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Australia

Better bones, stronger muscles and a happier heart — the benefits of exercising into old age are big

Aging. It’s something many Australians dread.

Things that used to be easy may not be anymore, appearances change and the body functions differently – but it’s not all bad.

The aging process can’t be stopped, but physical activity can bring a host of benefits as people get older.

According to Pazit Levinger, principal researcher at the National Aging Research Institute, overall wellbeing and health are better for those who exercise into old age.

“Physical activity is one way you can preserve efficient systems in the body that help you overcome diseases, function better and live a good quality of life,” she said.

‘Running has kept me healthy’

While not all older Australians can expect instant health improvements from exercise, 84-year-old Abdon Ulloa swears by his regular running routine.

Abdon Ulloa gives two thumbs up while at parkrun.
Abdon Ulloa has been running for the last 40 years.(Supplied: Abdon Ulloa)

Abdon took up the hobby in his mid-40s. He’s now done 75 marathons (his last one of him was at 77 years old) and he estimates his half-marathons of him are now into the thousands.

He goes to park run weekly. He’s been turning up on Saturday mornings for the last three years and has clocked up 184 runs.

All that exercise, he believes, has paid off.

“To keep running, to keep moving, you have very much kept me healthy,” he said.

Abdon Ulloa runs along the water at Port Macquarie parkrun.
Abdon believes the exercise he’s done, and is doing, is keeping him healthy.(Supplied: Abdon Ulloa)

“I don’t take any medicines and I visit the doctor once a year. I have no problems at all.”

Abdon is in a league of his own at his local parkrun in Menai in Sydney, where he’s the only runner over 80.

About an hour south, 82-year-old Ron Perry can be found making his way around the North Wollongong track.

“A lot of us still shuffle along up the back of the field,” he said.

Like Abdon, Ron took up running in his 40s and believes it’s kept him in good health.

Ronald Perry walks on red dirt in Broken Hill as part of parkrun.
Ron Perry was at North Wollongong’s first ever parkrun and has been there most Saturdays since.(Supplied: Ronald Perry)

“I started running around the block and then along the beach and just took it on from there,” he said.

In the nine years since starting parkrun, he’s done 215 runs.

‘Use it or lose it’

The World Health Organization (WHO) and Australian Department of Health and Aged Care recommend people aged 65 and older do about 30 minutes of exercise most days of the week. But data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) shows half of this cohort isn’t that active.

“It’s one of those things, we know it’s working [exercise]we just need to encourage people to do it more,” Professor Levinger said.

A portrait of Professor Pazit Levinger
Professor Levinger says overall health and wellbeing is better for those who exercise into old age.(Supplied: Pazit Levinger)

She also explained that ideally, exercise in older age should target the heart and lungs, with a bit of strength and resistance training too.

There should also be a focus on balance exercises.

“The heart has less capacity to function efficiently like it used to when we were younger,” Professor Levinger said.

“And the same with the respiratory system. We often might feel a bit breathless when we get older.”

Then there’s the issue of muscles getting weaker.

“If we don’t use them and preserve the strength we have, we lose muscle mass and strength and that will have a direct impact on how we function,” Professor Levinger said.

“When you exercise, you can improve how those systems function.”

When it comes to running in particular, Professor Levinger said the benefits were large, particularly for the cardiorespiratory system and bones.

A shot of an older woman running from behind.
Running into older age brings about benefits for the heart, lungs and bones.(Supplied: park run)

“Your blood pressure is in the healthy/normal range, your resting heart rate is reduced and pretty much your heart works more efficiently,” Professor Levinger said.

“Those who, for example, have run for a long time, and they keep running, it’s great for the bones, great for the muscles.

“We often use the phrase ‘use it or lose it’, which is actually correct.”

Someone using it is 98-year-old Colin Thorne, who in New Zealand has become the oldest person to join the 100-club at parkrun.

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“I’m not going to give up until I have to,” he said.

It’s never too late

Bill Lamont is Australia’s oldest active parkrunner. He signed up a couple of months ago and broke the record for his age group at Jells parkrun, on his first walk around the track.

