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(CBS) Forget frail old age: A
growing number of aging baby boomers have discovered the world of
serious weight-training. From overweight folks who just want to feel
better to dedicated 60-plus bodybuilders, the weight machine has
become the new rocking chair. In a report by Sunday Morning
correspondent Dr. Emily Senay, we meet the current senior National
Bodybuilding Champion, a Manhattan gerontologist who preached a
healthy lifestyle for years and is now taking her own medicine, and
the legendary figure behind the modern fitness industry, Jack
LaLanne.
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We've heard the old saw about
how you're never too old to get started. Truth is, most Americans
tend to avoid heavy workouts, BUT there is a growing number of
seniors who seem to live for them.
Ten years ago, Scott Hults was a
Navy Reserve captain, and a prime candidate for serious illness.
"I was told I had some
symptoms of diabetes," Hults said. "That kind of
worried me because my father and grandfather died of diabetes at
early ages."
So Hults hit the gym ... hard.
Before long, he began to look like a competitive bodybuilder and, at
the urging of his wife, Hults became one. The former sailor, who was
often the oldest guy on the stage, became known as "Old
Navy."
Last year, at the age of 64,
Scott Hults won a championship in the over-60 division.
But Hults is the exception:
There are 78 million baby boomers, with 8,000 turning 60 every day,
or about 330 every hour. And most can't even come CLOSE to Hults'
level of fitness, says Dr. Roseanne Leipzig, a professor of
geriatrics at Mount Sinai School of Medicine.
"Nobody exercises
enough, okay? Seniors are no different in that way," Dr.
Leipzig said. "But the other thing that happens as we get
older is that our body compositions change. And we become,
unfortunately, more fat and less lean body mass. Most of us know
this personally, okay? So that men go from being about 18 percent
fat to 33 percent fat. Women, unfortunately, start at about 33
percent and go to almost 50 percent. So what is lean body mass? It's
your muscles and your bone. And that's what you're losing as you get
older."
And exercise can help you keep
it. At Manhattan's 92nd Street Y, Dr, Leipzig practices what she
preaches:
"I'd say I'm a convert.
I think I grew up in a generation where doing exercise, doing
anything physical was thought as if it were something not to be
desired, okay? And now I feel pride in the strength that I have, in
the way my body looks, in how I feel."
Leipzig says that, in general,
her fellow baby boomers are taking better care of themselves.
"I think in general, the
boomers are starting to recognize that it's 'move it or lose it.'
And they're gonna be moving it and trying to make sure that their
bodies stay in the best shape possible," Dr. Leipzig said.
And that desire to be physically
fit might have been inspired by something boomers saw on black and
white TV many years ago.
The fitness revolution WAS
televised, and Jack LaLanne was the firebrand with a vision of a
fitter world.
Now 93, Jack LaLanne still works
out two hours every morning, mostly on equipment he designed, like
the device in his home pool that allows to him to swim against a
current.
Lalanne and his wife Elaine were
married in 1959. She's 82, and healthier now than when they met.
"She was skinny, just
terrible," he recalled. "She was smoking cigarettes
and all that stuff.
"I had two fried eggs!
No bustline!" Elaine said.
Today, the LaLanne empire is
built on things like health food machines and books, including the
latest one, "Fiscal Fitness: 8 Steps to Wealth and Health
from America's Leaders of Fitness and Finance," about how
to keep your finances in order if you really do get in shape and
live longer than you expected.
But Jack LaLanne's message is
unchanged since those first days on TV: Whatever your age or
condition, start moving now.
"You've got to work at
it!" Lalanne said. "Dying is easy. Living is an
athletic event. You've got to train for it. But the time you put in
taking care of this wonderful body and your health is minimal
compared to the results you're gonna get."
And to those slightly older
Americans who say aches and pains prevent them from exercising? Jack
says, "You show me somebody over 40 or 50 who doesn't have
an ache or a pain, I'll show you a liar!"
Jack LaLanne will turn 94 in
September. His goal, quite literally, is to be living proof that his
philosophy of diet and exercise was right all along.
"It's an ego thing. Here
I'm going to be 94. I want to see how long I can keep this up, using
me as an example, right? But the average person if they would work
out 20 or 30 minutes three times a week, that's plenty - if it's
vigorous."
If you think you can't achieve any level of fitness, let alone be
like Jack, you're probably wrong. Here are some tips:
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Check with your doctor
first.
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Start low
and go slow, set small goals - baby steps. One of the biggest
reasons people throw in the towel is they expect too much too
soon, so take it easy.
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Aerobics doesn't have to
mean a bone crunching, Jane Fonda-style, braided headband
sweat-o-thon. Studies have shown simply walking a total of 30
minutes a day can reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke,
and you don't have to do it all at once.
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Once you're
on track, consider adding resistance training or weightlifting
into your routine. If you don't know how to do it, check out the
local Y, gym or senior center.
The goal is to feel good so you
WANT to keep up your routine, and that can be as simple as walking
the mall in Minnesota, teeing off in California, or hitting the pool
in Florida.
Jack LaLanne says he wants to
stay active as long as he's physically able, and for the relatively
youthful Scott Hults, there is no finish line, either:
"As far as I'm
concerned, I'm gonna keep doing push-ups and sit-ups and pull-ups
and bicep curls until I'm dead. And I hope one of these days, when I
do die, I'll be dying in the middle of record-setting bench
press," he laughs, "right here in the gym!"
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