Turning 50 Issues

A couple of quick suggestions: first, the role of hypertrophy needs to be addressed. One of things that starts to mellow out is the “passion” to train. Honestly, I don’t have the answer there, but a few years ago, DHEA was argued to be the answer here. So, whatever it takes to reignite the spark, do it. I suggest camps, workshops, seminars, or any kind of full leap back into whatever lights you up. Relearn everything. I think that might be part of the reason things like the RKC really got me going again. Call it immersion.

With that, the older guy also needs to address specific hypertrophy issues. Now, be sure to look up tonic and phasic muscles and you really want to build up the deltoids, triceps, rhomboids, and glutes with explosive big movements. Doing stuff like Double KB Clean and Press or Double KB Clean and Front Squat will do a lot for you. At the same time, you need to do some flexibility work , but just what you need. I find stretching the pecs, the hammies, the hips psoas and the calves to be plenty. Absolutely, things like Bikram Yoga are great, but you can get by with much less.

Don’t be afraid to do workouts like my 2-3-5-10 press workout that emphasize one weight but you get 20 reps fast. Do that five times and you have 100 reps…good for hypertrophy, yet little damage to the system.

Passion can come back through some hypertophy and a little fat loss. Take your Vitamin D, follow Atkins’s induction (see the recent books) and get in the sun. For supplements, do stuff like ALCAR and ALA and more fish oil than you think. Also, pound down the orange flavored sugar free metamucil. Drink your water. And….a big one…donate blood five times a year.

Honestly, that newer Atkins book, something like the companion or something, is a great thing to follow. Eat all you want of fish, eggs, meat, poultry…one cup of cooked veggies a day….3-4 cups of raw veggies and drink a lot of water. If you drink, but the book, “Martinis and Whipped Cream.” Too bad locarbcris no longer has a site, she had great low carb drink recipes. Crystal Light and either rum, vodka or tequila is a pretty good little “how you doing.”

Sleep is huge. I take ZMA, Z-12, fish oil, Alpha Male and some metamucil before bed (about 45 minutes before bed) every night. I also invested in good shades, good pillows, and I worry about comfort in bed. It’s worth every nickel to invest in sleep. If you live in a dorm, buy ear plugs, eye shades and a CD or something that will teach you to relax and sleep. Underrated advice here…

Train in two week blocks. If you do Kenneth Jay’s VO2 max, an excellent plan, do it like I do: an 8 minutes workout, a 12 and a 15. Do THAT five times every two weeks. So, week one is 8/12/15 then week two is 8/12 and week three is 15/8/12…you get the drift. Work over two weeks. If you do something like I just mentioned, week two might be three lifting sessions where weeks one and three are two. Also, you need to nail down this issue: do I do light days or off days. I can’t do light. I can only workout, so for me, an easy day is “off.”

Don’t ignore these final two things: either do Farmer Bars and/or Sprints about twice a week. I call my sprints the “Great 8.” I start off slow and taper. I don’t measure the sprints and merely strive for 4 “Down and Backs.” The idea is to be smooth and get into a sprinting movement. Farmer Bars for distance is something you also need to do. I would argue these last two ideas tie into everything I have said (see tonic and phasic…explosive glute work…two week blocks, whatever), but many people will become addicted to the gym for their answers and the answer is probably outside.

Having said all of this, remember that part of the victory is simply playing longer than anybody else. I’m 52 and I’m already planning how to beat the crap out of college kids next year. In ten years, I would love to say that these guys will be competing but I have the sense that I will be in the kilt or the ring or the field and they will be discovering Scotch.

Certainly, there is more, but take care of some of this…

  • http://www.davecoffin.wordpress.com Dave C

    Hey Coach,

    I just wanted to let you know that I enjoy reading all of your stuff. Thanks for all of the inspiration.

  • Tom Cashmore

    Thankyou…inspiring. I am 46 and have been lifting most of my life,mostly bench and gym rat garbage. I am now learning the O lifts and love them…wish i had learned these as a teenager. Also do karate for ever and seems to help explosive movement. Please keep up with the tips for us over 40 guys. I too will never lay down to grow the old guy belly with a scotch in hand.

  • http://www.locarbcris.com Chrissy aka LoCarbCris

    Hey there. It’s Chrissy aka LoCarbCris and guess what? I am bringing my website back up. It’s been years and I have been off the low carb WOE/WOL and boy have I regretted this. Now, with kids, I am going back to the low carb lifestyle. NOT as strict…baby steps. But I will have a blog, information, success story, liquor tips back again. :)

    My website is in process of getting the domain activated, etc….so it will be a few days before anything is up.

    Take care!

  • Brian

    Hey coach, you are an inspiration to me. When I turned 50 last year I found myself recovering from a squat injury, and with my junk food addiction I weighed an all time high of 310. That was 9 months ago. Since then I quit junk food cold turkey, and started doing sprints, and going to the gym 3 times a week. And walking the dog with the wife and eating more like the Atkins way. Anyway I’ve lost over 50 lbs and can actually run again. Your articles and video’s have helped in many more ways than I can list here. But I just wanted to say thanks. And I’m not giving up my Jack Daniels.

  • Tim

    Hi Coach Dan,
    Im new here (61 year old)…classic old guy syndrome! “Benched” 405 in 1969 (who would have known there was EVEN a second lift back then?!) I’ve been really trying to work on learning a deep squat and suffering through the hip mobility issues. Goblet squat seems like it is really helping with ROM! I ride a bicycle about 150-200 miles a week for fun, but cant really seem to calm down the anterior knee pain that i feel…seems like feels better as it warms up, but my question is……in your experience, do you see a chance that with increased mobility and strength in the hips, quads and hammies, that the knee pain will ease up? Love your info. P.S. I was never a thrower (played 4 yrs of college football) but I was a freshman in high school when John Powell graduated from Mira Loma. He had the school record in the shot that year…I think it was 54 feet with the 12#

  • Jamie

    Hey 61 year old (sorry don’t see our name). In reference to knee pain when cycling check that your seat height is correct along with correct firm foot wear. Most knee pain in cycling comes from soft footwear or incorrect seat height. Get firmer shoes first of al if yo don’t wear them and secondly check your seat height is 0.85 x your inseam measurement from top of seat to the centre of your bikes bottom bracket (the axle your pedal cranks go through).
    Good luck and keep up the training and many thanks too to coach Dan for all his tips and training advice – an honest man that is rare in this age :-)

  • Don Hesprich

    Hey Dan,
    I am 56 YO and have been a couch potato since college where a knee injury stopped my discus career. At that time I was throwing in the 170s but had terrible technique. I was just real strong. Anyway, I am getting back into it and throwing every Sat. but wanted your take on getting back up to speed from basically zero. I tell my friends that I don’t want to live longer, I want to live my time better. So most of the effort is to get in good shape and be flexible again. I have been doing some one leg squats with body weight, one arm presses and snatches and one leg dead lifts. It sure has improved my balance and strength. the knee injury (ACL, MCL, Patela tear) was corrected with surgery, but I get some pain from it. My stand throws are about 100 ft. with the 1.5K and my full throws, well, I am happy when I don’t fall down. I am 6’1″ tall with a 79″ span and weigh 270 (20% body fat)
    My main point is, thanks for addressing us 50+ guys and any more on stretching would really help. Also, what discus seminars would you recommend for us geezers?
    Thanks

  • http://danjohn.net Dan John

    It’s funny you write this: really, it’s my next book and projects!!!

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