There is no more powerful anti-ageing drug than fitness and health. Now that we're here, all we have to do is work hard to stay here.
1. Go to the gym and lift.
2. Eat well.
- We buy most of our groceries from the outside edges of the grocery store: the produce, dairy and meat sections.
- Stay out of the aisles as much as possible with these limited exceptions: cereal, baking supplies, nut butters and, of course, coffee.
- Get in the habit of reading food labels. Look for nutrient breakdown, the number of ingredients, whether it includes more real food or more chemicals
- If it has trans fats, put the box back on the shelf.
- If you bake it yourself, you know what's in it.
3. Accept reality. Then move on.
4. Don’t accept ageing as an excuse for performance declines.
5. Just say "NO!" to fad diets.
And, please, please, please, use your common sense when you are looking to the internet for advice. Yes, there is some great nutrition information out there and here are a few hints on how to identify the good stuff and weed out the bogus:
- The author has an actual degree in the subject matter.
- The source is an actual scientific paper
- The source doesn't make any promises. There is no one thing that will change your life and change your performance, no matter how enticing the promise sounds. And the simpler fix, the more enticing it sounds, the more likely it is to be false.
- You don't have to go through a 10-minute video that talks about their unique system that you can buy for just a fraction of its purported value.
- If it is a buffed-up male personal trainer* addressing menopausal women and telling them he has the solution, take a hard pass on that one.
(* My apologies to those of you who think you fit into this category. I mean no disrespect to any individual but if anyone says there is just one thing or trick or secret, they're either selling you fiction or they don't understand that there's too much going on for one thing to be the singular solution.)
6. More isn’t always better. Better is better. Train smart.
- Threshold interval training to maintain aerobic & anaerobic systems.
- Plyometric training to develop and maintain muscle elasticity.
- Smart stretching to maintain the range of motion of joints and muscles.
- Continued focus on technique. (We might as well use the wisdom of our years, right?)
Smart training incorporating a regular protocol of quality intervals, yoga and strength training will have better long term results than a diet of LSD (long, slow distance).
7. Older and wiser: use your years of experience to your best benefit. Good technique can make you more efficient and prevent injury.
You know the saying "older and wiser"? Applying this to training to swim, bike and run, I like to say our wisdom can come in terms of refined technique.
We all know that technique counts for a lot in swimming but improvements in technique can also make you a better cyclist and maybe even a better runner. Seek out experts if you haven't already and learn better technique. In swimming where technique is so important, it is common to see masters athletes continue to perform at high levels. There was a local swimmer who competed into his late-70's in masters' meets and was still swimming sub-30 second for 50m in freestyle, backstroke and butterfly. Now, he was a world-class swimmer and was capable of far faster times than most of us could ever dream of but the point of it is that his swim stroke was technically so good, so beautiful to watch, that his superior technique allowed him to counter age-related declines in performance. I will never swim at his level but I saw him swim many times and he worked on technique in every single workout to keep his swim stroke in perfect form. That is a lesson we can all carry into our daily training.
We all know that technique counts for a lot in swimming but improvements in technique can also make you a better cyclist and maybe even a better runner. Seek out experts if you haven't already and learn better technique. In swimming where technique is so important, it is common to see masters athletes continue to perform at high levels. There was a local swimmer who competed into his late-70's in masters' meets and was still swimming sub-30 second for 50m in freestyle, backstroke and butterfly. Now, he was a world-class swimmer and was capable of far faster times than most of us could ever dream of but the point of it is that his swim stroke was technically so good, so beautiful to watch, that his superior technique allowed him to counter age-related declines in performance. I will never swim at his level but I saw him swim many times and he worked on technique in every single workout to keep his swim stroke in perfect form. That is a lesson we can all carry into our daily training.
8. If it hurts, look into it now.
9. Get some sleep.
- Have a routine time of the evening to prepare to sleep.
- Power off or turn off electronics, particularly anything with a blue screen.
- Avoid caffeine late in the day.
- Try a soothing drink like camomile tea.
- Try melatonin supplements or tart cherry juice (which is high in melatonin)
- Try a warm bath or warm milk.
For the record, none of these seem to work consistently for me but I've learned that I can get through a few days with very little sleep and then, by the third or fourth night, exhaustion takes over. I know it's not ideal in terms of promoting great recovery but I'm working on it.
10. Treat yourself. Sometimes, it’s OK to relax and have fun.
The views and opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of Element Cycling & Multisport. Any content or comments in this article or any article in this blog are not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual or anyone or anything.
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