- "There isn't a health
club in the area that caters to older adults/I can't afford
a membership."
- "I'd like to do some
exercises at home, but I am not sure what are the best
ones for me and what equipment I should be using."
- "I am away from home
a lot, so it's hard to stick with a program."
- "I don't want to
spend a lot of time exercising."
- "It looks too hard--too
intimidating!"
- "I'm too old to start."
Your Problems Are
Solved
Now you can eliminate your roadblocks and reap the benefits
of strength training. Exercise bands (aka rubber resistance
tubing) are perfect for the person over fifty who wants
a simple, safe, effective, and inexpensive way to train
at home.
Exercise bands are an effective
tool for strength training. When you strength train, your
muscles exert a force against some type of resistance. It
doesn't matter if this resistance is from machines, dumbbells,
or rubber tubing---your muscles, connective tissue, and
bones will respond by getting stronger.
A reserch study (Mikesky,
1994) found that older adults who used rubber tubing for
12 weeks on a moderate program increased their strength
an average of 82%! In a review of this study, Ralph LaForge,
renowned fitness expert, remarked "These results suggest
that home-based resistance training program utilizing elastic
tubing can serve as a practical, effective means of eliciting
strength gains in adults over the age of 65. Exercise bands
are inexpensive, compact and easy to use, and is therefore
a convenient means of strength training for those who are
older and on limited incomes."
As you get stronger with
strength training, you will need added resistance in order
to improve. If you are using dumbbells, you need to use
heavier weights---this can get costly and cumbersome. With
exercise bands, you simply move it farther to make an exercise
harder. Also, they allow you to train muscles that dumbbells
can't train in a seated position, such as the chest and
mid-back. Because an exercise band only weighs a few ounces,
it as very portable.
A Call to Action
Strength training is critical
for combating frailty and disability, for increasing strength
and mobility, for staying active and self-sufficient. Research
has consistently shown the fitness and health benefits of
strength training for older adults. You don't have to decline
with age! You can control these declines or even reverse
them with strength training---it will have a great impact
on the quality of your life as you grow older.
It's never too late to turn
back the clock with this powerful age eraser. Strength training
can improve the quality of your life at any age or condition.
Traditionally it was thought that it was normal to get weak
and feeble as one aged. We now know that this is not true--that
inactivity is the culprit, not aging itself. But you are
lucky--you have access to new research that wasn't available
to the previous generations. It's important to embrace new
information, even if it means tossing out familiar ideas.
If you want to stay fit,
trim, strong, mobile, and physically independent as you
age, then you should be strength training for 30 minutes,
twice a week. There isn't another investment that pays off
as well.
Note: Although a
moderate strength training is very safe, if you are 35 or
older or have heart disease or another medical condition,
you should check with your doctor before starting any exercise
program. |