Heather Monthie Podcast

Heather Monthie

Strong & Fit AF Over 40 Podcast The no-BS podcast for driven people over 40 who are already training—and want to keep getting better. Hosted by Heather Monthie, performance & transformation coach, bodybuilder, yoga teacher, this show breaks down what actually works after 40: strength, nutrition, mobility, recovery, and real consistency. No starting over. No fluff. No pretending you’re 25. Just smart strategy to stay strong, lean, mobile, and sharp for decades. Strong AF. Flexible AF. Fit AF. For life. Hit follow… and let’s get after it.

  1. APR 30

    The 7 Non-Negotiables for a High-Performance Body After 40

    There comes a point, sometime after 40, when you start noticing a subtle shift in the cultural narrative. The jokes about metabolism slowing down. The casual comments about “getting older.” The quiet suggestion that the best physical years are behind you and now the goal is simply maintenance, or worse, acceptance. Some people lean into that story. They interpret every ache, every dip in energy, every physical change as confirmation that decline is inevitable. They adjust their expectations downward. They move less. They train less. They assume this is simply the natural trajectory of the next few decades. And then there are the others. The ones who feel the same physical changes but interpret them differently. Instead of seeing limitations, they see responsibility. Instead of accepting decline, they decide it’s time to raise the standard. They don’t want to merely age, they want to build a body capable of carrying them confidently into their seventies, eighties, and beyond. If you fall into that second category, the question becomes: what actually matters? Not the trends. Not the extreme programs. Not the 30-day transformations. What matters are the foundations. The habits that quietly determine whether your body grows stronger or gradually weakens over time. I call them the “boring basics,” and together they form the BALANCE framework. They aren’t flashy, but they are powerful. And after 40, they are non-negotiable. https://youtu.be/0st86IkFIdE Build Strength Through Movement Muscle is protective. It protects your metabolism, your bones, your joints, your independence. It protects your ability to move through the world without hesitation. After 40, strength training shifts from being aesthetic to being essential. That doesn’t mean punishing workouts or training like you’re 25. It means intelligent resistance training. It means challenging your body enough to preserve and build muscle while respecting recovery. It means understanding that walking daily, lifting weights, practicing mobility, and incorporating bodyweight movement all contribute to long-term strength. If you want to continue hiking, traveling, competing, playing sports, or simply living actively, you must invest in your muscle now. Strength is not something you “try” occasionally. It is something you maintain deliberately. Adequate Hydration Hydration is rarely glamorous, yet it underpins nearly every system in the body. We often talk about nutrition in terms of macros, supplements, and meal timing, but water is the simplest performance enhancer available. It affects digestion, circulation, cognitive clarity, joint lubrication, and even hormone balance. Many adults underestimate how dehydrated they actually are. Coffee doesn’t replace water. Neither does sparkling water, soda, or kombucha. Before overhauling your diet, consider whether you are consistently drinking enough water to support your body’s daily demands. Optimizing health sometimes begins with the most straightforward adjustment. Lower Your Stress Levels At this stage of life, stress is not something you eliminate; it is something you manage. Career demands, family responsibilities, aging parents, financial pressures — they accumulate. Chronic stress, however, elevates cortisol, interferes with recovery, disrupts sleep, and makes body composition changes significantly harder. Lowering stress does not require withdrawing from your responsibilities. It requires regulating your response to them. That may involve breathwork, yoga, meditation, intentional time outdoors, nervous system regulation practices, or simply scheduling true downtime without screens or stimulation. It may mean recognizing when you are living in a constant state of urgency and deliberately creating space to come back to baseline. You cannot out-train unmanaged stress. A high-performance body requires a regulated nervous system. Adequate Sleep and Recovery Sleep is often the first sacrifice in a busy life, yet it is the foundation of physical adaptation. During sleep, hormones regulate, muscle tissue repairs, inflammation decreases, and the brain consolidates information. Without sufficient rest, even the most disciplined training program begins to falter. For adults over 40, sleep becomes increasingly non-negotiable. That means evaluating bedtime routines, room temperature, light exposure, and screen habits. It also means building recovery into your training plan — not treating rest days as optional. The body does not grow stronger during the workout. It grows stronger in response to it. Nourish Your Mind and Body What you consume shapes you — physically and mentally. From a nutritional standpoint, this means prioritizing adequate protein, whole foods, fruits and vegetables, and minimizing ultra-processed options. It means being honest about alcohol intake and recognizing how it impacts sleep, recovery, and body composition. But nourishment extends beyond food. What are you feeding your mind each day? The media you scroll, the conversations you engage in, the content you absorb — all of it influences your stress levels, your mindset, and your motivation. If you are constantly consuming content that spikes cortisol or fuels comparison, it becomes harder to operate from a grounded, focused place. A high-performance life requires intentional inputs. Create a Success Plan Sustainable health does not happen by accident. Creating a weekly plan for training, meals, and recovery provides structure. It allows you to act intentionally rather than reactively. Yet even the most carefully constructed plan will eventually encounter real life. The difference between stagnation and progress lies in adaptability. When the week unravels — when meetings run late or family obligations intervene — the solution is not to abandon the entire plan. It is to adjust it. To pivot. To continue forward momentum rather than waiting for a “perfect” restart. A success plan is not rigid; it is responsive. Embrace Consistency and Accountability Consistency quietly outperforms intensity over time. Many people approach fitness with bursts of motivation, pushing themselves to extremes only to find recovery derailed for days. Sustainable progress, however, comes from showing up repeatedly at an appropriate intensity — training in a way that allows you to return tomorrow. As consistency builds, intensity can increase strategically. But rhythm must come first. Accountability also accelerates progress. Whether it is a coach, a training partner, a structured program, or even a simple habit of tracking workouts on a calendar, accountability reinforces commitment. Learning to hold yourself accountable is a skill. Seeking support when needed is wisdom. Redefining What 40 Means A high-performance body after 40 is not about chasing youth. It is about raising standards. It is about recognizing that the next several decades are not a gradual fade but an opportunity for refinement and strength. The habits you practice now — the quiet, foundational disciplines — determine the trajectory of your future. You do not rise to your goals; you fall to your systems and your standards. So the question is not whether aging will occur. It will. The question is whether you will age passively or deliberately. The seven non-negotiables are not dramatic. They are not revolutionary. They are steady, grounded, and profoundly effective. And when practiced consistently, they allow you to do more than simply maintain. They allow you to level up.

    7 min
  2. APR 27

    What Yoga Does (and Doesn’t) Do for You After 40

    If you are over 40 and practicing yoga consistently, you are doing something deeply valuable for your body. You are maintaining mobility, preserving balance, and cultivating a nervous system that can handle stress. Those things matter more than ever in midlife. But at some point, the question surfaces: Is yoga enough? After 40, the goal is no longer simply flexibility or stress relief. The conversation shifts toward muscle retention, bone density, metabolic health, and long-term physical capability. You begin to think about what you want your body to feel like in 10, 20, or 30 years. You start asking whether what you are doing now will carry you into your 60s, 70s, and beyond with strength and resilience. Yoga is powerful. But it is not complete. The distinction becomes clearer when you look at what changes physiologically after 40. https://youtu.be/WSLB0VaSvyg Muscle Retention: Endurance vs. High Tension Beginning in your 30s and accelerating into your 40s, muscle mass naturally declines. This process, known as sarcopenia, is gradual but relentless if not challenged. Preserving muscle after 40 is not about aesthetics; it is about maintaining strength, metabolic function, and physical independence. Yoga builds muscular endurance. Long isometric holds — chair pose, plank, warrior variations — create light to moderate tension in the muscles. That tension absolutely contributes to strength maintenance. It keeps tissues active and engaged. It reinforces control and stability. However, muscle stays when it is challenged with sufficient load. Strength training introduces higher mechanical tension, recruits fast-twitch muscle fibers, and allows for progressive overload — the gradual increase in resistance that forces adaptation. Without that rising stimulus, muscle maintenance becomes more difficult over time. Yoga can help retain what you have. Strength training helps you keep it — and potentially build more. Bone Density: Stretch Does Not Equal Stress Bone density becomes a more pressing concern after 40, especially for women. Estrogen changes, hormonal shifts, and aging itself contribute to a gradual reduction in bone mass. Fragility is not an inevitability, but it does require deliberate action. Yoga provides bodyweight loading. Poses like plank, lunge, and chair introduce force through the skeleton. That loading supports stability, balance, and joint integrity. These are meaningful benefits. But bone adapts to mechanical stress. Heavy resistance training applies axial load and measurable force to the skeletal system. When bones experience sufficient stress, they respond by strengthening. Stretch alone does not create that adaptation. Stability alone does not maximize it. Yoga supports bone health. Strength training builds it. Progressive Overload: Adaptation Requires Increase One of the most defining principles in strength development is progressive overload. Adaptation occurs when demand increases. More weight, more resistance, more intensity — something must rise. Yoga, particularly when practiced in familiar flows or repeated sequences, emphasizes refinement rather than escalation. Flexibility deepens. Balance improves. Breath control strengthens. These are valuable adaptations. But they are not typically driven by measurable increases in load. Strength training allows for systematic progression. A weight that once felt challenging becomes manageable. It increases. The body responds. If nothing increases, nothing adapts. After 40, adaptation becomes less automatic. It must be intentionally stimulated. Mobility and Strength: Range vs. Control Mobility without strength can create instability. Strength without mobility can create stiffness. Yoga excels at expanding range of motion, enhancing joint mobility, and improving tissue elasticity. It restores suppleness that often diminishes with age. It teaches body awareness and breath integration. These qualities build resilience in subtle but profound ways. Strength training, on the other hand, builds control within that range. It reinforces joint stability under load. It develops the ability to generate and absorb force. When mobility and strength are integrated, resilience emerges. The combination is what allows you to hike at 65, lift luggage overhead at 70, or stay powerful through your 50s without chronic injury. Mobility creates access. Strength creates ownership. Recovery After 40: Stress Management Becomes Strategic Recovery shifts significantly after 40. Sleep quality changes. Hormonal fluctuations impact energy. Alcohol tolerance declines. Stress from career and family responsibilities compounds. Yoga supports recovery through parasympathetic activation. Slower classes and breath-focused movement reduce systemic stress. They function as active recovery, promoting circulation without overwhelming the nervous system. Strength training creates higher stimulus. It demands adequate protein, sleep, and stress management to translate into adaptation. Without recovery, intensity becomes depletion. The equation changes from “train hard” to “train hard and recover intelligently.” Recovery is no longer optional. It is part of the plan. Longevity: What Are You Training For? Longevity has become a popular term, but stripped of trend language, it simply asks a practical question: What do you want to be able to do later? If you want to hike mountains, lift grandchildren, travel actively, and remain metabolically healthy into your 70s, the groundwork must be laid now. Yoga builds mobility, balance, tissue tolerance, and breath control. Strength training builds muscle mass, bone density, power, and metabolic health. Lean muscle supports insulin sensitivity. It increases resting metabolic rate. It protects joints. It preserves independence. The future body you want depends on the training you choose today. Is Yoga Enough After 40? Yoga is not insufficient. It is foundational. But if your goals include preserving muscle, protecting bone density, maintaining metabolic health, and staying physically capable for decades to come, strength training becomes a necessary complement. The question is not yoga versus strength training. It is whether you are willing to train for the long term. After 40, the body adapts to what you demand of it. If you demand flexibility, it becomes flexible. If you demand strength, it becomes strong. If you demand both, it becomes resilient. Longevity is built at the intersection. And that intersection is where mobility meets load.

