Check Out Our Shop
Page 60 of 65 FirstFirst ... 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 LastLast
Results 1,476 to 1,500 of 1603

Thread: Athletic performance in your 40s?

  1. #1476
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Alpental
    Posts
    6,677
    My high side of 50 goal is generally to be in good enough shape to continue to chase and be chased by 20-30 somethings.

    Consistency is the key, some is better than none but more isn't always best. Lifting heavy with low reps and lifting light with high reps will both get you strength increases if you are lifting to fatigue/failure, one is more efficient but also more likely to cause injury. Do something every day but don't work the same muscle groups more than every 2-3 days. Functional strength is more important than maximal strength. Eat well. Get good sleep and recovery. It's cliche but it's true.

    Go fast. Have fun.

    Full lower body workout last friday w SVS and the kid.

    Move upside and let the man go through...

  2. #1477
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    7,237
    I think at some point it's time to stop working on progression and instead say that certain levels are good enough. I've mentioned this before, but I do an upper body routine that includes benches at essentially 5x5 @185. That's my maintenance bench weight. I don't try to progress from there, and typically lift as little as possible to stay there, which is about 1-2 upper body days per week. That level (along with 5 or so other staple upper body moves) provides me with enough muscle mass and strength to keep my upper back healthy and provide some protective armor, but not enough to add extra weight I don't need my legs to be carrying.

    I think the same is true for lower body and core - at some point it's enough. I have a much harder time staying at maintenance strength on my lower body however because every little nick and minor injury sets you back a bit. So lower body is always a bit of catch up. I also believe in reasonably heavy squats for skiing if you are doing anything dynamic on the slopes. Landing any substantial air on any slope that isn't perfect creates significant G forces, and I don't want the only time my body experiences those weights (impacts) to be when it's trying to balance on snow.

    As for cardio, it seems I'm always trying to progress there. Ha. Chasing world class bikers around this town will makes you feel off the back quickly.

  3. #1478
    Join Date
    Jan 2022
    Posts
    1,623
    Timely discussion here on switching to maintenance and not worrying about progression as much.

    I'm currently doing starting strength after being mostly a cardio guy for my entire life and making gains, but as a 40+ guy it certainly is at the forefront of my mind that my priorities are being strong and not getting injured, so I could care less about deadlifting 400 pounds.

    So the question becomes, what is enough?

  4. #1479
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    28,530
    Quote Originally Posted by Iowagriz View Post
    Crowd source this group for a home workout - bumbells and a weight bench.
    Are "bumbells" malt liquor 40 ouncers?

  5. #1480
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    3,518
    Quote Originally Posted by oldnew_guy View Post
    Timely discussion here on switching to maintenance and not worrying about progression as much.

    I'm currently doing starting strength after being mostly a cardio guy for my entire life and making gains, but as a 40+ guy it certainly is at the forefront of my mind that my priorities are being strong and not getting injured, so I could care less about deadlifting 400 pounds.

    So the question becomes, what is enough?
    Another cardio guy here, I've done strength training in fits and starts, but I don't think I've ever stuck with it for more than 6 months or so at a time. Moving into old bull mode, I know this is something I need to work on if I want to continue snowboarding for the next 20 years or so.

    I'll be interested to see how people respond to your question

  6. #1481
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    In the swamp
    Posts
    12,083
    ^^^Excellent topic. I used to lift but have dropped doing it in my 40s, even though I tell myself I need to. Now I feel like I don’t know how to start up again, even though I know most lifts. Should I start with 3 days a week, 1 day on Chest / Tris, 1 day on Back / Bis, and one on. legs? Or do 3 days of 1-2 lifts per muscle group, 10 reps?

  7. #1482
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    7,237
    Quote Originally Posted by oldnew_guy View Post
    Timely discussion here on switching to maintenance and not worrying about progression as much.

    I'm currently doing starting strength after being mostly a cardio guy for my entire life and making gains, but as a 40+ guy it certainly is at the forefront of my mind that my priorities are being strong and not getting injured, so I could care less about deadlifting 400 pounds.

    So the question becomes, what is enough?
    Depends on who you are and what you are doing.

    For me, as mentioned, I have a few minimums I use as a gauge. 5x5 benches at 185, 4x6 squats at 225, 4x6 deadlifts at 225 etc. I also have personal base levels for lats, curls, rows, tris. I'm 6', 185. That's not that strong for my size and nothing compared to what I did when I was younger, but it helps. You kind of have to find the levels and moves that keep you "fit." Sometimes I'm over those baselines but I try to not go under them, which is hard at times when you tweak something in the lower body from activities. But at least there's a goal to get back to quickly.

    You might not need that much but I'm still getting airtime on skis and bikes, and don't want to give that up anytime soon. Plus soccer against 20 somethings. Anyway, FWIW. Good luck. Aging and staying fit is such a crazy thing, and very few rules to guide.

  8. #1483
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    7,237
    Quote Originally Posted by The SnowShow View Post
    ^^^Excellent topic. I used to lift but have dropped doing it in my 40s, even though I tell myself I need to. Now I feel like I don’t know how to start up again, even though I know most lifts. Should I start with 3 days a week, 1 day on Chest / Tris, 1 day on Back / Bis, and one on. legs? Or do 3 days of 1-2 lifts per muscle group, 10 reps?
    I'd suggest start with 2 days per week upper, 2 days lower (and one of those days can be both so you only lift 3x week.) Start with 10-12 reps and aim to feel it a day or two later but not with pain, just with soreness. Easier to start with less and work up then to start with a lot and pull something.

