5 Chair Exercises That Restore Grocery-Carrying Endurance Faster Than Dumbbells After 65

United States News News

5 Chair Exercises That Restore Grocery-Carrying Endurance Faster Than Dumbbells After 65
United States Latest News,United States Headlines
  • 📰 EatThisNotThat
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 317 sec. here
  • 7 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 130%
  • Publisher: 63%

Your ultimate source for expert nutrition tips and health advice, covering wellness, healthy recipes, cooking hacks, food news, style trends and shopping.

Grocery shopping sounds simple until you actually break down what your body is doing the entire time. You're reaching up to shelves, bending down toward the floor, pushing a cart, and lifting items in and out of it.

When you get home, you're carrying bags from the car into the house, sometimes up stairs, and then reaching again to stock cabinets, refrigerators, and shelves. As a CHEK III practitioner and licensed massage therapist, I work with clients over 65 who are surprised to learn that grocery shopping is one of the more physically demanding activities in their weekly routine. It's not one movement. It's a series of different physical challenges: bending, reaching, carrying weight for a prolonged period, stabilizing your posture while walking, and coordinating your arms, trunk, and legs the entire time. All of these tasks fall under what exercise scientists call biomotor abilities. These are the fundamental movement capacities your nervous system and muscles use to accomplish any physical task, from sports performance to everyday errands. There's an acronym we use to describe them: PACSFEBS. Each letter represents one of the body's core biomotor abilities: power, agility, coordination, strength, flexibility, endurance, balance, and speed. Every task in life uses some combination of these abilities, but grocery shopping relies much more heavily on a specific group: endurance, balance, coordination, strength, and flexibility. Those are what allow you to lift items off shelves, carry bags for several minutes, stabilize your spine while walking, and reach into the trunk of a car without irritating your back or shoulders. Power, agility, and speed are still part of human movement, but they play a much smaller role here. So if the goal is to make grocery shopping feel easier and safer as we get older, the focus should be on improving the biomotor abilities that support stability, sustained effort, and coordinated movement under load. And when those abilities improve, it's not just grocery shopping that gets easier. Lifting laundry baskets, carrying luggage, bringing things in from the car: all of it starts to feel smoother. Any good exercise scientist will vary your programming based on your biomotor ability needs. These five chair exercises target exactly the abilities responsible for grocery-carrying endurance, and you don't need a single dumbbell.Our first exercise in the grocery series targets endurance. We need to be able to sustain work over time, which is why we use timed sets rather than counting reps. If you don't have a medicine ball, you can use a dumbbell, a milk jug, really anything that gives you a little bit of resistance. As you get better, we'll increase the load. I'm using an eight-pound medicine ball here, which is light for me. You'll also notice that I'm rounding my back during this exercise. If we were deadlifting something heavy, yes, we'd want that nice flat spine. But we also want to create strength in the ligamentous system of the spine, which does require some flexion. Sit on the chair and round your back slightly, bringing the ball to your chest. Don't try to go fast. Establish a nice, smooth rhythm at a comfortable pace.Form Tip: You are intentionally rounding the back here to build strength in the ligamentous system of the spine. This is not the same cue as a heavy deadlift.This is our balance exercise. It has a built-in progression system, so beginners and advanced exercisers can both use it. Beginner: Place one hand on the chair for support. Balance on your right leg. Bend your knee, hip, and torso, and touch the ball on the floor with your left hand. Advanced : Move the ball out of the way. Come down to the floor to increase range of motion. Complete all reps on one leg, then go right into the other leg. If you don't have a medicine ball, you can really use whatever you want. Just something that eventually, when you get to the advanced stage, provides some resistance when you lift it.Form Tip: Progress through the stages in order. Don't skip to the advanced version until you can manage the previous one with control.This exercise is for coordination, and it's really more about developing hand coordination and proprioception than about loading heavy weight. Start with something light. I'm using a foam nerve ball here. Sit in the chair and pass the ball around your waist in a circle, 3 to 5 reps in one direction, then 3 to 5 reps back the other way. Move up around your head, same thing: 3 to 5 reps per direction. When that's easy, do the same exercise standing.Form Tip: Don't watch the ball with your eyes. Feel it through your hands. That's the proprioception piece we're training here.This one targets hamstring flexibility using the med ball to help pull you a little further into the stretch. Same thing: if you don't have a med ball, any kind of load will work. A dumbbell, a gallon of water, whatever you have handy. Sit on the chair with your feet out in front and pull your ankles back . Let the ball pull you down into the stretch. Keep those ankles pulled back the entire time. If your flexibility allows you to reach past your feet, go a touch wider with your feet and reach through. You can hold the stretch 10 to 15 seconds for a more static version, or simply repeat the rounding and unrounding as a gentle dynamic stretch with no hold.Form Tip: Drop your chin first and let each section of the spine follow. The ball does the work of pulling you deeper. Don't force the stretch with your arms.This is the strength portion of our grocery shopping series. I'm using a 15-pound ball here, but start light and use what you have. We're putting together a combination of a lap pullover and an explosive chest press. You don't necessarily need power for grocery shopping, but there is a nice relationship between building strength and power. Because we're looking more for the strength piece, we keep the reps low and the load heavier. Sit on the chair and reach the ball over your head. A little bend in the elbows is totally fine. Push it up from your chest as high as you can. Try to push the ball up as high as you can every time to develop strength and a little bit of power. Recommended Sets and Reps: 2 to 3 sets of 5 to 8 reps. Use a heavier ball if you have one available. By your eighth rep, you should be tired and feel like you can't do more. Form Tip: The heavier the better on this one, as long as your form holds. If you're breezing through 8 reps, it's time to go up in weight.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

