Consider This from NPR - It's never too late to get fit
Episode Date: December 18, 2024How does fitness and movement change across the lifespan? According to NPR's Allison Aubrey, who covers health and wellness, the official recommendation is to aim for more than 150 minutes a week of... moderate-intensity physical activity. That could be running, walking, biking, swimming, or weightlifting. We meet a group of active older people, who show it's never too late to find movement and exercise that works for you.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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I've been thinking a lot this year about fitness and movement and how that's something
that's looked and felt different for me at different parts of my life.
For me these days, it looks like a lot of running and a lot of stretching.
And all of that got me thinking about how bodies change over time and what it looks
like to get or stay active as we age.
Our bodies are meant to move.
That's my colleague, Alison Aubrey.
She's covered health and wellness for many years.
So to start with, I wanted to know,
how much exercise should people 50 and older be getting?
The official recommendation is to aim for 150 minutes
per week of moderate intensity physical activity.
So about, you know, half hour, five times a week.
That exercise could look like walking, running, biking, swimming, or weightlifting.
The best exercise is the one you'll actually do.
For Mona Noyes, the answer is weightlifting. I recently dropped by a gym in Baltimore where
people in their 60s, 70s, and 80s learn to lift. She works with the trainer there.
It's never too late to build your strength because I'm 86 and I sort of rolled up on
86 and didn't realize your body begins to do different things as you get older.
A recent study found that women who strength train two to three days a week are more likely
to live longer. There is a longevity boost and a reduced risk of death from heart disease. Here's
my colleague Alison Aubrey again.
So muscle mass peaks in our 20s or 30s and weight training can really help slow the decline
and fend off what's called sarcopenia, which is basically just a scary sounding medical
term for age-related muscle loss. So, you know, I have seen this myself. I'm in my 50s and
adding weights, so resistance bands, you know, lifting weights seen this myself. I'm in my 50s, and adding weights, so resistance bands,
you know, lifting weights at the gym,
it can really protect your joints.
It can protect you against falls.
And functionally, you'll just feel stronger.
You know, for me, lifting that carry-on
into an overhead bin on an airplane is just easier.
And beyond the physical benefits,
exercising can build community.
We talked with some mall walkers in Annapolis, Maryland, who've been meeting five days a week for you. And beyond the physical benefits, exercising can build community.
We talked with some mall walkers in Annapolis, Maryland, who've been meeting five days
a week for years.
And that social connection keeps them going.
I don't always want to get up and walk, but I got these two ladies waiting for me.
So, guess me here.
Consider this.
Over the past month, I've spent a lot of time with active older people at the gym,
running, playing pickleball, and even at the mall.
They showed me that it's never too late to find movement or exercise that works for you.
From NPR, I'm Juana Sommers.
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It's Consider This from NPR. Many states across the country host senior games, which include all types of sports like
archery, basketball, and mountain biking.
But in Florida, pickleball is the crown jewel.
So we headed south to spend some time with senior athletes on the pickleball court. It's around 8 a.m. when we arrive at a sports complex north of Tampa.
Pickleball players holding their duffel bags and paddles are crowded around a man in a
neon green polo shirt.
We're going to be running a round robin system today.
You may be playing against teams that may be younger or older than you.
That's Erin Delmar, the tournament director
for the Florida Senior Games Pickleball Competition.
Players here are competing for spots
at the National Senior Games,
which will be held next summer in Iowa.
Ruth Weil is one of the players hoping to punch her ticket.
She wears a bright red visor with her name in white
on one side and pristine white sneakers. Weil, who's 76, lives in the villages, a sprawling
retirement community in Florida, and she says the active community is part of
what keeps her going. I have two very bad knees that I just keep plugging along,
cortisone shots, but it's just a matter of getting out and doing it and trying to
stay active. My wife who's 85 years old in January is still competing in pickleball and she is here today.
And she to me is an inspiration for everybody because how many 85 year olds do you see outplaying?
So as long as she competes, I will compete.
When Wile and her wife Joy took up pickleball about 15 years ago, they got hooked.
And Weil also plays on a softball team
and already qualified for the national senior games
in that sport.
She's hoping pickleball will be her second sport.
I look at everybody and I said,
how lucky we all are at this age
to be able to still compete.
The competition at the Florida senior games is fast paced
with players competing in divisions ranked by their age and skill.
Nick Gandy is the sports information manager for the Florida Senior Games.
It's really an interesting community
of 50 and over people.
The stories that I like to hear are the athletes who
competed in their younger days and they went on had a
career raised families the kids grew up they retired from their successful
careers their kids are gone and they decided to come back and they play
pickleball or they bowl or they swim and it's like they're going back to their
younger days when they did this with
their friends when they were growing up. I love that. So we're here today there's obviously
pickleball going on behind us. I understand that this is one of the biggest sports at the
senior games is that right? It is the biggest sport of the Florida senior game. We have almost 600 people playing, 595 entries,
and it's gone up by 100 every of the last four years.
There are first timers,
and then there are veterans like Erica Gonzalez.
She started playing pickleball
when she moved to Florida from Puerto Rico,
and her new community had a court.
She'd played tennis for more than 40 years
and wanted a new challenge.
She's also a pickleball coach.
In between her games, she showed us around.
The key about pickleball is that it's kind of like tennis
on a small court, but not.
See that net?
There's seven feet between the net and this line.
People call it the kitchen.
There's no smashing the ball in the kitchen.
You can't even step in it after you hit a shot.
The other thing is that you serve diagonally.
So if I'm starting in my rectangle,
I'm going to serve diagonally across the court.
If the other player doesn't hit it back, then I score?
I get a point.
And then you switch over.
Now you did an overhand serving.
You have to serve underhand.
Underhand.
Got it.
I asked her for advice for someone
who wants to start playing.
She told me, find a community.
It's a very social game.
It's very fun.
It's multi-generational.
I love that I can teach a seven-year-old
to play with their 70-year-old or 80-year-old grandparent.
And everybody can actually play it and have a good time.
So find a group of folks and learn together,
because then you'll grow together.
And then you'll support each other's addiction on the court.
Supporting each other's addiction, that's definitely the case for a couple that we met
nearby. Gene Berg is 72 and lives in Litchfield, New Hampshire with his wife Margaret, who's
63. He is hoping to medal at the senior games in every state that holds one.
I think it's just a fetish.
It's his bucket list.
I'll play in the games, but I'm not that interested in.
I don't have to get a medal.
But if I get a medal and he doesn't, we still have to go back to that state.
But she lets me polish her medal when she wins and I don't.
We have a 22 foot airstream that we tow
and we'll do states that we can,
like on a road trip during the year.
And we've done how many this year?
Seven?
Seven or eight this year.
We're up to 36.
So tell me how you guys got into pickleball.
We spent probably 35 years chasing youth sports.
And when the youths left, we had nothing to chase.
So we had to chase each other.
And he said, I've heard about this sport, pickleball.
Do you want to try it?
And we went to our local little indoor gymnasium
where people taught us how to play and from
then on I think we played maybe for six months and he said, Margaret, there's a tournament.
We need to play in this tournament.
At this tournament, spectators watched players from metal bleachers near each pickleball
court.
Some players came with their parents, others with their adult children.
We meet a man warming up with his daughter. She flew to Florida to support him as he competes.
Well, I'm Brad Smith.
I live in Ocala, Florida.
I'm 86.
Ann Smith is a Weibelman.
I live in Pleasant Ridge, Michigan,
just outside of Detroit, and I'm 51.
And Ann, you were saying you came from Michigan
to support your dad.
What made you want to come down here
and see him at the senior games?
Really because it's such a big deal for him.
Like he's, you know, the fact that he's made it to the state tournament, like this is exactly
what I want to be able to do now.
Now I can support.
I'm done driving my kids to sports tournaments year round.
Now I can go support my dad.
You know, just like he did when I was a kid.
What's it like playing pickleball together?
It's competitive.
Yes, it is.
It's very competitive.
Any sport with Brad is competitive.
Otherwise, what's the point?
I think.
It's how it goes in the Smith household.
We just play hard.
We want to beat each other.
Before we leave, we catch back up with Ruth Weil.
She has some exciting news to share.
Alright, so you finished for the day. How did you do?
I did fabulous. We won all of our matches.
We are looking forward to going to Iowa.
I'm going to play softball. I'm going to play pickleball.
And I can't wait.
Alright, so you've got the wins. You'll be there for both sports.
How are you going to celebrate?
Wow, how am I going to celebrate?
I've got friends in from New Jersey right now, so I definitely go have a drink tonight.
Oh, blueberry vodka.
Flavored vodka, my favorite.
She tells us that she and her wife are going to pack their car full of equipment for both sports
and drive from Florida to Des Moines where the National Senior Games will be held.
An opportunity, she says, to see more of the country together.
This episode was produced by Matt Ozug and Brianna Scott.
It was edited by Courtney Dornig and Sarah Handel. Our executive producer is Sammy Yannigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Wanda Summers.
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