    5 min
  3. MAR 2

    The Truth About Getting Fit After 40 (No One Says This)

    Fitness After 40: The Rules Have Changed (How to Lose Weight Without Extreme Diets) 👉Join OPERATION FIT AF Monthly Membership https://www.operationfitaf.com 👉 Download the Nutrition Guide for Women Over 40 https://www.heathermonthie.com/nutrition 👉 Meal Prep Essentials https://www.heathermonthie.com/mealprep/ 👉Free Goodies: https://www.heathermonthie.com/free/ 👉 GET MY BOOK ON AMAZON! What If You Gave Yourself a Year?: A Year of Showing Up, Slowing Down, and Discovering How the Boring Basics Still Work to Build a Strong, Confident, Healthier You https://amzn.to/4j0OmSI (my affiliate link!) https://youtu.be/ATNZEa3T184 Heather shares lessons from losing 60 pounds at age 48, explaining that fitness and weight loss after 40 require different expectations than in your 20s. She emphasizes giving yourself realistic time—suggesting a “pound a week” mindset like 30 pounds in 30 weeks or 50 pounds in 50 weeks—to reduce panic over scale fluctuations and make change sustainable through life disruptions. She warns that you can’t punish your way back into shape with extreme diets or excessive workouts, and instead encourages fueling your body with protein, complex carbs, fruits, vegetables, fiber, and healthy fats while managing stress. Heather also argues that midlife can be your strongest decade because increased confidence, mental discipline, and long-term thinking support a lasting lifestyle built on the “boring basics.” 00:00 Rules Have Changed 00:23 Heather’s 60 Pound Story 00:39 Why Old Habits Stop Working 01:49 Second Big Weight Loss 03:03 Give Yourself a Year 05:10 Realistic Goals and Timelines 07:10 No More Punishment Diets 07:45 Fuel and Lower Stress 09:09 Your Strongest Decade 10:34 Long Game Mindset 12:02 Boring Basics and Wrap Up Getting Fit After 40: The Truth No One Says If you’ve restarted your workouts recently and you’re in your forties — or beyond — you’ve probably noticed something no one really prepares you for. Getting fit after 40 does not feel the same as it did at 25. In my twenties, I could go to the gym a few days a week, do some cardio, go out dancing on the weekends, eat whatever was convenient, and stay lean without thinking too hard about it. I was the kind of person who would leave the gym and light up a cigarette in the parking lot. I lived on quick food, caffeine, and whatever fit into a busy life, and my body handled it. That version of living catches up with you. By my mid-forties, the gradual weight gain that had happened over the years — five pounds here, eight pounds there — had quietly turned into sixty pounds. There wasn’t one dramatic moment where everything fell apart. It was simply the accumulation of small habits that no longer matched my age, stress levels, or hormones. When I committed to getting fit after 40 in a serious way, what surprised me most wasn’t what to do. It was how differently I had to approach it. The Rules Have Changed The first truth about getting fit after 40 is that the timeline changes. In my forties, I told myself I would lose fifty pounds in a year. A pound a week felt steady and realistic. What actually happened was that I lost about thirty-five pounds in that first year. Years ago, I might have seen that as failure. Instead, I kept going. That shift made all the difference. When you stop treating your goal like a deadline and start treating it like a lifestyle, the pressure drops. A half-pound fluctuation on the scale doesn’t feel like a crisis. A stressful week doesn’t mean you’ve ruined everything. Life still happens — travel, work changes, family stress, hormonal shifts — but you’re no longer reacting to every bump in the road. That’s one of the biggest lessons about getting fit after 40: you are playing the long game whether you acknowledge it or not. The sooner you accept that, the smoother the process becomes. If you want to lose thirty pounds, give yourself thirty weeks. If you want to lose fifty, give yourself a year. The weight may come off faster at times and slower at others, but building it slowly gives you something sustainable. You Can’t Punish Yourself Back Into Shape Another truth no one talks about enough is that extreme approaches stop working. Crash diets, excessive cardio, severe restriction — they may have felt manageable in your twenties. In your forties and fifties, they create more stress than progress. And most of us already carry enough stress. Between work, family, aging parents, relationships, and financial responsibilities, your body is handling a lot. Layering aggressive dieting on top of that often backfires. Instead of asking, “How do I burn this off?” the better question becomes, “How do I support my body so it can handle my life?” That shift changes everything. Protein becomes about maintaining muscle and strength. Vegetables and fiber support digestion and long-term health. Sleep becomes non-negotiable because recovery no longer happens automatically. Movement becomes something you build into your life instead of something you use to erase a meal. Getting fit after 40 isn’t about punishment. It’s about support. This Might Be Your Strongest Decade Yet There’s also something powerful about this stage of life that we rarely acknowledge. In your forties and beyond, you have experience. You’ve accomplished things. You’ve navigated setbacks. You’ve built a career, raised children, survived losses, rebuilt after disappointments. That mental discipline is real. The same persistence that carried you through hard seasons can absolutely carry you through a body transformation. You’re also better at thinking long term. At 25, 45 feels far away. At 45, you realize how quickly twenty years passes. You begin to understand that the choices you make today will directly impact how you feel at 60, 70, and beyond. For me, that perspective changed everything. I don’t just want to look strong now. I want to be strong at 68, 78, and 88. I want to hike the Grand Canyon without wondering if my body can handle it. I want to move through life without feeling limited by preventable weakness. Getting fit after 40 stops being about aesthetics alone. It becomes about capability, longevity, and independence. The Boring Basics Still Work The fundamentals have not changed. Strength training. Adequate protein. Vegetables and fiber. Sleep. Hydration. Stress management. They are not flashy. They are not dramatic. But over months and years, they compound. When I lost sixty pounds between 46 and 48, it wasn’t because I found a secret program. It was because I committed to the basics and gave myself time. I stopped trying to rush the process and started building habits I could live with. The truth about getting fit after 40 is not that it’s impossible. It’s that it requires a different mindset — one built on patience, strategy, and long-term thinking rather than urgency. If you’re starting over, understand that you are not trying to recreate your 25-year-old body or lifestyle. You are building something stronger, steadier, and far more sustainable. And that takes time. 📢 Affiliate Disclaimer Some links in this description may be affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission if you choose to make a purchase through them — at no additional cost to you. I only share products and resources I personally use and love. Thank you for supporting my channel and my work! 📢 Health & Fitness Disclaimer The information provided in this video is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any new diet, fitness, or wellness program, especially if you have existing health conditions or concerns. Listening to your body and seeking personalized advice when needed is always encouraged.

