It keeps your bones strong and healthy.
Your bones need to stay challenged, just like your brain needs exercise to stay sharp. After about age 30, you start to lose bone density at a small percentage each year.
Keep in mind, women make up 80 per cent of osteoporosis cases as loss of bone mass can be accelerated due to menopause.
Resistance training creates force on the bone and helps it stay strong.
The research community is recognising that we can reduce our risk of cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes, and many classic chronic diseases including cancer if we are active, anything from strength training to cardio
They say running is good for your heart, your brain, your waistline, and your mental health. That applies to weight training too.
The stronger you are, the more resilient you are against disease and overall risk for mortality.
You burn more calories if you have more muscle. Muscle is an active tissue; it burns more energy at rest compared to fat.
Weight training can aid in weight maintenance and change your body’s composition.
Muscle weighs more than fat. A pound of feathers is the same as a pound of bricks, but one’s less dense taking up less room.
Along with keeping away chronic disease, strength training has you burning through glucose, which is good news for those grappling with Type 2 diabetes who consistently need to manage blood sugar levels.
Lifting weights even aids in fighting off inflammation, a marker tied to many diseases. Studies have suggested that regular resistance training sessions, about twice a week, resulted in drops in inflammation in overweight women.
Weight training comes with other bonuses.
Besides the aesthetic, physiological and strength benefits, it affects how we feel and how clearly we think. Weight training [has] proven to improve the quality of a person’s sleep.
As you train, your body grows stronger, and the effects will have a positive impact into other aspects of your physical activity.
If your legs get stronger, then the amount of time you can spend on a walking challenge, on a treadmill, chasing your children, will be longer.
Even very good runners who do weight training actually improve their running efficiency. They’re able to run at the same speed while using a lower capacity of their leg strength.
For now it is about being physically strong for the day to day activities we want to enjoy and how far we want to push ourselves but as we age it will be about maintaining mobility and autonomy.
Strength training, even in the elderly, provides better balance and strengthens your legs. It means being able to carry heavy groceries up a flight of stairs, keep doing day to day activities and enjoy health and longevity.
Our muscle mass really deteriorates in old age. Strength is a clinical marker for functional dependence.
Fifty per cent of seniors who get a hip fracture from a fall don’t live past two years following the incident. With improved balance, they’d better equipped to regain equilibrium.
Strength training can lead to visible physical changes in your body. As you become stronger, you may notice improvements in muscle tone, posture, and overall body composition. These changes can boost your self-esteem and make you feel more confident in your appearance.
Achieving strength and fitness goals through consistent training can provide a sense of accomplishment. When you set and reach personal records in lifting weights it can be a powerful confidence booster. You know you can overcome challenges and set your mind to achieve specific objectives.
It keeps your bones strong and healthy.
Your bones need to stay challenged, just like your brain needs exercise to stay sharp. After about age 30, you start to lose bone density at a small percentage each year.
Keep in mind, women make up 80 per cent of osteoporosis cases as loss of bone mass can be accelerated due to menopause.
Resistance training creates force on the bone and helps it stay strong.
The research community is recognising that we can reduce our risk of cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes, and many classic chronic diseases including cancer if we are active, anything from strength training to cardio
They say running is good for your heart, your brain, your waistline, and your mental health. That applies to weight training too.
The stronger you are, the more resilient you are against disease and overall risk for mortality.
You burn more calories if you have more muscle. Muscle is an active tissue; it burns more energy at rest compared to fat.
Weight training can aid in weight maintenance and change your body’s composition.
Muscle weighs more than fat. A pound of feathers is the same as a pound of bricks, but one’s less dense taking up less room.
Along with keeping away chronic disease, strength training has you burning through glucose, which is good news for those grappling with Type 2 diabetes who consistently need to manage blood sugar levels.
Lifting weights even aids in fighting off inflammation, a marker tied to many diseases. Studies have suggested that regular resistance training sessions, about twice a week, resulted in drops in inflammation in overweight women.
Weight training comes with other bonuses.
Besides the aesthetic, physiological and strength benefits, it affects how we feel and how clearly we think. Weight training [has] proven to improve the quality of a person’s sleep.
As you train, your body grows stronger, and the effects will have a positive impact into other aspects of your physical activity.
If your legs get stronger, then the amount of time you can spend on a walking challenge, on a treadmill, chasing your children, will be longer.
Even very good runners who do weight training actually improve their running efficiency. They’re able to run at the same speed while using a lower capacity of their leg strength.
For now it is about being physically strong for the day to day activities we want to enjoy and how far we want to push ourselves but as we age it will be about maintaining mobility and autonomy.
Strength training, even in the elderly, provides better balance and strengthens your legs. It means being able to carry heavy groceries up a flight of stairs, keep doing day to day activities and enjoy health and longevity.
Our muscle mass really deteriorates in old age. Strength is a clinical marker for functional dependence.
Fifty per cent of seniors who get a hip fracture from a fall don’t live past two years following the incident. With improved balance, they’d better equipped to regain equilibrium.
Strength training can lead to visible physical changes in your body. As you become stronger, you may notice improvements in muscle tone, posture, and overall body composition. These changes can boost your self-esteem and make you feel more confident in your appearance.
Achieving strength and fitness goals through consistent training can provide a sense of accomplishment. When you set and reach personal records in lifting weights it can be a powerful confidence booster. You know you can overcome challenges and set your mind to achieve specific objectives.
6 FREE strategies6 Weeks of education and action4 Weeks to kick your nutrition into touch.
In just 3 months, if you have implemented our strategies, watched our expert presentations, completed our strength workouts, and tweaked your nutrition - you WILL feel transformed, no longer on the path of midlife limbo, but stronger in mind and body and have rediscovered the 'YOU' you used to be!