I am with you on the whole joint friendly workouts. I consider myself fortunate, because I do not (and hopefully won't have issues with my knees), but I have learned on this forum that many others have knee issues. My wrists, however, are shot. I also have weak ankles, but have found that adding a tiny bit of impact for short periods of time actually strengthened them to some extent. My wrists are the main thing that prevent me from lifting heavy. I bought a pair of Cathe's wrist support gloves, and if we ever finish moving and I can actually locate which box they are in, I'm hoping they'll help some. Just trying them one time, though, I didn't feel they were going to be enough to help me increase my weight. I have a bad upper back, but that's not really an age thing. It just is what it is. I'm small framed, but throughout life have had to take care of things things that needed a bigger and stronger person to handle it. While I don't yet have bad knees, I often feel a bit of a strain when doing cardio - like I almost torqued them. I think it's actually due to having less agility as I age, rather than the movement itself. Whenever I look up "joint friendly", the results suggest walking. Walking isn't enough to burn off my excess energy. Also, I can't walk fast enough to get my heart rate up, because I can't leave my son home alone, and he's only capable of walking slowly. My searches barely even mention strength training, which is what I'm trying to increase. I have shoulder issues, but I have a feeling that that is related to the same things I did throughout my life that damaged my back, rather than age. My neck (part of the upper back issues) affects me when doing some strength training, so I hold the barbell in front instead of behind my neck in order to modify those moves/exercises. I'm at a high intermediate level for cardo and I would consider myself an average intermediate for strength training that focuses on high reps. I want to start adding heavy weights to my workout, but it just doesn't seem possible, so I'm not even at a beginner level for that yet. I need to find a way to do it that doesn't stress my wrists, which I don't know if that's even possible. I tried strengthening my wrists, but they have a mind of their own.Great idea….I would appreciate joint friendly and have no problem with it being heavy weights, because I can adjust mine easy enough…which is exactly what I am doing with
STS2.
Aahhh……something near & dear to my heart!!!! Hence….aqua girlwater aerobics are great cardio options if you have access to a pool.
Braille, I read a post (somewhere) where a woman mentioned she used lifting gloves with hooks on them to help hold heavy weights. I have a pair of my wish list on Amazon hoping they become a prime deal next week- they're about $20. If they don't go on sale, I'll probably get them anyways.
Things that we did in our past contribute to issues as we age .... cartilage becomes compressed, tendons become frayed or torn, synovial fluid leaks out of joints, etc. Inflammation contributes to arthritis, bursitis and pretty much all "-itis". Many foods in modern society also contribute to the inflammation too. Strong muscles help support the joints & the tugging on the tendons in training help prevent osteoporosis/penia.
I think you're right that when you research "joint-friendly" it's sort of like they think you're frail and suggest things that actually would lead to de-conditioning if we followed their recommendations when we've been active. They're great for people who haven't been active or exercising tho.
For cardio, you might consider bicycling or spinning ... bikes usually go on sale in late summer & fall. Spin bikes might go on sale during Amazon Prime days. Low Impact..high intensity if you want it or low/moderate if you want it. Swimming & water aerobics are great cardio options if you have access to a pool.
Like aqua-girl says, we need to focus on what we can do, use accessories/tools to help us keep going & modify as we need.
I'll have to look into those gloves. I don't think I've heard of them before, so I'm definitely curious. I've tried stationary equipment and we have a lot of it, because it works well for my son. I don't have the attention span for it myself though. It just doesn't suit my "workout personality/style". Swimming isn't an option, because I always have my son with me. He can't swim, so when we go to the gym's pool, I'm assisting him. He loves his pool time. After reading some research on joints, I actually started bringing a bit of impact back into my workouts. To my surprise, after doing it for a month or so, I noticed my ankles were stronger! Now, I haven't sprained either ankle for 3 years!. Ankle sprains used to be a regular thing for me, and every time they happened, it set me back on my fitness goals, because I couldn't do regular workouts with the injury. I'm going to check out those gloves. I can't even picture them in my head. You've got me curious now.
I have a pair of wrist support gloves, not Cathe's, just a local brand. I found they do help as they keep the wrist in better alignment. It is harder to bend the wrist wearing them. However, because of that they can be a hinderance when moving to pushups or hands and knees exercises or when stretching at the end. I do prefer them over standard gloves though.My wrists are the main thing that prevent me from lifting heavy. I bought a pair of Cathe's wrist support gloves, and if we ever finish moving and I can actually locate which box they are in, I'm hoping they'll help some. Just trying them one time, though, I didn't feel they were going to be enough to help me increase my weight.
Thank you!!!Braille ...
Take a peek ....
DMoose Weight Lifting Hooks (Pair), Hand Grip Support Wrist Straps for Men and Women, 8 mm Thick Padded Neoprene, Deadlift, Powerlifting, Pull up bar, Liftups, Shrugs https://a.co/d/6jdWTn9
Nickisteen, let us know your thoughts when you receive, I can’t decide if I need them orended up ordering a pair.
I ordered the Red ones just because I like red. I have small wrists.Hey. You're welcome ... just a note the "pink" ones are sized for smaller wrists ... they don't list the actually inches for each size as far as I can tell...
I definitely will!!Nickisteen, let us know your thoughts when you receive, I can’t decide if I need them or
not!![]()
DMoose Weight Lifting Hooks (Pair), Hand Grip Support Wrist Straps for Men and Women, 8 mm Thick Padded Neoprene, Deadlift, Powerlifting, Pull up bar, Liftups, Shrugs
Was wondering, do you think these would help with pull-ups/chin-ups on the tower. Byjust a note the "pink" ones are sized for smaller wrists