The Flipping 50 Show

Debra Atkinson
The Flipping 50 Show

The podcast for women in menopause and beyond who want to change the way they age. Fitness, wellness, and health research put into practical tips you can use today. You still got it, girl!

  1. 1 天前

    Exercise Timing Improves Exercise Benefits in Menopause

    The timing of your exercise hurts or improves exercise benefits in menopause. If this is new stay with me! If this is like a review or you’re a trainer and you’re unsure of how to relate these things to your clients, you stay with me too! This is a great refresher and for some trainers the first time they’re ever hearing it! If you’re a trainer or health pro, don’t miss the She Means Fitness Podcast, and be sure if you’re not getting results for your midlife and beyond clients you’re aware of our sponsor of this show, the Flipping 50 Menopause Fitness Specialist®. Since 2018 we’ve been providing the course and CECs, and now, this is not a course, it’s a business. Learn more here. Questions I Answer in This Episode: Why type and timing of exercise matters more in menopause? [00:07:56] The normal curve of hormones during the day (and night) [00:08:48] How exercise affects hormones [00:10:06] Some examples of how exercise timing change has supported symptoms of menopause [00:15:38] First steps to try if you’re a little “addicted” to your exercise [00:38:49] Let’s review hormones related to exercise (in menopause or any stage): Cortisol is at its highest level at 8am and lowest at 2am when you’re functioning optimally. During times of stress, whether chronic or acute cortisol levels spike (also increasing blood sugar). Insulin levels will increase if blood sugar rises, in order to lower blood sugar levels. By late afternoon, cortisol levels are low and not providing the energy we’ve enjoyed during the morning. So if we exercise, your body will convert another hormone into cortisol. In the evening, progesterone levels rise to help facilitate the chill and relaxation that helps provide a sound night sleep. During deep cycles of sleep, we release testosterone and growth hormones which improve muscle growth and repair. Why Doing Intense Exercise Early Improves Exercise Benefits in Menopause So you don’t misinterpret, this isn’t a suggestion for intense exercise every day. Doing intense exercise early improves exercise benefits in menopause. Also true, intense exercise late might interfere with exercise benefits in menopause. The two keys in the conversation on High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) are: cortisol during exercise cortisol after exercise What does cortisol do? Cortisol is responsible for physiological changes, such as the quick breakdown of fats and carbohydrates and a rise in blood sugar for immediate energy, and repressing the immune system to focus your energy on whatever you’re doing at the moment. The blood sugar elevation you see on your Continuous Blood Glucose Monitor is normal and not a bad thing (provided you’re recovering quickly from that spike that is caused by a legitimate need). The glucose has been released so it can be used: It’s when you see your CGM continue to be elevated after your HIIT session, or crash, that you want to be concerned about. The quality of your recovery is important. In menopause, particularly perimenopause, recovery can be slowed or insufficient simply because of the changes in hormones. The same stressors in your life can potentially have a greater negative impact on your cortisol. Additionally, some of the keys to recovery are hard to get in midlife: Sleep Down time for Meditation and breath-slowing exercises Foam rolling or massage Decades of conditioning work against us getting adequate nutrition and hydration. If we still operate with “eat less, exercise more,” we generally don’t have enough fuel to recover, and hydration could be impeded by low sodium intake. So many of us grew up with messaging about low salt, low sodium being the goal and have taken it so far that we’re not actually hydrating by drinking water only, or worse, water with sugary substances. Exercise Early Improves Exercise Benefits in Menopause But Not If… One big mistake women make with HIIT is doing it too much or doing it after a workout that was lower intensity, assuming it’s short and feeling you didn’t work hard enough. We often assume feeling good after exercise is wrong. We’ve been conditioned by the media that it should be hard or hurt to be effective and should be under that threshold of cortisol elevation. There is a psychological effect from HIIT that differs from cardio activities. Studies on HIIT and high intensity weight training show these are safe and create positive feelings. The brain gets bathed in neurotransmitters after HIIT sessions that give a boost of creativity or problem solving. While you CAN do HIIT and strength training on the same day, it is not recommended daily. Hard exercise is more beneficial at your capacity. When you’re in a period of extremely high stress (emotional and or physical) because of that overall load, the allostatic load interferes with recovery. During Perimenopause, the roller coaster of hormones can mean HIIT is not even ideal for you at all. If you do it and respond positively, 1-3 short sessions a week of not more than 45 minutes of HIIT is ideal. Beyond that point, injury rates go up significantly. Tendons can become more rigid and connective tissue is reduced thanks to lower estrogen. Awareness about this sweet spot of enough - not too much - is really important. I call it the MVP, MINIMUM VIABLE PHYSICAL activity to get results. Doing more gives you less ROI, it might tip your bucket so much that you are headed to breakdown instead of a more resilient body. During post menopause, the hormone roller coaster has generally calmed down and you can potentially include HIIT. You may be able to increase it up to 4 short sessions a week. First Steps to Improve Exercise Benefits in Menopause Skeptical or a creature of habit that it’s hard to change even if you’re not getting the results you want? If you say, your belly fat is not budging, in fact seems to get worse, here’s my suggestion. Let's use the analogy of science by the Glucose Goddess (we’ll link to that episode). If you have a plate of food and change nothing but the order you eat that food, you can change the impact of your blood glucose by up to 75%. Let’s say you find it hard to give up your exercise habits. Change to exercise intensely only in the morning and light exercise or movement late in the day. Two things to keep in mind: Intensity comes from duration too. So hiking 2 or more hours may also spike your blood sugar. Lack of fuel before, during or after exercise (for recovery) will also increase the negative impact on your cortisol. There you have it, keys to improve the exercise benefits in menopause: Time intense exercise early in the day Even low to moderate intensity exercise can become intense if the cardiac drift is prolonged enough to elevate cortisol and it remain elevated, or if The habits before, during or after don’t facilitate quick recover with the right fuel and rest to avoid muscle breakdown References: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25560699/ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1728869X22000338 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9990535/ Resources: My Favorite CGM: https://www.flippingfifty.com/myglucose Flipping 50 Membership: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cafe Flipping 50 STRONGER 12-week program: https://www.flippingfifty.com/getstronger Other Episodes You Might Like: Cortisol Hormone: Don’t let it derail your fat loss efforts: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cortisol-hormone/ Best HIIT Workouts for Women Over 50 | Fat Burning: https://www.flippingfifty.com/best-hiit-workouts/ The Blood Sugar Belly Fat Loss Connection for Women Over 40: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qnjwjT5-nc

