Losing weight can be a difficult task for many people. And, unfortunately, once you hit the age of 40 it starts to become much easier to gain weight and much harder to lose it.
As you age the changes in your activity level, eating habits, hormones and how body stores fat all work to conspire against you. The good news is that there are lifestyle changes you can make to ensure good health.
The best one is to make time to exercise. A couple of strong HIIT workouts along with some additional physical activity each week will help keep those extra pounds at bay.
Related: Resting Metabolic Rate Testing
Working out will also help to muscle, which is especially important after the age of 40. Muscle burns more calories than fit, so starting on a strength-training program with a certified personal trainer will increase your muscle mass and help keep the fat off.
Here are 10 other strategies, courtesy of webmd, to embrace if you want to keep off the pounds.
- Eat Fruits and Veggies: Fill half your plate with them at every meal. Produce tends to have more nutrients and less fat and calories than meat, dairy products, or grains. And it may help you feel satisfied, even if you eat less. Fresh fruits, like apples and berries, are also great in place of high-fat or high-sugar snacks.
- Don’t Skip Breakfast: Experts recommend a healthy morning meal like oatmeal or whole wheat toast with fruit. It can help curb that mid-morning hunger that leads you to grab something unhealthy on-the-go or overeat at lunch. Small meals or snacks every few hours can keep your appetite in check all day long.
- Eat Less at Night: If you get most of your daily calories at lunch (before 3 p.m.), you might lose more weight than if you have a big meal later. But the most important thing is still what you eat, not when.
- Cook Healthy Meals: A lot of extra fat and calories can come from the way you prepare food. Instead of frying food or cooking it in butter or lots of oil, try grilling, baking, or broiling. This is good advice at restaurants, too: Skip foods that are fried or that come in creamy sauces.
- Don’t Make a Second Trip: You tend to be less active as you get older, and you may need a few hundred calories less than you used to. To lose weight, you may need to cut your calories back even more. Smaller portions and tracking your calories with a food diary or an app can help you eat less.
- Pay Attention: When you’re busy with work, kids, and life, you can be tempted to grab food on-the-go or multitask through a meal. But you’re more likely to overeat – and be hungry again soon after – if you don’t focus on your food. Sit down for meals and tune in to what’s on your plate (not what’s on your TV or computer screen). That helps your brain realize when you’ve had enough.
- Lay Off the Soda: If you drink sugar-sweetened coffee, tea, soft drinks, or energy drinks, switch to water or another zero-calorie beverage. Your sweet drinks have lots of added sugar, which can make you gain weight and raise your risk for diabetes.
- Cut Back on Alcohol: Beer bellies aren’t always caused by booze. But a “spare tire” is common in middle age, and alcohol can have something to do with it. A glass of beer or wine is about 150 calories, and that can add up if you drink often. Plus, alcohol can make you hungry, so you may eat more while you drink.
- Get Good Sleep: All kinds of things can mess with your sleep after age 40 – health problems, stress, medications, and, for women, menopause. But people who don’t get good-quality sleep are more likely to gain weight. If you skimp on sleep because you’re busy or stressed, try to change your habits and settle into a regular routine.
- Get Support: For many people, it’s easier to lose weight with others than to do it alone. You might enter a weight-loss contest at work, join a group on social media, or ask a friend to go for walks or classes at the gym. Other people who share your goals can help keep you accountable and cheer you on as you make progress.
To learn more about developing a healthy exercise program, give us a call at 216-831-3674 or email us at info@ampfitness.com to talk with one of our certified personal trainers.