    7 min
  4. FEB 20

    How to Stay on Track With Your Nutrition While Traveling Over 40

    If you’re over 40 and working hard to stay consistent with your fitness, nutrition, or wellness plan, traveling can feel like a major disruption. Whether it’s a work trip, a vacation, or a long weekend away, it’s easy to worry about falling off track. You might do great at home — with your routines, your kitchen, and your regular grocery store — but travel can make everything feel unpredictable. The good news? Traveling doesn’t have to derail your nutrition plan. Over the past year, I’ve figured out practical strategies to stay consistent while traveling — without feeling restricted or missing out on the experience. Here’s exactly what works. LINKS ARE AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS POST! https://youtu.be/SDR6_hQ8Pr8 1. Start With Where You’re Staying Your nutrition success while traveling starts before you even unpack your suitcase. Take a look at your accommodations: Do you have a microwave? Is there a refrigerator? Do you have access to a kitchen? If you’re staying in a hotel for work, you may not have much flexibility. But if you’re traveling for pleasure, consider booking: A hotel with a microwave and fridge An Airbnb with a full kitchen Having access to even a refrigerator and microwave makes a huge difference. A full kitchen gives you complete control. If you choose an Airbnb, check what’s actually included — utensils, storage containers, pans, etc. Sometimes you have to get creative (yes, I’ve stored taco meat in a water pitcher before!). The key is understanding your baseline so you can build your plan around what’s available. 2. Make the Grocery Store Your First Stop When you arrive at your destination, go to the grocery store before doing anything else. This is one of the most powerful habits for staying on track. Stock up on simple staples: Protein Options Greek yogurt Hard-boiled eggs Rotisserie chicken Tuna packets Protein shakes (like Fairlife Core Power) Protein powder (if you have a blender) Protein is your anchor — especially over 40 when maintaining muscle mass becomes even more important. Fruits & Vegetables Pre-cut fruit Berries Baby carrots Sugar snap peas Pre-cut veggies Jicama sticks Guacamole snack packs Convenience matters when traveling. Grab-and-go options prevent impulse decisions later. 3. Bring Tools That Make It Easier If you’re road-tripping, invest in a high-quality cooler — ideally one that plugs into your vehicle so you don’t deal with melting ice. If you’re flying and won’t have access to a microwave, consider using a Hot Logic Mini. It’s a portable hot plate that safely and evenly warms your meals. It’s a game changer when you want a warm, healthy meal without relying on fast food. Preparation removes pressure. 4. Use a Smart Strategy When Eating Out Let’s be clear: you should enjoy restaurants while traveling. The goal isn’t restriction — it’s consistency. Here’s the simple framework: Start With Protein Before you even focus on sides or sauces, decide what protein you want: Salmon Fish Chicken Steak Shrimp Build your meal around that. Moderate Heavy Sauces Cream-heavy dishes and high-sodium meals can lead to bloating and inflammation, especially over 40. If you choose them, enjoy them intentionally — just don’t let every meal revolve around them. Look at the Menu Ahead of Time When possible, review the menu online and decide what you’ll order before you arrive. This prevents impulse decisions. If I were prepping for a competition, I’d often choose a salad and add protein. But if I’m simply maintaining while traveling, I prioritize protein and balance the rest. 5. Stay Hydrated (This Matters More Than You Think) Travel often means: Flying (dehydrating) Eating out more (higher sodium) Sitting for long periods It’s very easy to come home feeling inflamed and bloated. Drinking enough water helps: Reduce bloating Improve digestion Maintain energy Support recovery Bring a reusable water bottle and refill it throughout the day. Hydration is one of the easiest wins while traveling. 6. Keep Moving If you’re traveling for vacation, you may naturally walk more. If you’re traveling for work and sitting at conferences all day, look for opportunities to: Stand in the back of the room Take short walks Move between sessions Daily movement supports digestion, circulation, and overall well-being. 7. Follow the 80/20 Rule This is about sustainability — not perfection. Stay on track 80% of the time. The other 20%? Enjoy the local dessert. Try the new restaurant. Have the experience. Travel is part of life. When you get home, simply get back on your plan. Don’t let a few days turn into weeks of feeling “off track.” Travel doesn’t have to throw you off your nutrition plan — unless you let it. Final Thoughts: Nutrition Over 40 Is About Momentum After 40, consistency matters more than intensity. You don’t need to be perfect. You don’t need to over-restrict. You don’t need to skip restaurants. You just need a strategy. With a little planning, prioritizing protein, staying hydrated, and building balanced meals, you can travel confidently — without losing progress. Want a Simple Nutrition Framework? If you’d like a practical guide that walks you through: How to prioritize protein How to build balanced plates How to incorporate fruits, vegetables, grains, and healthy fats How to implement these strategies daily You can download my Nutrition Guide at: heathermonthie.com/nutrition It’s designed specifically to help you stay consistent — at home and on the road. 👉Join OPERATION FIT AF 365 Days Body Transformation Challenge https://www.operationfitaf.com 👉 Download the Nutrition Guide for Women Over 40 https://www.heathermonthie.com/nutrition AMAZON AFFILATE LINKS: Hot Logic Mini https://amzn.to/3OMCmcf Hot Logic Large (fits a casserole dish!) https://amzn.to/4rTRB1t Electric Cooler https://amzn.to/3ZJ2ibb Instapot https://amzn.to/4rQwL2T Isalean Performance Protein https://ysa.isagenix.com/en-us/shop/weight-management/isalean-performance-protein?pid=9c4ee1928e9c4dbfab628af1e4c8695e Core Power Protein https://amzn.to/3GreCGW Clif Builder Protein Bars https://amzn.to/4aVfuzV OPERATION FIT AF Travel Mug https://www.etsy.com/listing/4445132545/operation-fit-af-travel-mug-40oz