“In June, on my 93rd birthday, I decided to give it a try and I’m very pleased that I did so, I’m thoroughly enjoying it,” Bill said.

93-year-old Bill Lamont holds a parkrun cut-out frame and smiles.
Australia’s oldest active parkrunner, 93-year-old Bill Lamont, has done nine parkruns so far.(Supplied: Bill Lamont)

Bill has always been active, and even now he does exercise classes, orienteering walks and plays table tennis.

“All those activities, I’m quite sure, are what is keeping me as healthy as I am. I don’t have any medical problems at this age,” Bill said.

Professor Levinger says the bottom line is, do what you can manage, and do what you enjoy.

“Do whatever you can and build up. You don’t have to be fit, you can exercise and start at any age.”

Lenore Rutley with 80th-birthday balloons.
Lenore Rutley took up running at 72.(Supplied: Lenore Rutley)

Just like Lenore Rutley, who’s always done her morning walk, but took up running at 72.

“I wanted to do something a little different,” she said.

Since that decision was made, Lenore has amassed 332 parkruns.

“I just run down hills now. Every so often I’ll get a spurt up and do a little bit of a run and then I’ll do a little bit of walking,” she said.

Professor Levinger said the key thing was that people aim to do something they enjoy.

“You want to do things that you feel comfortable with and find fun, because then you are likely to stick with it,” she said.

And as Lenore puts it – “what else would you do on a Saturday morning?”

ABC Sport is partnering with park run to promote the benefits of physical activity and community participation.

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Categories
Sports

Race walker Jemima Montag embodying ‘Australian values’ as a role model to inspire next generation of athletes

Australian race walker and reigning Commonwealth Games champion Jemima Montag says she’s embracing the pressure of defending her crown just days away from competing at the Birmingham Games.

The Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medalist is shaping to be the walker to beat at the event, aiming to become the first woman since Jane Saville in 2006 to successfully defend a gold medal in walking.

The event distance has been shortened from a 20km road race and will now be contested as a 10km track race inside Alexander Stadium.

“I’m keen for it to be half the distance,” Montag said.

Jemima Montag crosses the line as she celebrates her gold medal in the Women's 20km Race Walk Final at Gold Coast, 2018.
Jemima Montag is aiming to defend her 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medal at this years’s 10km Race Walk Final in Birmingham.(Getty Images: Michael Dodge)

“I really feed off the crowd’s energy and excitement. I remember back to 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast and there were so many Australians … just giving us their energy for that entire hour and a half.”

In February, Montag broke Saville’s long-standing 18-year 20km Australian and Oceania record by 13 seconds. It’s a moment in which she reflects on, after her ‘turning point’ when pulling on the green and gold four years ago at Gold Coast.

“Representing Australia means embodying the Australian values ​​of mateship and a fair go and giving our all to something. I think that’s what the Australian audience really want to see us doing,” she said.

“Crossing the line and hitting the tape at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was the first moment I believed in myself as capable of competing on the world stage and representing my country well.

“I tried to enjoy the final couple of laps and interact with the crowd and grab the flag, and crossing that line, hitting the tape, and then having Nathan Deakes pop the medal around my neck.

“It felt like a real rite of passage and a sense of belonging after years of struggling with self-belief.

“I feel pressure and expectation to bring some medals home (at Birmingham), but I remind myself that all the Aussies and my family just want to see us going out and being leaders, setting a good example for the younger generation and embodying those values .”

Australian race walker Jemima Montag stops her watch and smiles after crossing the finish line.
In February, Montag broke Jane Saville’s 18-year record for the Australian 20km race walk event.(Athletics Australia / Steve Christo)

Change in mentality for national record

Montag said the Australian and Oceania record — at a time of 1:27:27 — came about from a motivational shift in mental techniques. The change lifted the weight of her off her shoulders, going on to reset goals for the remainder of the year.

“We got to the finish line about 30 seconds quicker than the national record,” Montag said.

“I’ve done a lot of reflecting since then about the power of values-based motivation as opposed to fear-based motivation.