  9. #1484
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    12,290
    I use the Caliber app (free version) to track sets and reps - I’m guessing there are other apps that do the same I did no research on which were best.

    Made a big difference for me - both in going into a workout being able to easily see where I was at last time - and also to get a sense of how rest impacts my next workout (having 4-5 days off in between hitting a body part rather than 2-3 leads to me being able to lift noticeably more)

    It also generates a “overall strength score” and tries to show you how “balanced” your strength is across areas of your body. I’m less clear on the value of these metrics for me personally but it’s there to look at - could potentially indicate when you have plateaued and need to switch things up.

  10. #1485
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    In the swamp
    Posts
    12,083
    Quote Originally Posted by EWG View Post
    I'd suggest start with 2 days per week upper, 2 days lower (and one of those days can be both so you only lift 3x week.) Start with 10-12 reps and aim to feel it a day or two later but not with pain, just with soreness. Easier to start with less and work up then to start with a lot and pull something.
    Thanks. How many sets to start do you think?

  11. #1486
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Conformist, Complacent State
    Posts
    1,056
    I can't get warmed up for cardio in under 20-30min. Other older folks can just start skinning at days pace from the get go.

  12. #1487
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    12,290

    Athletic performance in your 40s?

    Using a bike trainer on Zwift it was eye opening to see how much better I performed in a standardized test after warming up for 30 minutes versus 5-10.

  13. #1488
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    7,237
    Quote Originally Posted by The SnowShow View Post
    Thanks. How many sets to start do you think?
    First week or two I'd do 2 sets of work after one light warm up set. Then 3 from then on, with or without the warm up set as needed. Listen to your body, it'll tell you if you are going too fast.

  14. #1489
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    2 hours from anything
    Posts
    11,076
    Quote Originally Posted by The SnowShow View Post
    ^^^Excellent topic. I used to lift but have dropped doing it in my 40s, even though I tell myself I need to. Now I feel like I don’t know how to start up again, even though I know most lifts. Should I start with 3 days a week, 1 day on Chest / Tris, 1 day on Back / Bis, and one on. legs? Or do 3 days of 1-2 lifts per muscle group, 10 reps?
    I’d recommend you start by doing full body lift days focusing on multi joint movements 3 days a week. I’d start with 2 sets of each exercise, see how you feel, and increase or back off depending on how you feel. You don’t want to be super sore or even sore, just slightly sore. Most importantly only move up in weight by 10lbs per session for large lifts and 5lbs for lighter lifts. Even if it feels like you have more in the tank (unless it feels really really easy).

    You can design this yourself with a little research or buy a program. Ben Bruno has a really good 6 week program that you can repeat and also gives you access to ask questions and get some coaching.

  15. #1490
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    in the brew room
    Posts
    2,396
    Quote Originally Posted by Meconium View Post
    I can't get warmed up for cardio in under 20-30min. Other older folks can just start skinning at days pace from the get go.
    Quote Originally Posted by bennymac View Post
    Using a bike trainer on Zwift it was eye opening to see how much better I performed in a standardized test after warming up for 30 minutes versus 5-10.
    i've thought about jumping on the peloton for 10-15 min before going on a tour to get some kind of warm up in. esp if w other people who may be faster. not sure if beneficial if it's 30-45 min until i start skinning though?

  16. #1491
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    9,709
    Appreciating the discussions here.

  17. #1492
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    9,709
    Appreciating the discussions here.

  18. #1493
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    panhandle locdog
    Posts
    8,159
    Quote Originally Posted by oldnew_guy View Post
    Timely discussion here on switching to maintenance and not worrying about progression as much.

    I'm currently doing starting strength after being mostly a cardio guy for my entire life and making gains, but as a 40+ guy it certainly is at the forefront of my mind that my priorities are being strong and not getting injured, so I could care less about deadlifting 400 pounds.

    So the question becomes, what is enough?
    I’d say bodyweight bench press, 1.5x bodyweight squat, 2x bodyweight deadlift.

  19. #1494
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    SEA>DEN>Spokanistan
    Posts
    3,204
    Quote Originally Posted by TAFKALVS View Post
    I’d say bodyweight bench press, 1.5x bodyweight squat, 2x bodyweight deadlift.
    Dude, you’re not >40? Why TF are you posting in this thread.

    We’re in our thirties we can eat shit, not drink water and still rage on skis from off the couch! Sure, when our 40s roll around that program will shift. But you legitimately confuse me as to why you are posting in a thread about fitness in an age bracket that does not apply to you for which you have no personal or professional experience.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  20. #1495
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    11,362
    Last thing we need is some whipper snapper giving the geriatrics advice here.

    Go ride a skateboard to the arcade or something, and get off my lawn.

  21. #1496
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    panhandle locdog
    Posts
    8,159
    Doesn’t hold anyone back from posting about Ukraine or Real Estate either.

  22. #1497
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Posts
    9,574
    Plus, its the over 50 thread now...but if possible I'd ride my skateboard to the arcade. Gotta stay fresh for the 30s vs. 50s ski off!

  23. #1498
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    panhandle locdog
    Posts
    8,159
    Skateboarding is for Gen X’ers in their 50s trying to relive their youth. It’s super lame. No 30 year old skateboards, yuck.

  24. #1499
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Posts
    9,574
    Ski Off! Skateboarding in the opposite of lame.

  25. #1500
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    SEA>DEN>Spokanistan
    Posts
    3,204
    I’ll ski off if @LVS can somehow emulate being 40. Maybe wearing those drunk goggles? How about a bike off? I’ll let you use your eMTB? Better yet… wait for it a skate off.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •