Building muscle does tend to get harder with age, but that doesn’t mean it stops being possible. These changes can affect people at different ages and at different rates, and when they do, it doesn’t mean your fitness is suddenly on a downhill slope, or that rebuilding strength is an uphill battle you can’t win.

According to physiotherapist and personal trainer Grace Heinrichs, currently working at X-Club Pilates & Wellness in London, these shifts are a normal part of the aging process rather than a sign that you’ve left it too late. “There is good news in all of this, aging muscles respond very well to progressive strength training,” she says, particularly when training is approached with patience and consistency.

Grace HeinrichsGrace Heinrichs

Social Links Navigation

Physiotherapist and personal trainer

Doctor of Physical Therapy, HCPC Registered Physiotherapist, Chartered Physiotherapist, Reformer Pilates Instructor, and Personal Trainer currently working at X-Club Pilates & Wellness in London, UK.

progressive overload, simply means gradually increasing the challenge placed on your muscles over time. This might look like adding a small amount of weight, increasing repetitions, or improving control and range of motion, rather than pushing harder all at once.

You may like

Whether you’re returning to exercise or want to reinforce the fundamentals before progressing, here’s a five-move routine Heinrich recommends.

Google News

Tom’s Guide on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds.