently, I retired from skiing that season and now enjoy the lodge, where I write and make them great dinners.
Indeed, your older body desperately needs work to stay flexible, strong, and balanced as time goes on. I have seen too many independent seniors lose everything after a simple fall in their own home. They go from living on their own to spending their last days in a care center, sometimes never leaving bed. This outcome is not healthspan. Instead, you want a fall to be like my son’s—just on your butt and back up. Sadly, too many fall and cannot get up. This isn't a commercial for a safety pendant, but a sincere plea for you to start working your muscles.
Specifically, we talk frequently about heart health and clear arteries in longevity. Those things are unquestionably crucial. Nevertheless, the biggest threat to functional independence as we age is a condition called sarcopenia. This is the medical term for age-related muscle loss.
Unfortunately, we start losing about 3 to 8 percent of our muscle mass every decade after age 30. That loss accelerates quickly once you hit 70. This problem is not just about looking less toned; fundamentally, it is about losing the ability to stand up from a chair, carry groceries, or, most importantly, catch yourself when you trip. The falls that result are often catastrophic.
Amazingly, resistance training is effective at the microscopic level, too. We have talked extensively about the tiny, complex mechanisms of the cell, but here is the key takeaway: small things benefit from big things.
In fact, increasing muscle mass through training has direct, positive effects on two major microscopic drivers of aging: mitochondrial function and telomere health.
To elaborate, when you challenge your muscles, you signal your cells to create more energy. This signal forces your mitochondria—the cellular powerhouses—to become both more numerous and more efficient. Better mitochondrial function equals more energy and less cellular stress.
Moreover, studies show that resistance training actually increases the activity of the enzyme telomerase in some cells. Telomerase helps maintain the protective caps on your DNA called telomeres.
Therefore, you don’t need to buy fancy, expensive supplements like NAD or telomere boosters. Picking up a dumbbell costs less money but yields more results. You gain muscular strength, better metabolism, stronger bones, and the cellular benefits all at once.
Let's consider how muscle mass influences your diet. Your muscle is actually your body’s largest organ for glucose disposal. Think of it like this: when you eat, your body releases glucose (sugar) into your bloodstream. Insulin then works to escort that glucose out of your blood and into your cells for energy. The vast majority of that glucose gets parked in your muscle cells.
Clearly, if you have more muscle mass, you automatically have a bigger parking lot for that glucose.
Consequently, more muscle means your body gains better insulin sensitivity. It becomes more efficient at regulating blood sugar. This effect is the absolute bedrock of preventing and managing Type 2 diabetes. Ultimately, resistance training is a powerful pharmaceutical intervention for your metabolic health.
However, the benefits don't stop at the muscles. Let's talk about bone density, which is crucial for everyone, especially women. We know calcium and Vitamin D are important, yet they are only one part of the solution.
Remember that bone is living tissue; it responds to stress. When you lift a weight—even if it is just your own body weight in a squat—the mechanical force signals to your bones that they must get stronger. This process is known as the Mechanostat principle. Conversely, without that heavy, high-intensity mechanical load, bone density naturally declines, leading to osteoporosis.
In conclusion, if you only do low-impact cardio, you are helping your heart, but you are not sending the signal needed to maintain or increase bone mineral density. Specifically, you must load your bones to strengthen them.
Beyond pure strength, true independence depends on mobility and balance. This is where functional training, including Yoga, plays a huge role. My favorite Yoga classes are a combination of bodyweight resistance and cardiovascular movement. I look for the physics—the movement, the resistance, and the balance—and keep the "woo" out of it. Furthermore, a Yoga mat costs far less than some supplements, but it will make a fall much easier to recover from.
Therefore, if you are getting started, please get professional help! Having a great gym coach to help with proper form is paramount—shout out to my friends Jeremy the Hulk and the Zeigler Monster! Additionally, it is equally important to enlist a private Yoga instructor to ensure you are not malaligned and that you know what to look for. A special shout-out to my yogi Xuan—and yes, I will be doing more classes this year!