    45 分鐘
  2. 4 天前

    Turning Your Personal Drama and Trauma into Transformation

    Personal drama or personal trauma? One and the same? What is it, and how does it shape your health and happiness? Let’s explore the connection between everyday irritations and deeper trauma. From bad hair days to betrayal, uncover how personal drama impacts your well-being and how to move past it to live the life you deserve. My Guest: Dr. Debi Silber, founder of the PBT (Post Betrayal Transformation) Institute and National Forgiveness Day (celebrated annually on September 1st). An international bestselling author and acclaimed speaker on FOX, CBS, The Dr. Oz Show, TEDx (twice). Her podcast, From Betrayal to Breakthrough, is also globally ranked within the top 1.5% of podcasts. She empowers others to overcome betrayal and reclaim health, happiness, and confidence. Questions We Answer in This Episode: What is betrayal? How does it show up? [00:05:00] How does betrayal impact your health, work and relationships? [00:05:50] Why do we stay stuck? [00:18:30] How can our biggest crises become our greatest gifts? [00:21:50] Who needs healing most, the betrayed or betrayer and how are these paths similar or different? [00:23:30] Connect with Debi: https://thepbtinstitute.com/ On Social: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/InspireEmpowerTransform Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/debisilber/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@debisilber Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/debisilber Twitter: https://twitter.com/DebiSilber Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/debisilber/ The latest TEDx: “Do You Have Post Betrayal Syndrome?“: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyqOR69dHiU TEDx: Stop Sabotaging Yourself: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XX30i6nC7ro The From Betrayal to Breakthrough podcast: https://thepbtinstitute.com/podcast/ Other Episodes You Might Like: Healing Trauma to Lose Weight: What if it’s Not Stress? https://www.flippingfifty.com/healing/ The Hidden Reason for Belly Bloat: https://www.flippingfifty.com/reason-for-belly-bloat/ Your Brain Better | A No Negative Side-Effects Method https://www.flippingfifty.com/your-better-brain/ Resources: Flipping 50 Membership: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cafe Flipping 50 STRONGER 12-week program: https://www.flippingfifty.com/getstronger Discovery Call with Debra: https://www.flippingfifty.com/wellness-coaching-for-life/

