Timber & Steel Podcast

Your Body at 45 Is Not Your Body at 25

23 min · 10. juni 2026
episode Your Body at 45 Is Not Your Body at 25 cover

Beskrivelse

After age 30, you lose about 3% of your muscle mass each decade if you don't train to keep it, a stat from Harvard Health that Clayton references. It's a big reason people show up at 60 unable to do things they used to. VO2 max (how well your body uses oxygen) and bone density both start trending down around 40. You get winded easier and your bones get thinner, but resistance training, jumping, and landing push back on it. Recovery takes longer as you age, partly because blood flow to the muscles slows down. A tweak that bounced back on its own at 25 now needs real attention. The infinite game reframe (from Simon Sinek's book The Infinite Game): stop training to win today's workout and start training so you're still capable at 65 and 85. Live like a Prius, not a race car. Reset your PRs. Wipe your personal records every decade, every five years, or even every birthday so you're measuring against who you are now, not who you were at 35. How to know you're doing enough: show up at least two days a week (more if you're not active outside the gym) and do something that challenges you that day, even if it wouldn't have challenged 20-year-old you. A heavy day isn't a max day. Bridgett walks through coaching a full-stop deadlift session and resetting expectations, including an athlete who lost 100 pounds and had to rethink her numbers because losing the weight changed the lift.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Timber & Steel Podcast sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

75 Episoder

episode A Mediocre Workout Still Counts cover

A Mediocre Workout Still Counts

Mediocre means you show up tired, hungry, or stressed and adjust on the fly. Lighter load, modified movements, a slower pace. You're not hitting 100%, and the workout reflects that. The all-or-nothing mindset is what actually ends fitness routines. The missed session doesn't do the damage. The story you tell yourself afterward does. From Atomic Habits by James Clear: don't let misses pile up. If the benefit is the habit, your job is to protect the habit, not execute it perfectly. A mediocre workout may not produce a training stimulus. But it keeps the habit of showing up alive, and that habit is what every good training day depends on. Clayton's framework: consistency → mechanics → consistency → intensity. Showing up at low effort still builds the base volume that makes everything else possible. Every workout is a deposit in your fitness bank account. Sporadic big deposits don't add up the way small, consistent ones do. Log the mediocre workouts. Your notes exist to track consistency, not performance. Hiding your results from your coach makes it harder to actually help you. The hardest part is already done when you walk through the door. In Clayton's experience, almost no one has ever shown up and then left without doing the workout.

24. juni 202631 min
episode Your Body at 45 Is Not Your Body at 25 cover

Your Body at 45 Is Not Your Body at 25

After age 30, you lose about 3% of your muscle mass each decade if you don't train to keep it, a stat from Harvard Health that Clayton references. It's a big reason people show up at 60 unable to do things they used to. VO2 max (how well your body uses oxygen) and bone density both start trending down around 40. You get winded easier and your bones get thinner, but resistance training, jumping, and landing push back on it. Recovery takes longer as you age, partly because blood flow to the muscles slows down. A tweak that bounced back on its own at 25 now needs real attention. The infinite game reframe (from Simon Sinek's book The Infinite Game): stop training to win today's workout and start training so you're still capable at 65 and 85. Live like a Prius, not a race car. Reset your PRs. Wipe your personal records every decade, every five years, or even every birthday so you're measuring against who you are now, not who you were at 35. How to know you're doing enough: show up at least two days a week (more if you're not active outside the gym) and do something that challenges you that day, even if it wouldn't have challenged 20-year-old you. A heavy day isn't a max day. Bridgett walks through coaching a full-stop deadlift session and resetting expectations, including an athlete who lost 100 pounds and had to rethink her numbers because losing the weight changed the lift.

10. juni 202623 min
episode Leftovers on Purpose cover

Leftovers on Purpose

- Batch cooking doesn't have to mean full meal prep. Cooking extra at dinner for the next day's lunch is the simplest version. - Bridgett's Costco chicken method: buy in bulk, cook all of it at once in four different flavors (lime/jalapeño, BBQ, spiced, balsamic/oil) so you're not eating the same thing every day. - Taco meat gets made in a giant pot and used across multiple meals: bowls, salads, omelets, eggs. The ingredients are batched, not the meals. - Portion size matters: chili goes in single-serve containers because only Clayton eats it. Taco bowls go in bigger containers because the whole family will eat them. - Frozen vegetables are picked at peak ripeness and flash frozen. They're likely better than "fresh" produce that was picked early to ripen on the shelf. - If batch cooking isn't realistic (small kitchen, tight budget, limited storage), basic prep still helps: chop veggies ahead, buy a rotisserie chicken, keep your ingredients accessible. - Bridgett's advice: make it boring. Pick the meals you know you'll eat, keep them on rotation, and only add something new once in a while. - Decision fatigue at the end of the day is the real problem. Having something ready, even if it's not exciting, keeps you from defaulting to fast food or skipping meals entirely.

13. mai 202629 min
episode Make Healthy the Default cover

Make Healthy the Default

- Willpower is limited, especially when you are hungry, tired, stressed, or rushing between responsibilities. A better food environment lowers the amount of willpower you need. - The four levers Clayton outlines are visibility, access, portion, and friction. Make the helpful choice easier to see and reach, then make the less helpful choice a little less automatic. - Jennie shared how organizing food by macronutrient helps her know where to go when she needs protein fast. That kind of structure can remove a lot of decision fatigue. - A small whiteboard on the fridge can help track fresh food, leftovers, and meal prep before they get forgotten. It is a simple way to reduce waste and make options easier to see. - Breakfast does not have to look like breakfast. If chicken chili or leftovers help you hit the nutrition target for meal one, that can be a better answer than forcing traditional breakfast food. - Portioning food before you are hungry makes it easier to avoid overcorrecting later. That can mean prepped meals, single-serve options, or keeping the right containers close to where you cook. - Friction can be useful. Deleting delivery apps, removing saved payment info, changing your drive home, or storing trigger foods out of sight can interrupt automatic choices. - A kitchen reset starts with clearing out old food, making healthy options visible, keeping grab-and-go protein and produce ready, and setting up backup options in the freezer.

29. april 202631 min