Country Zest & Style Holiday 2019 Edition

Page 20

An Aging Antidote: Just Move It! ®

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By Jodi Nash hen are you too old to work out?

To get fit for your age? Is it really “use it or lose it?” The consensus among local fitness professionals is by all means, MOVE! Carol Hueter, a long-time certified personal trainer, specializes in working with 60-year-olds and up, some at the Trainer Kay Colgan puts Richard Taylor through his paces. Middleburg Tennis Club, others in their own homes. After an initial assessment of a client’s baseline fitness and health challenges, she designs a one-hour workout tailored to that client’s needs. Taking into account personal goals, and any chronic health condition or injuries, she utilizes everything from recommending a long walk to free weights, stability balls, resistance bands, or medicine balls. For those with access to stationary bikes or elliptical machines, she plots a cardio fitness regimen and encourages climbing house stairs four or five times a day. The important thing is to work up to a mid-intensity workout, and stick with it. “Just move” Hueter said. “And variety is great”. Some clients need more correction or motivational feedback than others. That’s the beauty of personal training—the trainer’s time and focus is exclusively on one individual, maximizing the workout potential. Hueter’s emphasis is on helping people to adjust to the subtle shifts in strength and energy, as people transition from decade to decade. “Things you previously took for granted, suddenly become harder,” she said, adding that she also values her client relationships. They offer as much to her in wisdom and experience, as she does to them in training. “You’ve earned the slower pace,” she said. “Just don’t ever let go completely!” Kay Colgan, owner of Middleburg Pilates and Personal Training and a certified Pilates instructor and holistic nutritionist, said she avoids the “senior” label for its negative connotation. In her view, thinking that way limits true potential, and creates fear which becomes an obstacle to staying active. “The best exercise is the one a client enjoys and will do consistently” said Colgan, who also believes cross training is an excellent way to create a balanced body. “Pilates compliments other forms of exercise, especially yoga. The Pilates method increases coordination, using breath, rhythm and strength in a series of exercises that build core stability.” Pilates also develops balance, and lengthens and tones all the muscle groups. “I feel young is a state of mind,” Colgan said. “It doesn’t matter how many years have passed, bodies given good whole foods, clean water, physical exercise and a connection to people and the environment equals a life that is lived to the fullest.” Both women advocate staying physically active as an effective way to create energy for the rest of life. For those starting out, keep in mind there are four major types of exercise that comprise a well-balanced fitness routine: endurance (heart and circulatory system), strength and weight bearing exercises (reducing muscle loss and increase bone density), stretching exercises (keeping as much range of motion in joints as possible and maintaining agility), and balance exercises (through yoga, tai chi, barre, or dance classes) to prevent falls. A little-discussed component of fitness as you age is one of the most crucial: kinesthetic awareness or “spatial orientation” ----the ability to know where you are in space. Falls are among the biggest problems as people age, with changing vision, vertigo and balance issues elevating the risk. It can be highly beneficial to move through space, using ballroom dance, ballet, Zumba, jazzercise, or some form of martial arts. This sort of complex and patterned movement engages the brain to frequently rewire its neural pathways, boosting memory, improving cognitive function, muscle memory, balance, agility, flexibility and endurance. Movement to music can elevate mood, reduce depression, develop rhythm, and just generally make one feel happier. Or, as Ralph Waldo Émerson once said: “Few people know how to take a walk. The qualifications are endurance, plain clothes, old shoes, an eye for nature, good humor, vast curiosity, good speech, good silence and nothing too much.”

Country ZEST & Style | Holiday 2019


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Articles inside

Cup of Coffee - An Admirable Act of Pure Steeplechasing Sportsmanship

4min
page 62

Sporting Pursuits

3min
pages 60-61

It's a Fabulous New Day for Upperville Horse Show

3min
pages 58-59

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting

2min
page 56

Vineyard View - A Sommelier's Story at a Historic Location

3min
pages 54-55

A Christmas Concert

1min
page 53

Keeping a Year End List and Checking it Twice

2min
page 52

Archwood Green Barns Winter Market Goes Through Dec. 22

2min
page 51

A Hunting They Will Stay (In Middleburg)

2min
page 50

For Gomer Pyles, the Planet is a Playground

2min
page 48

Property Writes - Smitten Farm Lane

2min
pages 46-47

A Middleburg-centric Crew Unlike Any Other

2min
page 44

Saying Goodbye to a Middleburg Gem

2min
page 43

That Old-Timer Music Offers a Happy Place

3min
page 40

A Small Town Mayor with a Big Time Vision

3min
page 39

Garden Club's Going Green

2min
page 38

American Legion Marching Toward a Bright Future

2min
page 36

The Natural Order and Open Space

2min
page 35

At Nick's Market in Marshall, There's Something For Everyone

2min
page 34

Celebrations

3min
page 30

Style

2min
page 29

Cantankerous to the End, and a Great Friend

4min
pages 26-27

Serving it All Up

2min
page 25

A Christmas Wish List

2min
page 24

Conservation Easements Benefit Everyone

2min
page 22

An Aging Antidote: Just Move It!

2min
page 20

Salamander Has a Five-Star Rating, and GM

3min
page 18

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!

2min
pages 16-17

Someone's in the Kitchen With ...

3min
page 14

Dangerous Blind Bombing Set Stage for D-Day

3min
pages 1-13

Sporting Pursuits

1min
page 11

Country Zest

1min
page 9

Holiday Happenings

2min
page 8

For Wayne Gibbens, It's Been a Lifetime of Good Works

3min
page 6

Unique Artist Seizes an Opportunity

3min
page 5

Middleburg Just Loves a Parade

2min
page 3
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