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[For Seniors] Recommended Easy Strength Training

We all want to live a healthy, independent life for as long as possible.

Strength training is an important habit for maintaining health.

By maintaining muscle strength, you can reduce the risk of falls and move more smoothly in daily activities.

In this article, we’ll introduce simple strength training routines that are easy to try.

This is likely a topic of interest for older adults.

Because these exercises can be started easily at home, even those who aren’t confident with exercise can feel at ease.

Take a step forward today and start building a healthier body!

[For Seniors] Recommended Easy Strength Training (Ages 71–80)

Walking balance practice

One move a day! Walk to boost your balance
Walking balance practice

Falls are especially likely to occur while walking, and those automatic, half-conscious movements increase the risk.

This session slightly modifies and makes the act of walking more challenging, aiming to improve everyday walking balance.

You’ll place your stepping foot and bend your knee in ways different from usual, then take small steps while maintaining balance in that unstable position.

Another key point is to keep your upper body upright so the effort transfers properly to your muscles as you move forward.

Balance training in a walking posture

Fall Prevention! Balance Training Needed for Walking [Senior Exercise TV]
Balance training in a walking posture

Walking is very important for your health, isn’t it? For older adults to maintain their balance, it’s essential to strengthen the core.

The key is to train using the whole body so you’re not walking with just your legs.

Since this movement activates muscles you don’t usually use, make sure to hold on firmly with both hands to a chair or something stable for safety when you do it.

Even if you usually walk without thinking, simply paying attention to your hip movement and posture can help improve your balance.

Why not incorporate this movement into your daily walks?

Exercises to prevent a hunched back

Posture Improvement [Beautiful Back Exercises, Back Muscle Training, 10 Minutes]: Exercises to Prevent Hunchback for Seniors and Older Adults
Exercises to prevent a hunched back

To strengthen your back muscles, it’s important to move your shoulders.

If you can move them properly, it will help support correct posture and also improve rounded shoulders.

This is a training routine you can do while seated, slowly moving the muscles around your shoulder blades.

Follow a sequence that supports shoulder movement with coordinated arm and torso actions, and take your time to rotate your shoulders slowly.

It’s also important to proceed while exhaling slowly—relaxing will help increase your shoulder’s range of motion.

Slow aerobics to When the Saints Go Marching In

Let's Try Slow Aerobics! ~When the Saints Go Marching In~
Slow aerobics to When the Saints Go Marching In

Aerobics—moving your body to music—can feel difficult for people who have trouble with movement.

This exercise adapts aerobics by slowing the tempo and using gentler motions, making it accessible for anyone.

Find a calmer rhythm than the original song and move your body as if buoyantly engaging your whole body.

Rather than trying to keep up with the music, it’s more important to use your entire body, so it may be best to proceed at a rhythm that suits the participants.

Hip joint training

[For Seniors] A hip-focused training program that moves the hip joint in all directions to expand range of motion, improve flexibility, and increase strength so you can keep walking for life.
Hip joint training

The hip joint plays an essential role in walking.

This time, we’ll introduce hip-focused training to strengthen the hips and help you keep walking for life.

In addition to classic exercises like high knee lifts and swinging the leg forward and backward, we include movements you don’t usually do in daily life, such as lifting the leg inward as if sitting cross-legged and flicking the leg outward.

These may feel difficult at first, but they are important for loosening the hips, and you can expect benefits if you keep at them.

Pilates exercise to move the back

4 Pilates exercises for a slimmer back
Pilates exercise to move the back

It’s easy to go about your day without paying much attention to your back, and you might be losing strength there without noticing.

This is a training routine that brings awareness to the back and strengthens it in coordination with the arms and shoulders, incorporating elements of Pilates.

The basics are to focus on the shoulder blades and perform movements that engage the shoulders, while also maintaining posture so the shoulder blades can move properly.

If you’ve never really paid attention to this area before, it can be hard to grasp how to move your shoulders.

So it’s best to start by moving slowly and checking your shoulder motion first.

Arm-swinging exercise

An easy arm-swing exercise you can do at home! [Health information for people in their 40s, 50s, and 60s]
Arm-swinging exercise

For older adults, building muscle strength is important to help prevent falls.

Even without intense exercise, this arm-swing exercise can be continued comfortably.

Arm swinging is very important for strengthening the core and lower limbs during walking.

As the arms swing forward and backward, pelvic rotation is moderately controlled, allowing smoother lower-limb movement.

It also helps improve balance.

The key to this exercise is to be mindful of your posture while swinging your arms.

It’s nice that you can do it at home.