I just finished a 4-week session of Brains and Balance Fall Prevention Training in the gated community of Springfield at Whitney Oaks in Rocklin, CA and there were some amazing improvements in this group, especially from the students who didn't think they needed "balance training".
The biggest single improvement was a 79-year old woman who reached 10 inches further while touching her toes. TEN INCHES. On the first day, she was 3.5 inches from touching her toes. In four short weeks, she reached 6.5 inches past her toes! She also did 3 more chair stands in 30 seconds.
What is awesome about this lady is she scored well on the fitness tests and wasn't going to join because, "it was her husband who needed the class, not me!" Well apparently her brain needed the class and her body responded! She was a great student and truly practiced her homework and her post-testing showed it!
The most improved overall of the class was a 75 year old woman who accidentally joined the group. Looking for the High Intensity Aerobics class, she stayed when I showed her how to fix the nagging nerve pain in her shoulder. There are no coincidences.
A stroke survivor, this woman increased her lower body strength by 6 stand ups in 30 seconds, increased her lower body flexibility by 4.5 inches and got up and walked around a cone 2 full seconds faster. All in four weeks. And to think she wasn't looking for balance training but ended up most improved in the class! No coincidences.
The men in the class did equally as well.
Check out my next blog for the men of Springfield's improvement numbers!
This private, aging community gets the importance of staying active in order to be able to do the things you want to do when you want to do them. Unfortunately, most people think that lifting weights, doing yoga and burning calories in a high intensity aerobics class is the key to independence.
Here's my message to aging adults: Everything you do begins in the brain. Your balance, strength, flexibility, power, and agility all begin in the brain. If you want to participate in gym activities and stay active, you might want to try training the sensory systems that your brain relies on in order to move through life.
The better the input, the better the output. Period.
I am so grateful for the open-mindedness of the eight individuals who invested in my four-week brain-based fall prevention training classes.
Great work, team.
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