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Fitter After 50: Forever Changing Our Beliefs About Aging

Edwin Mayhew

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (6x9)9781403302571 $ 11.50  
About the Book

We can be not only fit after 50, but fitter -- fitter than most 40, 30, and even 20-year-olds AND fitter than we were ourselves before our encounter with the BIG FIVE-O.

Meet these Masters of Fitness and learn their secrets:

    • The 79-year-old great-grandmother who has run twenty-eight races of 100 miles or longer
    • The Award-Winning 61-year-old bodybuilder who started at age 55
    • The middle-aged, overweight couch potato with high blood pressure who became an American marathon champion
    • And dozens more who will FOREVER change your beliefs about aging

Discover:

  • Why some stick with their fitness plan, most don’t, and how you can
  • Why it is easier than you think to get started
  • Why a strong "why" (desire) is more important than the "how"
  • Why just tweaking your diet can make all the difference
  • Why and how The 60-Second Solutions can make you fitter
  • Why and how to produce the Human Growth Hormone naturally
  • Why and how YOU CAN be fitter after 50

"Whether you are fast approaching age 50 or looking at it in the rearview mirror, this is the book you need to read!"

–Jerry Dunn, America’s Marathon Man --

200 marathons in 2000 at age 54

About the Author

Ed Mayhew is the author of Educating Your Star Child, The Skinny Book of Fat, and The Important Journey (audiocassette). A professional educator for thirty-five years, he has specialized in physical fitness for children. As he crossed the half-century mark, he turned his attention to adult fitness issues. Ed is an avid runner, a cyclist, sports enthusiast, and definitely fitter after 50. He is married to his co-author, Mary.

Note: For Fitter After 50, Mayhew conducted dozens of interviews with the Masters of Fitness – the real authors of much of FA50’s insights and inspiration – and researched dozens more to glean their secrets and share them with you.

Mary Mayhew has authored two other books: Your Star Child (nonfiction) and Great Adventure: A Coming of Age at Going on Fifty (a novel). She is also the co-author of Educating Your Star Child. Besides writing, Mary is an artist, musician, and mother of the Mayhews’ two daughters, Catherine and Joanna. She illustrated the covers and/or “innards” of most of the above-mentioned books, including FA50.

www.FitterAfter50.com

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At 53, in 1976, she was an emergency room nurse and mother of four, who had never entered nor had any interest in the athletic arena. Two years later, retired from the ER, she was cajoled by her husband, Norman, into accompanying him in a 10-mile race; a competition which she didn’t enjoy at all until she crossed the finish line -- in last place at that.

But wait! In 1982, at the age of 59, she entered the Hawaiian Ironman Triathlon (the epic swim, bike, and run-a-marathon competition). In 1989, now a 66-year-old grandmother of 9, she completed the Grand Slam of 100-mile mountain-trail runs (the Vermont 100, the Wasatch 100, Colorado’s Leadville 100, and the Western States 100); plus one more to grow on, the Angeles Crest 100, all in just a 16-week time period. In 1995, in her prime at 72, she ran the Marathon Des Sables, a grueling 145-mile stage race across the Sahara Desert in Morocco; then just 2 weeks later (with hardly time to catch her breath), she competed in AND finished the first annual Eco Challenge, in Utah, a 370-mile multi-sport, multi-day, race (including horseback riding, canoeing, and rock climbing -- 1200-foot vertical cliffs) in which over half the competitors (most just half her age) could not complete this rugged event.

Who is this marvel? Her name is Helen Klein. Helen makes us reexamine our old, outdated beliefs about aging. Helen proudly says to us, through her actions and awe-inspiring accomplishments, that the decline we associate with getting older may be highly exaggerated -- to our detriment.

Helen has unquestionably become fitter after 50. She can show us what gave her 23 injury and illness-free years of competition, years in which she set more than 75 age-group, American and world records. These included her 100-mile world record -- 21:03:01 (21 hours and 3 minutes); her 54 marathons and 130 ultra-marathons (including 5 and 6-day race events); her winning the coveted Arete Award for courage in sports; and her being named Runner’s World magazine’s Woman of the Century (100-mile racing, that is).

Let’s look at how an un-athletic Helen Klein went from emergency-room nurse to world-champion athlete, all after the age of 55. Like many readers of this book, maybe even you, before that first 10-mile race, Helen didn’t like the idea of getting all sweaty from running. She was so embarrassed by just the idea of her neighbors and friends (yes, and even total strangers) seeing her running around town, that she had her husband measure out a one-fifth mile "track" in their backyard where she could run in relative obscurity, in preparation for that first 10-miler. In addition, she thought that running a race was a crazy way for one to spend his or her time; and she regarded walking as a plenty good means of locomotion. However, once she commits to something, anything, even something as insane as giving Norm her word that she would train for and run a 10-mile race with him, there is no turning back.

Her first training session, she could only do two laps around the homemade track, and she told me, "I thought I would die!" The next day she added another lap and found that it was not quite so exhausting. With this experience, she decided to add a lap each day for the several weeks of training. In 10 weeks Helen was ready for the race. She and her husband, Norm, completed the 10-mile race in 2 hours (a 12-minute-mile pace), not exactly a gold medal performance. But, she did get a T-shirt, a trophy (she was the only woman in her age-group), and her picture in the paper (crossing the finish line), which she thought was "cool." Most importantly, she experienced the satisfaction of having completed a difficult challenge.

Norm wanted to keep racing and so Helen sort of got dragged into the running scene, first as a cheerleader for her husband and then as a runner herself (if you are going to be at the races, you might as well run in them -- it makes the time go faster). Eventually she got caught up in the challenge of seeing if she could run this distance and that distance; this race and that race, with their differing obstacles and challenges; and "violá!" a world champion was born. But, why the great success?


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