    38 分鐘
  3. 12月13日

    Increase Longevity and create a life you look forward to without Heavy Lifting

    Having a better menopause experience alone ensures you increase longevity and your health span. Usually we talk about preserving muscle, reversing bone loss, and enhancing walking speed to do so. Today, it’s a lot less sweat and breathlessness. but probably the hardest exercise I could ask you to do. Research shows that older individuals with more positive self-perceptions of aging, measured up to 23 years earlier, lived 7.5 years longer than those with less positive self-perceptions of aging. If you don’t like what you see, change it. Change the people around you, change what you’re doing or not doing. The research study consisted of 660 individuals aged 50 and older who participated in a community-based survey, the Ohio Longitudinal Study of Aging and Retirement (OLSAR). By matching the OLSAR to mortality data recently obtained from the National Death Index, the authors were able to conduct survival analyses. The findings suggest that the self-perceptions of stigmatized groups can influence longevity. If perceptions about aging are formed by the age of 6, you might want to consider that we’ve likely contributed to our children’s and grandchildren’s early death or improved longevity, one or the other. You and I have either helped them live longer stronger or believe the little things we’ve said, and I quote from people and potentially myself having said this: “I’m getting old,” which we don’t usually say with a positive spin. This is most likely first said often at age 25 or at 30 when you have at least ⅔ or ¾ of your life left to live. “It’s hell getting old.” -said at any age “Just you wait.” -said to younger women about trying to get or stay fit “Grandma is old, honey, you have to be careful.” “There’s nothing good about it.” -in reference to getting old “So, that’s when it happens/when things start falling apart.” “I am my mother.” But, how important are these offhanded, casual, lighthearted comments really? Increase Longevity Through Growth and a Positive Outlook A 2018 Plus One study found that the chances of dementia can be lowered by 49.8% if a positive outlook is maintained. Who do you surround yourself with? What are your own thoughts? Do you think about yourself in 20, 30 or 40 years? What do you see? How does it feel? What are you doing and who are you doing it with? Physical exercise and nutrition are the two most important of the tangible things you can do. Your mindset, however, is number one. Yes, you should move every day and we eat every day. We think 60-70,000 thoughts a day and 90% of those are the same as yesterday. We continue living the same pattern and change becomes hard. While preparing for a class reunion, I looked through old yearbooks filled with messages like, “keep being you” or “don’t forget who you are when you go to…. [university].” In reality, we didn’t intentionally do it, but that advice is some of the worst we could have given each other. “Keep changing and evolving, growing and becoming” would have been wise beyond our years but even teachers didn’t write things like that. Increase Longevity With a Youthful Mindset Dr Ellen Langer, the Mother of Mindfulness, tells us that we will stay stuck getting the same results, changing very little, if those habits aren’t changing WHO we are. Unless your best habit is to break habits that keep you doing and repeating thoughts that aren’t getting you results, you’ll continue on the path you’re on now. Virtually, you won’t change much. The reframing of anything is possible. You’ve probably done it. For instance, you may have had to run in high school for punishment if you lost or you made mistakes or talked too much in class. Running then was bad. As an adult you may have come to love running maybe because someone you loved or envied did it and seemed to enjoy it. Not eating for a long period of time seemed so difficult, it was like dieting, which has a negative connotation stemming from deprivation. But today we know not eating between meals and going 12 hours between dinner and breakfast without calories is positive, and that some often go 16 or more hours without consuming calories and call it intermittent fasting. So when I go in for a fasting blood test and all that means is I haven’t eating after dinner and it’s 7:30 and they ask if I’m fasting or the phlebotomist asks what I’m going to eat first, as if I must be starving, I’m always a bit surprised they refer to it as a hardship not to have eaten for 11 hours, while I was sleeping most of the time. A reframe, right? Dr Ellen Langer’s well-known Counterclockwise study (there’s a book by the same title) with older adults asked to pretend “as if” they were their younger selves for a short time. They were exposed only to music, periodicals, movies of the time they were younger and by the end of the week older adults who arrived using canes, moving slowly, could hear better, see better, were playing touch football. Simply by changing their thoughts about aging. References: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2002, Vol. 83, No. 2, 261–270 Copyright 2002 by the American Psychological Association, Inc. 0022-3514/02/$5.00 DOI: 10.1037//0022-3514.83.2.261 https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0191004 Levy BR, Slade MD, Pietrzak RH, Ferrucci L (2018) Positive age beliefs protect against dementia even among elders with high-risk gene. PLoS ONE 13(2): e0191004. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0191004 Other Episodes You May Like: Think You’re Too Old? Ageism Dismantled with Ashton Applewhite: https://www.flippingfifty.com/ageism-dismantled/ The Senior Games | Off The Scale and Onto a Starting Line: https://www.flippingfifty.com/senior-games/ Positive Aging Sources: How to Change the Way You Age | Bolder is Better: https://www.flippingfifty.com/growing-bolder/ What, When & Why to Exercise for Women 40+ Challenge Bundle https://www.flippingfifty.com/store/uncategorized/what-when-why-to-exercise-for-women-40-challenge-bundle/ Resources: Flipping 50 Membership: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cafe Flipping 50 STRONGER 12-week program: https://www.flippingfifty.com/getstronger Discovery Call with Debra: https://www.flippingfifty.com/wellness-coaching-for-life/

    36 分鐘
  4. 12月10日

    Empower & Energize Yourself with The Colors You Wear

    Have you ever wondered why you feel better based on the colors you wear? In this episode, you’ll understand just how your fashion is related to your personality. Know the difference between “image” and “essence". Discover how to use fashion as a tool for self-expression and personal growth! Today’s guest is my personal color expert (in addition to my voters on IG who helped nail the ultimate Mother of the Groom dress I wore!), and now she can be yours too. My Guest: Jennifer Butler is a master of color and style. Holding degrees in Art history, Sociology and Spiritual Psychology she builds on her fashion expertise, knowledge of human nature, and understanding of color, to develop individual DNA based color palettes and style profiles that reveal the essence of an individual’s personality. She is also the author of Dress Your Essence. Questions We Answer in This Episode: What’s the difference between Image and Essence? [00:07:10] What are the 12 Fashion attitudes and how do they affect how we dress ourselves? [00:09:30] Why do you say "Beauty is a Spiritual Practice? [00:16:30] How does your book help us to "Dress in our Essence"? [00:19:40] What inspired you to write this book and put much thought into the colors you wear? [00:15:30] What are the 3 first steps to get started Dressing our Essence? [00:31:00] Connect with Jennifer: https://JenniferButlerColor.com/ Dress Your Essence Book Link: http://www.worldchangers.media/jennifer-butler-dress-your-essence Free Essence Quiz: https://learn.jenniferbutlercolor.com/quiz Train Your Eye All Four Season-Archetypes: https://vimeo.com/118613102/4aa456ebb0 On Social: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JenniferButlerColor Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/JenniferButlerColor/ Other Episodes You Might Like: Beyond Color: Confidence, Radiance, and Energy in Your Closet: https://www.flippingfifty.com/color/ Younger for Life with America’s Holistic Plastic Surgeon® https://www.flippingfifty.com/younger-for-life/ Resources: Flipping 50 Membership: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cafe Flipping 50 STRONGER 12-week program: https://www.flippingfifty.com/getstronger Discovery Call with Debra: https://www.flippingfifty.com/wellness-coaching-for-life/

    39 分鐘
  5. 12月6日

    Building Muscle During Menopause: A Protein and Exercise Review

    Building muscle during menopause takes a unique stimulus compared to PRE menopause and is also unique during peri and post menopause. Of course there’s more. Are you trying to lose weight, gain muscle, prevent osteoporosis, reduce or avoid medication, do you have adrenal fatigue or long haul? In this episode I’ll discuss the research on protein and call back to a recent episode about exercise volume for building muscle during menopause. Questions I answer in this episode: How have protein recommendations changed over time (then and now)? [00:08:00] What are women’s protein needs during menopause? [00:17:30] What are the effects of protein on building muscle during menopause? [00:11:00] As a refresher, what is the resistance training volume for pre, peri and post menopause? [00:19:50] How important is recovery—and are you doing it right? [00:30:20] Based on RDA (Recommended Dietary Allowance), protein consumption is 0.8g per kg (of body weight) per day. This is about 55 grams of protein for a 150-pound woman — but that’s only enough to maintain nitrogen balance and prevent deficiency in sedentary women. It is not enough to help you build muscle. Let me explain why that is true. The reason for that recommendation is important to understand. As you age, anabolic resistance increases, meaning you need more protein and stimulus for muscle protein synthesis. More emerging research indicates “that amount may no longer be an appropriate recommendation.” That statement was the conclusion of a  2020 systematic review and meta-analysis addressing the protein needs of people who are exercising and/or trying to lose weight.  Researchers concluded, “The RDA for protein of 0.8g of protein / kg / day may no longer be an appropriate recommendation.” Scientific Research on Building Muscle During Menopause An interview with Bill Philips, PhD, in May 2024, on the What, When & Why to Exercise for Women 40+, with his primary research focus shifting to that of midlife women, he could already say that the single simplest way to support fat loss and optimal body composition is to increase protein even if you didn’t change your caloric intake. A 2022 meta-analysis recommends adults should consume nearly 1.5g of protein / kg / day of protein to maintain and/or augment muscle strength along with resistance training. Small-statured women with low reserves may need even more to prevent muscle loss, strength decline, reduced activity, and increased risk of falls or disease. For active women, whether you are competing or you are intentionally exercising more than 3 times a week for a purpose of achieving fitness or reduced fatness, the 2023 International Society of Sports Nutrition recommends at least 1.5g of protein / kg / day and maybe even more. “Daily protein intake should fall within the mid-to-upper ranges of current sport nutrition guidelines (1.4–2.2 g of protein / kg / day) for women at all stages of menstrual function (pre-, peri-, post-menopausal, and contraceptive users) with protein doses evenly distributed, every 3 to 4 hours, across the day.” One thing to note is that hitting the “ballpark” is not enough. You need to meet the threshold. Whether it’s reaching muscle fatigue, breathlessness during exercise, or consistent protein intake, falling short means missing the full benefits. For women in perimenopause, it requires less stimulus than for postmenopausal women with the most hormone decline and most advanced age contributing to anabolic resistance. (inability to gain lean muscle). Training and Protein:  Building Muscle During Menopause When it’s recommended to have at least two total body resistance training sessions a week, that minimum may best serve: Women in perimenopause Those with adrenal fatigue or long haul Time constricted Others who require a longer recovery period And within those workouts, there needs to be adequate volume achieved with a number of muscle groups, sets, and weight to muscle fatigue. Postmenopausal women require greater stimulus to build lean muscle. You can aim for 4 HIIT sessions per week and increase resistance training volume if 2 sessions aren’t enough, provided protein, sleep, and stress are optimized. The biggest obstacle to exercise is time. The second though is time for recovery. An aging muscle needs more stimulus overload. It needs greater recovery to repair the microtears that are innate to workout out intensely. If you’re an active 150 lb postmenopausal woman who wants to improve lean muscle and decrease fat, to reach the upper range of protein that would be 2.2g of protein / kg body weight / day. 68 kg x 2.2 g of protein = 150 g of protein To get this, here is a sample protein consumption per day 50 g x 3 meals 35-40 g x 4 meals For strength training, 15-minute weight training sessions likely lack adequate volume in a session, unless focused on one muscle group. This is useful for beginners learning form or those with adrenal stress or special conditions but may not provide adequate stimulus for muscle growth. In a minimum, do 5-8 sets with some rest between puts you at a need for 15-20 minutes. That’s no warm up and cool down. Again, that’s a single muscle. Even 30-minute sessions may not allow you adequate stimulus for your muscles. Where to Find Support for Building Muscle During Menopause Personal trainers and fitness instructors, even with degrees or certifications, lack training on menopause and hormonal influences. They’re entering the field with the minimum viable knowledge. But eager to help solve a problem like weight loss or earn money, they may only do as well as they know. Advice or training from a 20, or 40-something woman showing what’s working for her may not work for the goal you have and the hormone status you’ve got. Someone trained solely in nutrition on clinical recommendations may not necessarily be up to date on contemporary needs of older women and their hormonal status. It’s coming, but until we start demanding it, here’s how to advocate for yourself: To determine protein and exercise needs consider: Activity level and goals Current hormone status What you’ve been doing and how it’s working 2.2 g protein per kilogram for active and or postmenopausal women Volume of exercise – from sets of major muscle groups – increases with age Recovery from exercise is as important as the exercise itself In an upcoming podcast, I’ll share how to start increasing protein, how to plan a day of protein and position it for support of muscle protein synthesis and blood sugar control. Watch for masterclasses monthly where we deep dive with our members References: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7231581/ https://sportsmedicine-open.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40798-022-00508-w https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10210857/ Other Episodes You May Like: My Post Menopause Workout Week Experiment | What I’m Doing: https://www.flippingfifty.com/my-post-menopause-workout/ Protein Consumption in Menopause (Revisited): https://www.flippingfifty.com/protein-consumption-in-menopause/ Resources: Stronger: Tone & Define https://www.flippingfifty.com/get-stronger/ Flipping 50 Membership: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cafe/

    44 分鐘
  6. 12月3日

    Connection Between the Sex Hormones and Bone Density

    Today’s episode is a refresher course or your introduction if you’re new to Flipping 50 and not quite sure you can make the connection between sex hormones and bone density. Share this with younger women to understand “more than seen and felt symptoms” of perimenopause. Many women aren’t aware of the options, pros and cons of hormone health. The more we know, the more we can make our own informed decisions. Bone density declines at menopause, and postmenopausal increases fracture risks. But do you know the importance of estrogen and testosterone in your bone health? Stay tuned to review the relationship between your sex hormones and bone density. My Guest: Dr. Doug Lucas is a double board-certified physician specializing in osteoporosis reversal and hormone replacement. After training at Stanford University, he transitioned from orthopedic surgery to anti-aging and regenerative medicine, gaining a fellowship in Anti-Aging and Metabolic Medicine and started Optimal Human Health MD (OHH) which is his nationwide telehealth practice. Dr. Doug educates the world through The Dr. Doug Show: Bones, Hormones and HealthSpan (YouTube), HealthSpan Nation and other platforms, while also mentoring physicians to prioritize patient-centered care. Questions We Answer in This Episode: What is the role of sex hormones in maintaining or improving bone density? [00:15:22] Can hormone replacement therapy (HRT) improve bone health? [00:18:32] What is the relationship between hormone decline and bone density? [00:14:17] What are the best strategies to maintain bone density with low hormone levels? [00:30:09] Connect with Dr. Doug: https://www.optimalhumanhealth.com/ On Social: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrDougLucas/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Dr_DougLucas Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr_douglucas/ Other Episodes You Might Like: Bone Health, Osteoporosis, Osteopenia Tips You’ve Never Heard: https://www.flippingfifty.com/bone-coach/ Build Bone After Osteoporosis: https://www.flippingfifty.com/build-bone-after-osteoporosis/ Can I Still Start Hormones 10 Years After Menopause? Doctors Respond: https://www.flippingfifty.com/start-hormones-10-years-after-menopause/ Resources: Flipping 50 Membership: https://www.flippingfifty.com/cafe Flipping 50 STRONGER 12-week program: https://www.flippingfifty.com/getstronger

    47 分鐘
  7. 11月29日

    Exercise for Menopause Brain Fog, Memory, Depression and Anxiety

    If you deal with menopause brain fog, mild depression or anxiety any time of year, this is for you. It’s also for anyone who wants the latest science on exercise and brain health. The evidence around how movement affects mental well-being is growing, and I want to share some of the most impactful insights with you. Almost all types of exercise seem to show benefits on mental well-being. Activities like resistance training, yoga, other mind-body activities, aerobic exercise, and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) can support brain health to some extent. In this episode I’ll share which exercise helps most, specifically on menopause brain fog, mood, or anxiety. No matter when you’re listening to this episode, it’s relevant for multiple reasons and seasons. But as I release it during the holiday season, it can have more impact. Whether you might be facing memories of loved ones you’ve lost, whether it was this year or in years past, or the traditions, memories, or emotions that come with the season that make this time of year bittersweet. While holidays can be magical and full of warmth, they can also feel heavy, bringing sadness, anxiety, or emotional struggles to the surface. For women with menopause brain fog and memory issues, the holidays can have an even greater impact. Beyond Menopause and Brain Fog Global prevalence of depression in perimenopausal women are at 33.9% and 34.9% in postmenopausal women. Why? This may be due to estrogen and progesterone fluctuations, sleep disturbances and greater susceptibility to negative effects of stress. Most adults with depression don’t receive adequate care - due to the stigma or the fact that they don’t respond well to antidepressants. And pharmaceuticals don’t address the physical comorbidities associated with depression. Exercise is well accepted as an alternative or complement due to accessibility, acceptability and safety. Even physical activity below public health recommendations can yield significant mental health benefits [and is a necessary place to start]. Menopause Brain Fog, It’s Not Just You A recent study published in the Biomedical Central Public Health Journal of over 200 randomized controlled trials show exercise interventions may have more potent antidepressant effects than SSRIs. A study examined which of 5 exercise interventions helped reduce depression levels most in postmenopausal women and if certain population characteristics responded differently. The Exercise Interventions: Stretching Exercise Aerobic Exercise Resistance Training Mind-Body Exercise Multi Exercise Mind-Body Exercise had the greatest effect on easing anxiety, followed by Aerobic Exercise. Exercise helps because it creates a controlled stress response, increasing resilience to anxiety. Years ago, I shared a study showing yoga boosts cognitive function more than muscle conditioning. A study published in Menopause: The Journal confirmed that mind-body exercises reduce fatigue, insomnia, depression, and anxiety. Why mindbody? Yoga increases melatonin levels, balances nervous system and improves brain-derived neurotrophic which improves cognition and memory. Best Exercise for Menopause Brain Fog The menopause brain fog experienced by many women may improve most with HIIT, being characterized by periods of “all out” exercise to breathlessness. A study in the Journal of Exercise Nutrition & Biochemistry in 2018 showed a Wingate protocol study on HIIT: Exercise Structure 30 seconds of all-out effort (fast-paced or against resistance) per interval 4 - 6 intervals per session, with 4 minutes of recovery between intervals Total Intense Exercise Time 2 - 3 minutes of intense exercise per session lasting a total of 20 minutes, including rest periods Training Frequency 3 sessions per week (totaling 15 minutes of high-intensity work per week) Results 2 Weeks - Improved skeletal muscle oxidative capacity 6 Weeks - Equivalent to traditional endurance training (40 - 60 minutes, 5 sessions per week) Additional Benefits for Midlife Women: Time - HIIT sessions take 1.5 hours a week, compared to other traditional endurance training 4.5 hours a week Cortisol - Short HIIT sessions avoid the cortisol spike (40 - 60 minutes is the tipping point where cortisol spikes negatively) Most women say they feel more energized, lighter, and more focused after HIIT compared to long endurance sessions. Studies on postmenopausal women with osteoporosis found that high-intensity, high-impact protocols led to positive responses, with low injury rates and high retention. Other Exercises for Menopause Brain Fog Resistance training also proves popular among women with anxiety, potentially due to the fact that the increase in heart rate and intensity is temporary, strength gains are made fairly quickly for a beginner and that carries over to increasing motivation, improved sleep. Walking outdoors with friends combines three sources of serotonin for women, particularly: movement, sunlight, and venting/talking. References: Han, B., Duan, Y., Zhang, P. et al. Effects of exercise on depression and anxiety in postmenopausal women: a pairwise and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. BMC Public Health 24, 1816 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-19348-2 Min Chul L, Sung Ki L, Suk Yool J, Hyung Hoon M. New insight of high-intensity interval training on physiological adaptation with brain functions. J Exerc Nutrition Biochem. 2018 Sep 30;22(3):1-5. doi: 10.20463/jenb.2018.0017. PMID: 30343552; PMCID: PMC6199482. Xu, Hong MM; Liu, Jian MD; Li, Peishan MD; Liang, Yujie MD. Effects of mind-body exercise on perimenopausal and postmenopausal women: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Menopause 31(5):p 457-467, May 2024. | DOI: 10.1097/GME.0000000000002336 Resources: BLISSMAS 12-Day Challenge: https://www.flippingfifty.com/blissmas Other Episodes You Might Like: Heal Your Gut, Save Your Brain: https://www.flippingfifty.com/save-your-brain/ Six Powerful Ways To Keep Your Perimenopause Brain Sharp: https://www.flippingfifty.com/perimenopause-brain/ Exercise Your Way to a Better Mood in Menopause: https://www.flippingfifty.com/better-mood-in-menopause/

    43 分鐘
  8. 11月26日

    Fitness Then and Now: A Look at Fitness Routines as You Age

    Let’s have a quick flashback on fitness then and now, a look at fitness routines as you age. We're going to talk about how we exercised through the years with my guest Linda Malone who is 65. She’s been in the fitness industry as a personal training and fitness expert. She’s doing some marketing and helping fitness and health pros develop their copy. My Guest: Linda Melone is the founder of The Copy Worx, a copywriting business targeting health and fitness businesses. She’s a seasoned copywriter, former personal trainer, and a fitness specialist for women over 50. She once ran an online fitness program for women over 50. She also hosts a podcast, B2B Marketing & Copywriting. Her byline appears in top publications including MSN Health, Oxygen, TIME, Shape, Self, AARP, and the Huffington Post, among many others. She was also a ghostwriter for a high-profile television celebrity fitness expert. Questions We Answer in This Episode: How did you start your fitness journey, and how has it shaped your life? [00:05:58] How has your workout routine changed, and what inspired those shifts? [00:07:37] Reflecting back, what do you wish you’d known in your 30s when training women over 50? [00:19:04] What are the biggest physical changes and abilities you've noticed over the years? [00:18:01] What are your top 3-5 tips for women embracing midlife at 65? [00:22:45] What are the biggest myths about exercising as you age? [00:26:09] Connect with Linda: https://thecopyworx.com/ On Social: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LindaMeloneWrites/ Instagram: https://x.com/LindaMelone YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thecopyworx LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/linda-melone/ Other Episodes You Might Like: Ageless Aging: Believe it or Not? https://www.flippingfifty.com/ageless-aging/ Truths and Myths: Lifting Heavy in Menopause for Bones & Body Comp: https://www.flippingfifty.com/lifting-heavy-in-menopause/ Exercise for Bone Density Then and Now: https://www.flippingfifty.com/exercise-for-bone-density/ Resources: Meditation: https://www.brain.fm/

    45 分鐘
4.5
(滿分 5 顆星)
391 則評分

簡介

The podcast for women in menopause and beyond who want to change the way they age. Fitness, wellness, and health research put into practical tips you can use today. You still got it, girl!

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