“It was a very special day, I think that it was bigger than winning the Commonwealth Games or making it to the Olympic Games or anything.

“Being the fastest woman in the country to cover that distance is pretty cool.”

It was only a matter of minutes after the race that an exhausted Montag received a call from her idol, Saville, who celebrated the achievement with her.

“It was amazing. I was in the tent half-dead on the physio table, and she was there on the phone, so supportive,” she said.

“I think that’s a true sign of an excellent sportswoman when they just want to see their sport moving forward … and she had the record for a couple of decades or whatever it was and she was she was so happy.”

The importance of role models

Despite the accolades on the track, winning doesn’t appear to be everything for Montag. The near misses are cause for just as much celebration, after coming fourth at the World Athletics Championships by just 19 seconds in July.

“Humans have just decided that 1-2-3 get medals and fourth is one spot away from that. I think that fourth rocks, it doesn’t suck,” Montag said after the meet in Eugene, Oregon.

Being successful off the track and showing there’s a human behind every athlete is just as important as Montag inspires the next generation of athletes.

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Australian racewalker Jemima Montag talks about the impact her Nana has had on her

A medicine student who loves to cook and spend time with family, the 24-year-old also talks about superstitions; like the lucky number three, her her lucky pajamas, and a lucky golden bracelet she wears from her late grandmother.

“I lost my nana about a year ago, just before the Olympic Games, and it’s only in the months that have followed that we’ve really been able to unpack her story as a Holocaust survivor,” Montag said.

“It’s something that understandably she didn’t want to talk about much, and there was a lot of pain and trauma there.”

A golden necklace became a keepsake for Montag and her two sisters, who split it into three bracelets to continue her nana’s legacy.

“I wear my nana’s bracelet as a lucky charm now. And it reminds me of that strength and resilience,” she said.

“It’s just a really tangible reminder of what she sacrificed for dad and then me to even be alive. Sometimes, you know, sport is hard and it comes with its challenges.

“(But) it’s a reminder that I choose to be out there day in, day out at these competitions doing what I do. And it’s hard, but it should be fun.”

Australian race walker Jemima Montag competes on the race track at night.
Jemima Montag became the first Australian track and field athlete to be nominated for the Commonwealth Games for the UK campaign.(Athletics Australia / Steve Christo)

Walking is ‘much bigger’ than just a sport

Montag is using walking as the ‘vehicle’ to create positive messages as a role model.

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“Race walking to me is much bigger than the physical sport. It’s somewhere I belong and it’s a vehicle through which I can explore my values ​​of the pursuit of mastery, of challenging myself, of inspiring the next generation of boys and girls, and just exploring my mental and physical limits,” Montag said.

The Australian champion was chosen as one just 25 athletes across the globe — the sole representative from Oceania — in the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Young Leaders Program from 2021-2024.

“We’re choosing a pressing local issue that we’re passionate about that connects to the sustainable development goals, and we’re building a sport-based solution,” Montag said.

“I’ve chosen to focus on the decline of young women and girls in sport and physical activity, which is something I’m passionate about because I’ve seen how much sport and physical activity has brought to me.

“I’ve also seen friends that I’ve made through sport gradually face barriers and drop out and how challenging it’s been for them and how I was almost driven out of the sport.

“I was able to get to the bottom of: what are the unique barriers to women and girls in sport, what’s driving them out at twice the rate of boys?

“Then the tricky part was what do we do about it? Because if we had all the answers, then I’m sure they’d be being enacted already.”

Through Montag’s program ‘Play On’, a vision of creating enabling environments through education and training for young women is changing perceptions.

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Racewalker Jemima Montag on navigating adolescence and puberty as a female athlete

“So often I found that girls and women are blamed for being lazy or just not committed enough for choosing to drop out of sport,” she said.

“And we’re not really questioning whether the environments are made for them or welcoming them or attuned to their needs.

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“I built a team of 14 women experts who are very diverse — some Paralympians and Olympians, some are community leaders, some are doctors, some in the political space.”

