Longevity training isn’t about avoiding intensity — it’s about using the right tool for the right person.
Research in older adults shows that high-speed training with moderate loads can increase power by shifting peak power to lighter weights moved faster — improving real-world movement and reaction speed.
That doesn’t mean more intense or ballistic options are bad.
For the right client, at the right time, they can be very effective.
But for everyday clients — especially those prioritizing joint health, consistency, and long-term progress over “gainz” — power can (and should) be trained without unnecessary impact or wear and tear.
Fast concentrics.
Controlled eccentrics.
Smart exercise selection.
Over the next few posts, I’ll be sharing multiple power-training options you can plug into your workouts — from low-impact to more advanced — so you can choose what fits you best.
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Here's a quick look at a pull-focused workout.
Trap Bar Deadlifts led the way, starting a new strength block with 4 sets of 3-5 reps. I also did pull-ups with different grips, 5 sets of 8-12 reps. The upper back work pairs well with the heavy deadlifts, creating a great pump, and could be a full workout on its own.
Grip strength is crucial for both exercises.
After the heavy lifts, I did hip abductor work and rhomboid rows. The deep stretch feels great. This workout hit squat/hinge heavy, vertical pull for hypertrophy, horizontal pull for endurance, and lateral work for hips and legs.
Finishing with direct hamstring and low back work, plus triceps, rounds it out.
I wanted to share the logic behind a training program - starting big with compound movements and finishing with direct work.
If you’re in the Mt Juliet area and interested in working with a professional coach, or looking for some guidance via online coaching, drop me a dm.
RDLs look simple. They’re rarely done well.
If you’ve ever felt Romanian deadlifts in your low back instead of your glutes and hamstrings, it’s usually a setup and ex*****on issue — not the exercise.
Three cues/tools I coach every time:
• Stay active through your feet — press the ball of the foot into the ground to help the glutes turn on. I like beginning with a small weight plate to serve as a physical cue to stay active.
• Hips back, chest forward (not down) to keep a true hinge. A superband around the hips help groove the right pattern.
• Set the shoulders and brace the core so the spine stays stable while the hips do the work
Don't try to reach the floor - focus on keeping the low back neutral (i.e. normal low back curve) - when you lose neutral, it's no longer an RDL - it's a back exercise.
When those pieces are in place, the RDL becomes a powerful posterior-chain builder — not a back irritator.
Train the pattern. Load it after you earn it.
If something doesn’t feel right, get checked and regress as needed.
Quality always comes first.
I’m seeing a pattern with people coming from large group fitness settings.
They’re consistent.
They work hard.
They’re fit, but not strong.
And most haven’t learned how to “hinge” (bend over and pick stuff up/deadlift) without their low back taking over.
That’s rarely a “bad back” problem.
It’s usually a setup and technique issue.
When form isn’t taught, the body finds a workaround—and the low back often pays the price.
👉 Tomorrow: 3 tips to help you hinge better - load your hips, protect your back, and actually feel the exercise where you’re supposed to.
If you’re over 40 and you feel “stiff” all the time, you don’t need a longer stretching routine—you need a few high-return drills you’ll actually repeat.
My go-to trio:
1️⃣ 90/90 Hip Switches
2️⃣ Quadruped T-spine rotations (upper back)
3️⃣ Knee-to-wall rocks (ankles)
Use them:
1–2 sets each
2–4x/week
5–8 minutes total
Best before lifting, or as a quick reset on off days.
These are fairly generic - the best mobility routine is one that is based on your personal needs and abilities - but these are a great place to start for the vast majority.
If you want, DM me what feels most limited right now (hips / back / ankles) and I’ll tell you which one to prioritize first.
If certain exercise movements (i.e. squat, hinge, lunge, push, pull, press) bother your joints right now, your goal isn’t “rest/avoid forever”—it’s finding a trainable version that keeps you progressing.
My order of operations:
✅ Fix setup + technique first (often the biggest lever)
✅ Then adjust range of motion → load → tempo (add isometrics) → volume
✅ If needed, swap the lift—but keep the same movement pattern
✅ Use the 24-hour check: you should feel the same or better tomorrow
If you want help choosing the right exercise swap for what you’re dealing with, DM me what’s bothering you (knee/back/shoulder/hip) and what movement triggers it.
Disclaimer: I’m talking here about the everyday aches and pains we have, especially as we age. If you have something beyond that - get checked out by a qualified medical professional.
After 40, training needs a clearer purpose than just “staying active.”
In reality, it’s about training the right qualities—consistently.
After 40, long-term health and independence are driven less by random workouts and more by whether you’re developing these four physical qualities:
• Strength
• Aerobic capacity
• Mobility with control
• Power (yes—still important)
Miss one, and something eventually pays the price—energy, joints, confidence, or resilience.
I just published a new article breaking down:
– Why these four matter
– What most people undertrain
– How to structure training so it actually supports longevity
This isn’t about extremes.
It’s about staying capable for decades.
🔗 Read the full article here:
https://www.elevatefitnessmj.com/post/longevity-training-after-40
01/12/2026
After 40, brain health isn’t just about moving more.
It’s about sending the right signals.
HIIT (high-intensity interval training) means short bursts of very hard effort, followed by plenty of recovery — not nonstop exhaustion.
When used sparingly, HIIT can stimulate things like BDNF (often called fertilizer for the brain), support focus and mood, and improve vascular health.
Where it fits best:
✔ After a strength workout (short and controlled)
✔ Or as a standalone conditioning day
✖ Not before lifting
✖ Not every day
More HIIT isn’t better.
Daily HIIT isn’t smarter.
And it doesn’t replace strength training or aerobic base work.
Think of HIIT as a supplement, not the foundation:
✔ Build your Zone 2 base
✔ Add moderate intensity work
✔ Layer in short, high-quality intervals when recovery allows
✔ HIIT won't cover up poor nutrition or bad sleep habits...
Train to sharpen the system — not exhaust it.
This is general education, not medical advice. Individual needs vary.
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