    6 min
  5. FEB 12

    Integrating Strength Training and Yoga into Your Wellness Routine

    Heather shares strategies for integrating weightlifting and yoga into a balanced weekly schedule without feeling overwhelmed. She provides specific examples of alternating days between weight training and various types of yoga to maximize efficiency and recovery. Heather also emphasizes the importance of rest days and offers insights on how to integrate both practices throughout the day. The video is designed to help those in midlife build strong, healthy bodies that can carry them well into old age. 00:00 Introduction: Balancing Fitness and Yoga 00:47 Identifying Your Fitness Profile 01:23 Creating a Balanced Weekly Schedule 02:33 Exploring Different Yoga Styles 04:35 Combining Yoga and Weightlifting 05:22 Personal Tips and Strategies 06:38 Conclusion and Final Thoughts https://youtu.be/Dj1MSGROtTg?si=cs4fMv4m86e6tV2K There’s a very specific kind of question that tends to show up in midlife. It doesn’t usually sound dramatic. It’s not urgent. It’s quieter than that. It sounds more like this: “I know I need to be lifting weights… but I love yoga.” Or, “I’ve been doing yoga for years, but I keep hearing I should be strength training.” Or sometimes simply, “How am I supposed to fit all of this in without feeling like my entire life revolves around working out?” And I understand that question deeply, because I’ve been every version of that woman. There was a time when my training was almost entirely strength-based. I was lifting four, sometimes five, days a week, focused on performance, progress, and pushing. Yoga was something I would occasionally add in when I felt tight or needed to stretch. And then there were seasons when yoga became the anchor. It was grounding. It kept me mobile. It kept me sane. But eventually, I had to be honest with myself; mobility alone wasn’t enough to protect my muscle mass or bone density as I moved through my 40s and beyond. At some point, if you care about longevity, you realize this isn’t an either/or conversation. It’s a both/and. The real question becomes how to combine them intelligently. The First Thing We Have to Do Is Get Organized Most overtraining doesn’t happen because someone is “too motivated.” It happens because there is no structure. We react to how we feel that day. We add a class because it sounds good. We lift because we feel guilty for missing a workout earlier in the week. We say yes to a hot yoga session on what was supposed to be a recovery day. And suddenly we’re exhausted and wondering why our joints ache. The solution is far less exciting than people expect. You look at your week. You decide — ahead of time — which days are strength days and which days are yoga days. If you’re lifting three days per week — say Monday, Wednesday, and Friday — that’s your strength foundation. Those sessions are about building. Not burning. Building. That distinction matters more than most people realize. Strength training, done properly, is about creating capacity in your body. It’s about teaching your muscles and bones to handle load. It’s one of the most important investments you can make for your future self. Then you look at the other days. That’s where yoga lives. Maybe Tuesday and Thursday are your practice days. Maybe Saturday becomes a longer mobility session. Maybe Sunday is true rest. But the decision is made calmly, not emotionally. That alone prevents most overtraining. Not All Yoga Is the Same This is where nuance comes in, and nuance is something we don’t talk about enough in the fitness world. There is a profound difference between a heated power yoga class that leaves you drenched and shaking… and a slow, restorative practice where you hold a pose for ten minutes and allow your nervous system to settle. If you are strength training with intention — challenging loads, progressive overload, real muscular effort — and then you stack intense yoga sessions on top of that, you are not recovering. You are layering stress on stress. Midlife bodies are incredibly resilient. But they are also honest. If you push without allowing adaptation, they will tell you. The version of yoga you choose should support your training, not compete with it. Sometimes yoga is the challenge. Sometimes yoga is the repair. Knowing the difference is maturity. Can You Do Both in One Day? Yes. But timing matters. When I lift, I prefer to lift first. I want my nervous system focused. I want my energy directed toward building strength. Afterward, when my body is warm and my spine is open, I might spend time working on a pose I’m building toward. Something technical. Something that requires mobility and control. If I’m taking a full yoga class, I usually separate it from my lift by several hours. That space allows your body to shift gears. We are not twenty-five anymore. Recovery is not optional. It’s part of the process. And if longevity is the goal — not just aesthetics — then your programming has to reflect that. You Still Need a Day That Asks Less of You One of the most important lessons I learned after breaking my leg was that progress doesn’t come from constant output. It comes from staying. From allowing the body to adapt. From not panicking when you take a day off. Rest is not weakness. It is strategy. In the BALANCE Framework, strength is only one pillar. Hydration, sleep, nourishment, recovery — they all matter because no single habit is meant to carry the entire load. When you build your week with that mindset, you stop feeling like you’re trying to cram everything in. Instead, you start distributing the work, which helps prevent burnout. This Is a Long-Game Conversation I often think about something I wrote in What If You Gave Yourself a Year? — The people who play the long game struggle less and sustain success longer. That applies here. If you try to do everything every day at maximum intensity, you might sustain that pace for a few weeks. Maybe even a few months. But eventually your body will ask you to choose sustainability over ego. The goal isn’t to prove you can do the most. The goal is to build a body that feels strong, capable, and mobile ten, twenty, thirty years from now. Strength training preserves your muscle mass and bone density. Yoga preserves your mobility and balance. Together, they allow you to move through your life with confidence instead of caution. And that — far more than any aesthetic outcome — is what most of us actually want. If you’re reading this and trying to decide where to begin, start by asking yourself one honest question: Where am I underinvested right now? Is it strength? Is it mobility? Is it recovery? You don’t need to overhaul your life. You need to organize it. And if you want a structured plan that weaves strength training, mobility, nutrition, and recovery into one sustainable system, that’s exactly why I built Operation Fit AF 365. It’s not about doing more. It’s about doing what matters — consistently — over time. Because this body you’re living in? It deserves a strategy that lasts.

    4 min
  6. FEB 1

    Strength Training Over 40 (Beginner Weightlifting Guide)

    If you’re over 40 and ready to start strength training but don’t know where to begin, this video is for you! Join Heather as she walks you through beginner-friendly strength training movements designed to help you build muscle safely and confidently. Learn about compound movements like squats, deadlifts, shoulder presses, and lunges, all geared towards creating a strong, healthy body to carry you through midlife and beyond. Heather also covers the importance of proper form, nutrition, and recovery in achieving your fitness goals. Get started today and build the strength you need to lead an active, independent life! 00:00 Introduction to Strength Training for Beginners 00:46 Understanding Muscle Toning and Bulking Myths 02:35 The Importance of Compound Lifts 04:33 Getting Started with Squats 14:51 Mastering Deadlifts 21:34 Pushing Movements for Upper Body Strength 25:02 Introduction to Pushup Variations 25:14 Wall Pushups for Beginners 26:24 Elevated Pushups and Knee Support 28:32 Floor Pushups and Advanced Variations 30:57 Exploring Pulling Movements 32:50 Incorporating Rows and Pull-Ups 38:31 Lunges for Lower Body Strength 43:39 The Importance of Recovery 44:58 Final Thoughts and Encouragement https://youtu.be/tUIOMbILch0 AMAZON AFFILIATE LINKS Power Block Adjustable Dumbbells https://amzn.to/4aPEs1y Power Block Workout Bench https://amzn.to/41LfVa5 Power Block Adjustable Kettle Bell https://amzn.to/3Sd080E Stability Ball https://amzn.to/4dOf90D BOSU Ball https://amzn.to/3Halghz Pilates Ball https://amzn.to/3RSonzK Pilates Ring https://amzn.to/41Lg3GB Resistance Bands https://amzn.to/3Sa1jOj Storage Rack https://amzn.to/3vAOtQ0 Resistance Loops https://amzn.to/47qxTj5 Foam Roller https://amzn.to/3vsTudH Aerobic Step https://amzn.to/41QOITt Dumbbell Weight Rack https://amzn.to/47wbm4y Battle Ropes https://amzn.to/48LnVtI Pull up Bar https://amzn.to/3YP9MKi Dumbbells (select which weight you’d like) https://amzn.to/3X9ywvL PROTEIN IDEAS Optimum Nutrition Whey Protein https://amzn.to/40BRJHF Egg Bite Mold for InstaPot https://amzn.to/44oIVHH Core Power Protein https://amzn.to/3GreCGW Premier Protein https://amzn.to/3GreCGW Isalean Performance Protein https://ysa.isagenix.com/en-us/shop/weight-management/isalean-performance-protein?pid=9c4ee1928e9c4dbfab628af1e4c8695e Orgain Plant Based Protein Powder https://amzn.to/44ulJ9H Lemonade Clear Protein https://amzn.to/44etstC Catalina Crunch Protein Cereal https://amzn.to/3U0O56l Roasted Edamame https://amzn.to/3Tnvgu8 Muscle Mac Macaroni & Cheese https://amzn.to/4kn6zcg Protein Coffee Creamer https://amzn.to/4lf2esR Collagen Peptides https://amzn.to/4lf2iZD 📢 Affiliate Disclaimer Some links in this description may be affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission if you choose to make a purchase through them — at no additional cost to you. I only share products and resources I personally use and love. Thank you for supporting my channel and my work! 📢 Health & Fitness Disclaimer The information provided in this video is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any new diet, fitness, or wellness program, especially if you have existing health conditions or concerns. Listening to your body and seeking personalized advice when needed is always encouraged.