With four topics to address positivity — female athlete health, mental health, nutrition, and inclusivity — Montag is aiming for a stronger connection between schools and parents, who often rely on one another to address responsibility gap issues of retaining women in sport.

“We challenge the idea that there has to be a cookie cutter image of what a female athlete looks like that’s tall, blonde, thin, able-bodied, neurotypical of a certain race,” Montag said.

“I’m hoping that by listening to the experts in those four areas, 15-year-old girls have what I wish I had at their age, and that they’re armed with the tools to navigate any challenge that might come up for them and to help themselves.

“Having the opportunity to be a role model for the younger girls and women coming through has added a whole new layer of meaning and enjoyment to my sport.

“No longer is it a lonely individual pursuit, it’s something that I can really leverage and use to make a difference to other people’s lives, which feels amazing.”

That pursuit this weekend at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games is something Montag is hoping to use as inspiration for future walkers who will be watching her race.

“It’s something that’s a really important biological marker of health that we should celebrate and just learn how to navigate on the track and in life,” she said.

“I’m really careful with the legacy that I’m leaving to the next generation and the words I choose and what I say to them.

“It really doesn’t matter what any of us do, it’s really about ‘why’ behind it.

“And so that ‘why’ is belonging to a community and being a good leader and inspiring younger women and girls to take up whatever physical activity it is that feels good for them to look after their physical and mental health.”

Montag will compete in the women’s 10,000m Race Walk Final on Saturday at 7:30pm AEST.

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Categories
Australia

How hiking helped Chelle transform from being a ‘functioning alcoholic’ and climb out of addiction

An Albany woman has plumbed the lowest depths and climbed high peaks in a battle with the bottle.

Chelle Fisher spent 23 years struggling with drug and alcohol addiction but has now kicked those habits and this month climbed eight peaks in West Australia’s south to help people escaping domestic violence.

Ms Fisher turned to alcohol and drugs as a child after experiencing family violence.

“I go hiking every year,” the 43-year-old said.

“Part of my sobriety, or how I got sober, was basically instead of drinking that six-pack of an afternoon, I replaced that with going for a hike.”

It is now eight years since Ms Fisher had her last drink and she challenged herself to scale eight mountains in eight days to celebrate.

“I started at the age of 13,” she said.

“I started because that was my coping mechanism. I was going through a lot of family domestic violence.

“My coping was drugs and alcohol. So I battled with that addiction for 23 years.”

Some days it was more than a six-pack.

“It was half a carton and I was functioning. I was a functioning alcoholic; I started a business, I was a mum — I had to run a household,” she said.

But it couldn’t go on forever.

A woman giving peace sign
Chelle Fisher now uses hiking as an alternative to drinking.(Supplied: Chelle Fisher)

Starting new, healthy habits

Tired of waking up feeling like hell, Ms Fisher started to make changes.

“There’s so much that I don’t remember, which is sad. Because I got married, I had two children and I was kind of just on autopilot,” she said.

“I wasn’t really living, I was just kind of surviving.

“It was in my early 20s, probably about eight years later, that I sort of started to realise, ‘Hey, there’s got to be more to life than what I’m doing’.

“Slowly and surely, I began to creep out of the hole that I was in and find my way.”

It was July 2014 and a “mother of all hangovers” got Ms Fisher off the couch and onto the mountains.

“I was so badly hungover. It was very scary. And I just said, ‘No more’. And it was easier when I made that choice,” she said.

“And that’s when I was able to start [to] just get out and hike.”

Ms Fisher said challenging any negative thoughts helped her along her new path.

“I also had to remind myself that this was a pattern,” she said.

“It wasn’t so much that I was weak, it was just a pattern that I was playing over and over because I didn’t know anything else.

“So I had to give myself something else, which was hiking.”

A woman on a mountain
Chelle Fisher has been raising funds to support other family violence survivors.(Supplied: Chelle Fisher)

Peaks raise money and awareness

Over eight days, Ms Fisher climbed eight mountains in the Great Southern. She started with Mt Hallowell near Denmark and finished with Mt Frankland near Walpole.

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