12
Wednesday, January 31, 2024 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
I was out on a long ramble through the woods west of Sisters a few weeks ago when it hit me that IâD BEEN DOING
Not today, Father Time!
THIS PARTICULAR HIKE FOR 30 YEARS. Against
my will, that led to taking an inventory of the difference between 28 and 58.
By Jim Cornelius Editor in Chief
THE GOOD NEWS IS, IâM STILL GETTING OUT THERE, AND I CAN STILL COVER THE MILES. The less good
news is, Iâm wearing sleeves on barking knees, and it takes a couple of days to recover from those miles. Sometimes going hard at it leaves me sore and feeling like the Tin Man in need of a whole can of oil. PHOTO BY JAROD GATLEY
I donât really think of myself as an athlete â other than tennis, Iâm not really into sports. But I have always been very active, and my physical capabilities â the ability to put in the miles on the trail, lift heavy things, strike a ball well, and shoot straight â are fundamental to my sense of who I am. While I canât pretend that time has no effect on me, Iâm not ready to retreat before its inexorable advance. Iâm still standing on the edge of the chasm shouting âYou shall not pass!â Fortunately, thereâs a whole bunch of folks in Sisters who can help us keep Father Time at bay. Intelligently, so we donât get stove up trying to act like weâre still 28. I asked a couple of them for advice. Matt Kirchoff of Therapeutic Associates Physical Therapy in Sisters works with a lot of folks that match the profile of the fit, active â but aging â person. He told me that the two areas that need more focus as we age are warmup and recovery. And theyâre things active folks often donât like to pay attention to, especially the warm-up when weâre eager to get into the activity itself. âI think thatâs the toughest thing â dedicating the time before the activity,â Kirchoff said. Kirchoff advises that we engage in five minutes or so of dynamic warm-up before any physical activity â not just sports, but yard work, snow shoveling â anything that is putting a demand on the body. Dynamic warm-ups get the body ready to move. Dynamic warm-ups include up-tempo movements like leg swings, arm circles, lunges and the like â not just static stretching. âIt should be something to get your heart rate up,â Kirchoff said. You can find sports-specific dynamic warmup protocols online.
A few minutes of dynamic warm-up can improve performance â and reduce injuries. âIf people were really mindful of that, I might not have a job!â Kirchoff said. Having a sport or activity specific training program is beneficial â one that includes rotation and lateral movements. Consulting with a professional can help you identify what types of movement best serve your needs. Andrew Loscutoff, a personal trainer at Sisters Athletic Club, says, âYou need to recognize where youâre at now â and that takes some assessment. Having an eye toward individualistic programming is going to be the first place to start.â Thereâs a key question that aging athletes and active folks need to answer: âWe ask them, what does your recovery look like?â Kirchoff said. Recovery has multiple elements: rest/sleep, hydration, nutrition, and active measures like foam rolling. âA lot of those recovery principles are neglected in a lot of cases,â Kirchoff cautions. âSleep is important,â Loscutoff said. âSleep is really important. Itâs when youâre recovering from the exercises youâre doing.â Good sleep hygiene is a habit that offers dividends â better rest means better mood, better performance, and better recovery from activity. âAre you going to bed when youâre tired, or are you going to bed when youâre done watching TV?â Loscutoff asks. Create a routine that lets you wind down, and gets you to bed when your body is telling you itâs tired. Nutrition is also critical. âHaving lean protein in adequate amountsâ is especially important for older athletes, according to Loscutoff. Protein as a proportion of overall
diet should be prioritized. It can be difficult to keep the grams of protein up when weâre busy. Protein shakes can help with that. âA protein shake is great, because it can fill a snack slot while giving you optimal nutrition,â Loscutoff said. A shake is way better than a bag of chips. âItâs going to replace something thatâs not nutritionally sound,â the trainer said. Both Kirchoff and Loscutoff are advocates of strength training. Itâs especially valuable as we age to keep up our muscle and bone mass and to improve our metabolism. But we have to be mindful not to do a good thing to excess. Those of us who enjoy lifting weights, and rely on the mental and psychological benefits of the activity, want to lift every day â and thatâs probably not optimal, especially as we get older and require more recovery time. âIâm generally not an advocate of strength training more than three times a week,â Kirchoff said. Loscutoff says âThereâs merit to doing something every day, but you donât have to go hard every day. In fact, itâs best if you donât.â He recommends two or three sessions in a week when youâre pushing your limitations, with the rest of the days devoted to working on balance and movement. We canât stop time and entropy â but we can slow its advance. Assessment from a pro, along with a little programming advice can help us adapt what we do so we can keep doing it. And focusing not just on the activity itself, but on the warm-up and recovery, can help us avoid injury and keep doing the things that make us who we are. So, hopefully, Iâve got another 30 years of rambling the woods of Sisters in me. Thatâs what I keep telling myself, anyway.