Ultimately, the reason we train is not just to be strong; rather, it is so that if you fall when you are 65, 75, or 80, you possess the strength, stability, and awareness to get up by yourself. This ability is the true mark of functional longevity.
Let me give you two examples of why this ability matters so much. A fellow was admitted to a facility after he broke his hip. Before he fell, he lived alone, was a champion bowler, and enjoyed his life. He simply slipped on a rug, fell, and was found a day later. After his hip was fixed, he spent the next year of his life mostly in bed, eventually dying of COVID-19 in a long-term care facility. One single fall that he couldn't get up from changed his life and his outlook completely.
Contrast that with my own dad. He took a fall at age 96 trying to trim a tree. It took a bit of effort, and he received a stern warning from his son and the EMTs, but he got up. He lived independently until age 98.
Consequently, this kind of preparation matters because the statistics are sobering: falls are the leading cause of injury death for people over 65. Tragically, studies show that up to 30% of seniors who fracture a hip lose their independence entirely.
Finally, resistance training, combined with functional movement, is the macroscopic lever that pulls all those microscopic switches. It is the closest thing to a fountain of youth that doesn’t require a prescription. It just requires effort.
Remember that you must continually increase the demand on your body—this is called progressive overload. Most importantly, remember that resistance training is the stimulus, but protein is the building material. Aim for a high protein intake daily, and definitely enjoy that protein smoothie right after your workout!
On that note, we’re even taking this training on the road this year with our Mediterranean Cruise, where we’ll have an instructor to help you with simple movements—things so that if you fall, you can get up by yourself.
By Terry Simpson4.8
100100 ratings
Clearly, your body changes as you age. I learned this lesson years ago when my son was three years old. We started him skiing, and he loved every minute of it. When he fell, he tumbled onto his behind, jumped right back up, and skied down the hill like nothing had happened. He was pure rubber and resilience.
However, I was 53 years his senior that year. I did an inadvertent 360-degree twirl on the slopes myself. His mother saw me and immediately asked if I had broken my wrist, wondering when I could return to surgery. The difference between a flexible young body and an older body is critical. Consequently, I retired from skiing that season and now enjoy the lodge, where I write and make them great dinners.
Indeed, your older body desperately needs work to stay flexible, strong, and balanced as time goes on. I have seen too many independent seniors lose everything after a simple fall in their own home. They go from living on their own to spending their last days in a care center, sometimes never leaving bed. This outcome is not healthspan. Instead, you want a fall to be like my son’s—just on your butt and back up. Sadly, too many fall and cannot get up. This isn't a commercial for a safety pendant, but a sincere plea for you to start working your muscles.
Specifically, we talk frequently about heart health and clear arteries in longevity. Those things are unquestionably crucial. Nevertheless, the biggest threat to functional independence as we age is a condition called sarcopenia. This is the medical term for age-related muscle loss.
Unfortunately, we start losing about 3 to 8 percent of our muscle mass every decade after age 30. That loss accelerates quickly once you hit 70. This problem is not just about looking less toned; fundamentally, it is about losing the ability to stand up from a chair, carry groceries, or, most importantly, catch yourself when you trip. The falls that result are often catastrophic.
Amazingly, resistance training is effective at the microscopic level, too. We have talked extensively about the tiny, complex mechanisms of the cell, but here is the key takeaway: small things benefit from big things.
In fact, increasing muscle mass through training has direct, positive effects on two major microscopic drivers of aging: mitochondrial function and telomere health.
To elaborate, when you challenge your muscles, you signal your cells to create more energy. This signal forces your mitochondria—the cellular powerhouses—to become both more numerous and more efficient. Better mitochondrial function equals more energy and less cellular stress.
Moreover, studies show that resistance training actually increases the activity of the enzyme telomerase in some cells. Telomerase helps maintain the protective caps on your DNA called telomeres.
Therefore, you don’t need to buy fancy, expensive supplements like NAD or telomere boosters. Picking up a dumbbell costs less money but yields more results. You gain muscular strength, better metabolism, stronger bones, and the cellular benefits all at once.
Let's consider how muscle mass influences your diet. Your muscle is actually your body’s largest organ for glucose disposal. Think of it like this: when you eat, your body releases glucose (sugar) into your bloodstream. Insulin then works to escort that glucose out of your blood and into your cells for energy. The vast majority of that glucose gets parked in your muscle cells.
Clearly, if you have more muscle mass, you automatically have a bigger parking lot for that glucose.
Consequently, more muscle means your body gains better insulin sensitivity. It becomes more efficient at regulating blood sugar. This effect is the absolute bedrock of preventing and managing Type 2 diabetes. Ultimately, resistance training is a powerful pharmaceutical intervention for your metabolic health.
However, the benefits don't stop at the muscles. Let's talk about bone density, which is crucial for everyone, especially women. We know calcium and Vitamin D are important, yet they are only one part of the solution.
Remember that bone is living tissue; it responds to stress. When you lift a weight—even if it is just your own body weight in a squat—the mechanical force signals to your bones that they must get stronger. This process is known as the Mechanostat principle. Conversely, without that heavy, high-intensity mechanical load, bone density naturally declines, leading to osteoporosis.
In conclusion, if you only do low-impact cardio, you are helping your heart, but you are not sending the signal needed to maintain or increase bone mineral density. Specifically, you must load your bones to strengthen them.
Beyond pure strength, true independence depends on mobility and balance. This is where functional training, including Yoga, plays a huge role. My favorite Yoga classes are a combination of bodyweight resistance and cardiovascular movement. I look for the physics—the movement, the resistance, and the balance—and keep the "woo" out of it. Furthermore, a Yoga mat costs far less than some supplements, but it will make a fall much easier to recover from.
Therefore, if you are getting started, please get professional help! Having a great gym coach to help with proper form is paramount—shout out to my friends Jeremy the Hulk and the Zeigler Monster! Additionally, it is equally important to enlist a private Yoga instructor to ensure you are not malaligned and that you know what to look for. A special shout-out to my yogi Xuan—and yes, I will be doing more classes this year!
Ultimately, the reason we train is not just to be strong; rather, it is so that if you fall when you are 65, 75, or 80, you possess the strength, stability, and awareness to get up by yourself. This ability is the true mark of functional longevity.
Let me give you two examples of why this ability matters so much. A fellow was admitted to a facility after he broke his hip. Before he fell, he lived alone, was a champion bowler, and enjoyed his life. He simply slipped on a rug, fell, and was found a day later. After his hip was fixed, he spent the next year of his life mostly in bed, eventually dying of COVID-19 in a long-term care facility. One single fall that he couldn't get up from changed his life and his outlook completely.
Contrast that with my own dad. He took a fall at age 96 trying to trim a tree. It took a bit of effort, and he received a stern warning from his son and the EMTs, but he got up. He lived independently until age 98.
Consequently, this kind of preparation matters because the statistics are sobering: falls are the leading cause of injury death for people over 65. Tragically, studies show that up to 30% of seniors who fracture a hip lose their independence entirely.
Finally, resistance training, combined with functional movement, is the macroscopic lever that pulls all those microscopic switches. It is the closest thing to a fountain of youth that doesn’t require a prescription. It just requires effort.
Remember that you must continually increase the demand on your body—this is called progressive overload. Most importantly, remember that resistance training is the stimulus, but protein is the building material. Aim for a high protein intake daily, and definitely enjoy that protein smoothie right after your workout!
On that note, we’re even taking this training on the road this year with our Mediterranean Cruise, where we’ll have an instructor to help you with simple movements—things so that if you fall, you can get up by yourself.

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