EatThisNotThat /  🏆 294. in US

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Cuban Colleges to Host Military Training Exercises, Signaling Intensified RepressionCuban Colleges to Host Military Training Exercises, Signaling Intensified RepressionCuban universities will hold mandatory military training exercises for students, coinciding with Fidel Castro's 100th birth anniversary and amidst economic crisis. The event aims to prepare students for 'all people's war' and includes updating military registries. The move follows the arrest of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro, which worsened Cuba's economic woes.
Read more »

The 7-Minute Standing Routine That Restores Core Strength Faster Than Floor Exercises After 60The 7-Minute Standing Routine That Restores Core Strength Faster Than Floor Exercises After 60Your ultimate source for expert nutrition tips and health advice, covering wellness, healthy recipes, cooking hacks, food news, style trends and shopping.
Read more »

5 Chair Exercises That Restore Full-Body Balance Faster Than Yoga After 655 Chair Exercises That Restore Full-Body Balance Faster Than Yoga After 65Your ultimate source for expert nutrition tips and health advice, covering wellness, healthy recipes, cooking hacks, food news, style trends and shopping.
Read more »

Effective Exercises for a Flat Stomach After 60Effective Exercises for a Flat Stomach After 60Discover the most effective exercises to reduce belly fat and strengthen your core after the age of 60. This article provides a comprehensive workout plan that focuses on full-body movements to increase calorie burn and improve overall fitness.
Read more »

Effective Exercises to Flatten Your Midsection After 60Effective Exercises to Flatten Your Midsection After 60Discover effective full-body exercises, including running, squat jumps, jumping jacks, and alternating lunges, specifically designed to help individuals over 60 flatten their midsection. Learn how these exercises build strength, increase calorie burn, and improve overall fitness.
Read more »

Exercises for a Flatter Midsection After 60Exercises for a Flatter Midsection After 60Discover effective exercises, incorporating full-body strength training and continuous movement, to flatten your midsection after age 60. This article details exercises like running, squat jumps, and jumping jacks that target major muscle groups, increase calorie burn, and train your core, offering a practical path to a healthier physique.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 01:48:43