    49 min
  7. JAN 27

    This Is Why You Keep “Getting Ready” but Never Starting

    Stop Preparing and Start Moving: How to Break Free from the ‘Getting Ready’ Trap Heather addresses the common issue of feeling stuck in the ‘getting ready’ phase, where constant planning and preparation replace actual action. She explains why this feels productive but ultimately hinders progress. Heather shares insights on overcoming fear, perfectionism, and procrastination, especially for those in midlife aiming to build strong, healthy bodies. She emphasizes the importance of starting with small, manageable actions and the necessity of consistency over intensity. Viewers are encouraged to take immediate steps and commit to daily movement, breaking free from the endless cycle of planning. 👉Join OPERATION FIT AF 365 Days Body Transformation Challenge https://www.operationfitaf.com 👉 Download the Nutrition Guide for Women Over 40 https://www.heathermonthie.com/nutrition 👉 GET MY BOOK ON AMAZON! What If You Gave Yourself a Year?: A Year of Showing Up, Slowing Down, and Discovering How the Boring Basics Still Work to Build a Strong, Confident, Healthier You https://amzn.to/4j0OmSI (my affiliate link!) 00:00 Introduction: Stuck in the Getting Ready Phase 00:43 Understanding the Illusion of Progress 02:24 Facing the Hidden Fears 04:32 The Trap of Perfectionism 06:14 Taking Action: Small Steps to Success 07:51 Consistency Over Intensity 09:10 Breaking the Loop: Start Small 12:20 Conclusion and Invitation https://youtu.be/63_EliMI2z4 📢 Affiliate Disclaimer Some links in this description may be affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission if you choose to make a purchase through them — at no additional cost to you. I only share products and resources I personally use and love. Thank you for supporting my channel and my work! 📢 Health & Fitness Disclaimer The information provided in this video is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any new diet, fitness, or wellness program, especially if you have existing health conditions or concerns.

