How Retired Professionals Can Stay Fit

When you’re working, it’s easy to maintain a fitness routine. As gyms become common fixtures in corporate buildings, a busy professional can stop off after work for a quick workout. It’s easy to get out of the habit, but working out regularly is even more important once you have retired.

Retired professionals need to pay attention to their diet to maintain a proper fitness level. While it may be tempting to spend the newfound free time going out to eat and snacking, that is a quick path to weight gain. Instead, retirees should focus on cooking at home and using lots of vegetables in their cooking. After working hard for 40 years, they have earned the right to eat out once in a while! However, it’s important to eat more home-cooked healthy meals than meals at a restaurant.

The second part of staying fit is maintaining an exercise routine. Sometimes, retired professionals lose out on exercise just by leaving the workplace. For instance, people who work in careers in physical therapy spend their working days helping people overcome physical disabilities. When they leave those careers, they need to work hard to maintain that same level of physical activity. Retired professionals may want to visit a personal trainer at a local gym. A personal trainer can put together an appropriate workout routine for anyone’s age, fitness level, and physical abilities. By setting specific times and dates to work out, retirees can stick to a schedule that makes it easy to stay fit and healthy.

By maintaining a proper diet and sticking to an exercise routine, retired professionals will have no trouble staying healthy. Both aspects of a healthy lifestyle will make a retiree’s time away from work even more enjoyable.

The Importance of Exercise and a Healthy Heart

Marine of the United States Marine Corps runs ...
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Did you know that exercise can be good for you? By just adding a 30-minute walk, five times a week a person can lessen their chance of a heart attack, obesity and stroke. However the most important part of your body, the heart, gets the most benefit from exercise. Exercise gets the blood flowing throughout the body, clears out bad substances in the body that could surround the heart and lowers blood pressure and cholesterol.

There has been a massive amount of information aimed at the ability to inform the public about the importance of adding exercise to a person’s daily routine. There are public service ads, announcements on the radio, Internet and TV as stories from celebrities talking about how they got fit, as well as reality shows showing the benefits of exercise. It is all done in an effort to get people excited about working out.

Surprisingly with all these media and medical campaigns going on the public is listening. Gym memberships are on the rise, apartment complexes and assisted living facilities are being encouraged to add gyms and people are being rewarded for walking and exercising on their own free time by employers and corporations all over.

It might appear to some that all of these efforts are a way to get people geared up to spend more money on gym memberships, and to promote businesses that focus on exercise and fitness. But the truth is that exercise can really help save a person’s life and the media and medical community is simply trying to spread the word about exercise and the importance of a healthy heart. If it takes a little bit of encouragement and inspiration to save a person’s life by getting them to start exercising, it is well worth it because exercise really could add 10 years to a person’s life.

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