Aging Is Inevitable. Weakness Isn't.
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Here's a thing that happens to almost everyone: somewhere around middle age, you quietly renegotiate your relationship with your body. You stop expecting it to perform and start expecting it to complain. You chalk up the stiffness, the slowdowns, the loss of grip strength to "just getting older" — as if decline were a scheduling appointment you simply had to keep. The problem is, most of what we call "aging" is actually just inactivity wearing a disguise. And this week, Srdjan is here to pull the mask off.
The numbers are uncomfortable but important. After 30, you start losing muscle. After 60, that loss accelerates and nearly doubles. That's not a prediction — that's sarcopenia, and it's already happening unless you're actively fighting it. Falls become the leading cause of injury-related death in adults over 65. The overhead bin you couldn't reach last Tuesday? That's not a bad day. That's a data point. The good news — and there genuinely is good news — is that resistance training is not just helpful at any age, it's more important at 70 than it was at 30. Your 70-year-old body can still build muscle. It just needs a reason to.
Of course, knowing that and walking through a gym door are two completely different things. There's the grief of being a former athlete in a body that won't cooperate. There's the terror of looking foolish. There's the very reasonable suspicion that whatever you do at 68 is a pale imitation of what you did at 28, and why bother. Pete and Srdjan address all of it — including the guy who tore his rotator cuff because he refused to accept that his 52-year-old shoulder had a different opinion than his 28-year-old ego. The goal, as Srdjan puts it, isn't to perform like you used to. It's to pick up your own groceries, catch yourself when you trip, and get off the floor without needing a spotter.
And here's the part that should make you sit up a little: clients are coming off medications. Memory is improving. Metabolic markers — blood pressure, cholesterol, inflammation — are moving in the right direction. Resistance training turns out to be doing things that no pill on the market does quite as well, and it's available to anyone willing to start slow and stay consistent. The science on aging well is not ambiguous. The only question is whether you're going to take it seriously before you have to, or after.
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