strength by fitness
podcast
About this podcast episode
Our conversational podcasts are based on our own coaching, long-form articles, and podcasts but narrated by Notebooklm to provide an easy conversational summary of our longer content.
It is in other words a convenient, and entertaining way to consume our denser, fact-based content.
The use of Notebooklms conversational AI for these shorter podcasts does not change the fact-based value and correctness of our content & coaching, but it is a conversation about our own coaching, and content so Notebooklm sometimes make small mistakes.
Notebooklms AI narrators are doing their own thing with our fact-based coaching & content, under the supervision of my input, so when I notice a small mistake, or I feel that they are slightly off in their conversation I try to highlight that in the video, or edit it away.
So please enjoy our high-quality conversational podcasts as exactly that, someone else discussing the fact-based things, and content we coach, do, publish, and talk about, but keep in mind that both humans and AI interpret things in their own way.
In this episode, we are covering older age & fitness.
The increased need for more protein as we humans get older, the incredible benefit of a high-protein approach together with strength training for the elderly, not just for strength and muscle mass, but better health outcomes, mobility and a much richer health span.
So buckle up, and enjoy.
Cited studies & articles
Articles used for this podcast.
1. Strength train above 60 years of age.
2. Crossroads of explosive strength, mobility and muscle mass.
3. Protein and Resistance training progression. 1.6+g/kg/day.
Studies: Protein et al, from health, to hypertrophy, strength, and aging. Nutritional deficits.
1. https://ajcn.nutrition.org/article/S0002-9165(23)66282-3/pdf
2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8116875/?s=09
3. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/obr.12131?s=09
4. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37630702/?s=09
5. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8468854/
6. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38674813/?s=09
7. https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0002916524004726?s=09
8. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnut.2024.1397090/abstract?s=09
9. Global Food Deficit in billions of people, Lancet study.
recent articles
Plant-Based High-Protein Oat Bowl. Breakfast or post-gym?
Welcome to a tasty high-protein oat bowl from Strength By Fitness coach team, Mike and Mida.
This fabulous high-protein oat bowl delivers roughly 56 grams of protein from 3 main sources of protein, all while delivering around 615 calories, making it a genuine high-protein, high-satiety meal, loaded with micronutrients, fiber, and satiety to boot.
As with all Strength By Fitness meals, you will find a good protein and fiber-to-energy ratio together with a wide spectrum of protein sources and micronutrients.
Vegan Mince and Pepper Salad V02, High-protein and Moderate Fat.
This is version 2 of our popular vegan mince and green pepper salad. With around 66 grams of protein, more healthy fats, almost 50% less whole plant-based carbs, and more leafy greens this is a tasty variant of the same high-protein meal with a nutritional difference. Enjoy.
Plant-Based High-Protein Recipe: Pepper, Mince Salad.
This is one of Strength By Fitness plant-based high-protein meals. A tasty high-protein salad with peppers and vegan mince. 70 grams of protein, from 3 different protein sources, nutritiously rich and satiating.
Recipe Strength By Fitness.
Our mountainous hike on our gym-free Saturday.
Saturday is one of our weekly gym-free recovery days. This means that we prioritize ‘us’ time, chilling, relaxing, recovering, eating healthy high-protein foods supplanted with plenty of whole plant-based foods, and doing nonexhaustive activities that are done for adventure, fun, family, relationship, calm, rejuvenating and quality of life time.
Our world suffers both obesity & nutritional deficits.
Around the world, billions of people eat too much food while at the same time not getting enough nutrients. But how bad is the situation really?.
Let us look at some nutrients and how many are estimated to be deficient globally right now.
The relentless onslaught of plastic pollution.
Globally speaking, this disregard for cause & consequences becomes even more apparent in the way far too many still do not acknowledge the importance of a healthy planetary home and the fact-based suffering and harm we are causing both ourselves and our planet by our refusal to live in a sustainable way.
The blood-brain barrier and plastic pollution.
So, following this short introduction I have drummed up, we have finally arrived at the core of my article. Man-made plastic pollution and the way it encapsulates everything in our earthly home by now.
Even our brain.
We appreciate you
so stay healthy & never stop training
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