    7 min
  8. JAN 20

    365 Day Body Transformation Challenge Explained (Is This for You?) : Operation Fit AF Info Session

    Operation Fit AF: 365 Days Body Transformation Challenge Explained Heather introduces the Operation Fit AF 365 Days Body Transformation Challenge, designed for midlife individuals seeking to build strong, healthy bodies that will last into their later years. Heather shares her personal fitness transformation journey, beginning with her decision to quit smoking and culminating in her achievements in bodybuilding competitions. This program offers a structured yet flexible approach to achieving various fitness goals over the course of a year, emphasizing the importance of consistency and community support. The session also covers the balance framework for health, the concept of 75-day missions to break down long-term goals, and addresses frequently asked questions about the challenge. https://youtu.be/cumhKtczrKc Join the 365 Days Body Transformation Challenge at www.OperationFitAF.com 00:00 Welcome to Operation Fit AF 365 Days Challenge 01:09 Heather’s Personal Fitness Journey 03:48 The Turning Point: Breaking the Leg 05:27 The Year-Long Transformation Plan 05:54 The Importance of Enjoying the Process 06:54 Community Support and Personal Goals 07:24 The Long Game Approach to Fitness 08:58 Heather’s Transformation Photos 13:57 The Problem with Short-Term Challenges 17:45 The Power of Experience and Learning 19:50 Why a Year Changes Everything 20:38 Introduction to Operation Fit AF 20:43 Defining Fitness Goals 21:22 The Balance Framework 22:13 Building a Lifelong Healthy Lifestyle 26:52 The 75-Day Missions Explained 32:18 Frequently Asked Questions 37:43 Final Thoughts and Joining Information Operation Fit AF Information Session When I first said the words “I’m going to take a year and get fit as f*ck,” it wasn’t part of some grand business plan. I was hiking with friends. I had rebuilt my leg after breaking it. I had already started losing weight. And I was realizing something important — I didn’t just want the weight off. I wanted my old self back. Strong. Capable. Confident. Solid in my body again. And I knew it wasn’t going to happen in 30 days. Operation Fit AF was born from that realization. Not from a marketing strategy. Not from a flashy challenge idea. But from the decision to stop rushing and start committing. Why a Year? Most of us don’t struggle because we don’t know what to do. We struggle because we don’t stay with one course long enough to see it work. I had competed in bodybuilding in 2013, 2015, and 2017. I knew what discipline looked like. I knew what structure felt like. But after stepping away from that world, life crept in. I turned 40. Then came the gradual weight gain. Then COVID. Then habits that didn’t align with who I actually wanted to be. By the time I broke my leg in 2023, I was 60 pounds heavier than my norm. That injury forced me to slow down. Recovery took time. And in April 2024, I made a decision: I was giving myself a year. Not six weeks. Not a crash cut. Not a “get ready for summer” sprint. A year. Because a year removes the panic. When you give yourself twelve months, you stop trying to starve yourself for a vacation. You stop doing two-a-day cardio sessions because you’re desperate. You stop treating your body like a problem to fix immediately. You start treating it like something you’re rebuilding. The Long Game Changes Everything Between April 2024 and April 2025, I didn’t hit my original goal. I had planned to lose 50 pounds. I lost about 35. Old Heather might have said, “Well, that didn’t work.” Instead, I said, “Keep going.” That mindset shift is the entire foundation of Operation Fit AF. This isn’t about perfect execution. It’s about sustained direction. When you stop measuring success by a 30-day window and start measuring it across seasons, something changes internally. You begin to enjoy the process. You get curious about what your body can do. You challenge yourself in ways that feel energizing instead of punishing. That’s what happened to me. The weight loss became part of the journey, not the whole point. What Operation Fit AF Actually Is First, it’s not a diet. It’s not a specific workout plan you must follow. It’s not one-on-one coaching. And it’s not about micromanaging your food or workouts. Operation Fit AF is a year-long commitment to focusing on your health with intention — supported by structure and community. We break the year into four 75-day missions. The reason for that is simple: a full year can feel overwhelming. Seventy-five days feels manageable. You can focus deeply for that window of time, then take a short reset before the next mission begins. This isn’t the kind of “challenge” where you go all-in, burn out, and then fall off the rails. It’s designed to teach you how to stay steady — and how to bring yourself back when you drift. Because you will drift. We all do. The goal isn’t perfection. The goal is learning how to return. The Balance Framework At the core of Operation Fit AF is something I call the Balance Framework. It’s built around what I often refer to as the “boring basics.” These principles never stop working — we just stop staying in them. Balance stands for: Build strength through movement Adequate hydration Lower stress levels Adequate sleep and recovery Nourish your mind and body Create a success plan Embrace consistency and accountability None of that is flashy. None of it is extreme. But if you stay inside those principles consistently, your body and mindset change. You don’t need another extreme program. You need a structure you can live inside for decades. Is This Only for Weight Loss? No. Weight loss was my goal when I started. But inside Operation Fit AF, people are working toward all kinds of goals. Some want to build strength. Some want to train for a race. Some want to get back into a routine after years away. Some simply want to feel better in their body and more confident in their skin. There is no single definition of “fit.” For me, at that moment, “fit as f*ck” meant losing weight and getting lean again. For someone else, it might mean running their first 5K. Or improving mobility. Or lowering stress. You choose the goal. We focus on the structure. Why This Works When Short Challenges Don’t Short challenges often fail because they create urgency without sustainability. You push hard for six weeks. You restrict. You overtrain. You white-knuckle your way through it. Then it ends. And you’re left wondering what comes next. Operation Fit AF is different because it teaches you to think in seasons, not sprints. You still push yourself. You still set goals. But you zoom out far enough that setbacks don’t derail you. If you’re 45, 50, or 60, this isn’t about looking good for one event. It’s about stacking the cards in your favor for the next several decades. I often think about a line from Peter Attia’s book Outlive, where he asks a patient what she wants to be doing in her 80s. She lists hiking, yoga, staying active. He asks her why she isn’t doing those things now in her 40s. That stuck with me. If we want strength and vitality later, we build it now. You’re Not Starting Over One of the biggest misconceptions I see is this idea that you’re “starting over.” You’re not. You have experience. You know what doesn’t work. You’ve tried the crash diets. You’ve done the extreme programs. You’ve lived in your body long enough to understand patterns. Operation Fit AF isn’t about wiping the slate clean. It’s about applying your experience differently. A change in behavior is a result of experience. That’s learning. You already have the experience. Now you get to decide how to use it. What If You Stopped Rushing? What if you stopped saying, “I need this done in six weeks”? What if you gave yourself twelve months and trusted that steady action would compound? What if missing two workouts in a week didn’t mean you quit, but instead meant you adjusted and kept going? What if drifting didn’t mean failure — it meant practicing accountability? That’s what this community is built around. Not perfection. Direction. So… Is This for You? If you’re looking for a quick fix, it’s not. If you want someone to micromanage every calorie and rep, it’s not. If you’re ready to commit to yourself for a year — to build something sustainable and strong — then yes, it might be exactly what you need. You can join for one 75-day mission to test the waters, or commit to the full year. Either way, the invitation is simple: Stop rushing. Pick your goal. Follow one course until success. And give yourself the time it actually takes to build the body — and discipline — you want for the rest of your life. https://youtu.be/cumhKtczrKc

    40 min

About

Strong & Fit AF Over 40 Podcast The no-BS podcast for driven people over 40 who are already training—and want to keep getting better. Hosted by Heather Monthie, performance & transformation coach, bodybuilder, yoga teacher, this show breaks down what actually works after 40: strength, nutrition, mobility, recovery, and real consistency. No starting over. No fluff. No pretending you’re 25. Just smart strategy to stay strong, lean, mobile, and sharp for decades. Strong AF. Flexible AF. Fit AF. For life. Hit follow… and let’s get after it.