The Best Weight-Lifting Advice For Men Over 40 | Men's Health Magazine Australia

2022-09-18 09:06:07 By : Mr. Stone Wang

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FIRST, a confession.When I rather reflexively wrote the headline to this story, I immediately...

A popular magazine asked me to write an article on weight training for the over-40 average Joe. (It wasn’t Men’s Health, by the way.)

While I was flattered, the warm and fuzzy feeling faded once I skimmed articles on the topic in their archives.

Suddenly, I felt embarrassed more than anything – like I was a washed-up ballplayer being asked to pitch Viagra or be a spokesman for a new line of “rich mahogany scented” adult diapers. The articles were so lame.

So I decided to write my own type of over-40 training article. If you’re a healthy man who’s trying to train hard past 40, this is for you.

Just because you’re older doesn’t mean the “big” exercises like squats, deadlifts, and bench presses are suddenly too dangerous to include. Performed correctly, these movements still offer the biggest bang for your training buck.

However, the “performed correctly” part becomes much more important with age.

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So if you want to regularly include the big lifts you should do the following: 

For instance, I haven’t done a standard deadlift in almost a year. But I have done other deadlift versions, such as snatch grip, stiff-leg, trap bar, dumbbell and barbell Romanians, standing good mornings, seated good mornings, sumo off pins, snatch grip off a podium, and a multitude of back extension variations.

For some nonsensical reason, older trainees are always pressured to dump any isolation or “single-joint” exercises to “save energy.”

Like a few sets of dumbbell curls or triceps pressdowns, not those excruciatingly slow 1RM deadlifts, will be what sends them tumbling down the overtraining rabbit hole.

In fact, older lifters should do more isolation work – not less – especially if trying to bring up an aesthetically weak body part. These exercises allow for greater mind-muscle connection and can help clean up your technique, which is often the limiting factor.

And since isolation lifts aren’t as taxing as the “bigger” lifts, sets can safely go right to failure (and even beyond), which is a powerful hypertrophy tool.

Of course, training economy still matters. If you only have 30 minutes to work out, prioritise a big lift – not 11 variations of cable curls.

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Exercise variety is a grossly undervalued hypertrophy tool. Basically, the bigger your exercise toolbox, the better your results.

As exercise scientist Brad Schoenfeld notes in a study published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning, your muscles’ architecture supports variety during resistance training. If you want them to grow, you must work them in different planes of motion and at different angles.

Furthermore, if you’re older and more beat up, something as subtle as a change in grip width or hand position can be enough to mitigate pattern overload injuries.

Or you can just be stubborn and keep loading your beloved lying triceps extensions for another 25 years. By the way, that’s not your dog barking, it’s your elbows.

Every “three days a week” gym hero works out with one eye on the clock, rushing to beat the “59-minute deadline” for fear that he’ll wake up in a hospital bed with the testosterone level of an earthworm.

While few recreational lifters will ever come close to overtraining (“overreaching” is more plausible), the fact remains that older dudes get bogged down faster.

So here’s a checklist of what to do.

Do shorter workouts more frequently. Forty (hard) minutes, six days a week is more tolerable than 80 (hard) minutes three days a week.

A good rule of thumb: A few hours after you complete a workout, you feel as if you could repeat it.

Steady state cardio is an awesome recovery tool (as long as it isn’t a slog fest). It burns fat, improves mood and mental clarity, and boosts cardiovascular health – things all older guys need.

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Stress is like the Terminator. It can’t be bargained with, it can’t be reasoned with. Push it too long and it will take you out.

So it’s no surprise that smart coaches like my colleague Luke Leaman now start their coaching process with stress management. As he says, stress can cause insulin resistance, reduced energy production, and a reduction in male sex hormones.

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I’m not going to tell you to hand write thank-you notes to your high school math teacher while slow-roasting your own coffee beans for your morning cup of gratitude. That’s something your 25-year-old life coach will tell you to do.

Here’s some practical stuff that works even while you’re still hustling.

Belly breathing. Most people take very short, shallow “half-breaths.” Get them to perform a few deep, full lung-filling breaths (in through the nose, out through the mouth) and watch their reaction.

Three minutes, three times a day works wonders to get the parasympathetic nervous system back online.

Slow down. How? Just do less.

A better answer: when overwhelm hits, do the deep breathing above and go for a 15-minute walk. Running through your mental to-do list won’t help. You need to re-set your brain.

Talk to someone. If there’s one thing that I won’t change about my coaching process, no matter how often other coaches tell me I’m crazy from a time monetization perspective, it’s that I won’t stop spending time talking to my clients on the phone or Skype.

Email is a cold, impersonal tool that’s become a mechanism for delivering bad news or more shit to do. It also offers little insight into the emotional state of the person writing.

I can send clients charts and forms and have them email me how they feel on a sliding scale of “shit” to “marvelous,” but I hear more and learn more talking to them than in all that bullshit paperwork combined. Find a coach or a workout partner who is willing to do the same.

Don’t get me wrong: The only way to make fitness work for someone is if you “meet them where they are.” And for many men, it’s a place where just getting up and moving or eating less crap will be an enormous win.

Still, some attention needs to be paid to the “already initiated” who have been going strong, but are starting to feel the heavy hands of Father Time.

You don’t have to change everything you’re doing. Just work smart.

You know, just like what your favourite 25-year-old life coach has been saying to do since, like, forever.

This article originally appeared on MensHealth.com

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