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How to age well? Hit the gym for weight-resistance training to regain muscle mass
- Use it or lose it – physiologist says we often put too few demands on the body as we age; to stay young, start resistance training in a gym
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Here is the message from Dr Marcas Bamman, an American physiologist with decades of research into ageing who preaches the benefits of weight-resistance training for those who are getting up there.
We are talking 60-plus – women and men. And we are talking about hitting the gym and weight training. Do not be put off, Bamman says.
“Resistance training is in many ways the true fountain of youth,” Bamman says. “I like to say the fountain of youth is the water cooler in the gym.”
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Of course, there are biological limits. But Bamman says the bulk of age-related decline in strength, flexibility and endurance is behavioural – putting too few demands on the body, not too many.

“When I tell somebody that in four to six months your strength and muscle mass and overall muscle function is going to elevate to the levels of people 30 to 35 years younger, that hits home,” he says.
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So you know you’re too sedentary and the birthdays keep piling up. You suspect resistance training would be beneficial. But perhaps you’re intimidated. Do not be.
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