• Why Strength Training is Better Than Pilates for Your Muscles and Your Health
    Jun 30 2026
    How does strength training at the Exercise Coach compare to Pilates?In this Q&A episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down a listener's question about training at The Exercise Coach compared to Pilates. They unpack the similarities and differences between the two approaches and explain why muscle loading and bone density become increasingly important with age. You'll also learn where Pilates can complement a strength training routine, who may benefit most from each method, and why strength training serves as a powerful foundation for long-term health and function.Dr. Fisher explains that Pilates was originally developed around the concept of “Contrology,” emphasizing intentional movement, precision, and quality over quantity. This focus on controlled exercise shares a similar philosophy with The Exercise Coach’s approach to strength training.Learn how Pilates emphasizes core musculature, posture, balance, and coordinated movement patterns. Exercises are designed to improve body control and alignment while encouraging the body to function as an integrated system.Dr. Fisher highlights that Pilates combines elements of strength, flexibility, coordination, and postural training. While these benefits can be valuable, the overall mechanical loading placed on muscles is typically limited compared to strength-focused exercise programs.Learn why Pilates may not provide sufficient resistance to significantly increase muscle mass or strength. According to Dr. Fisher, the emphasis on controlled movement often prioritizes movement performance rather than maximizing muscular overload.Dr. Fisher explains that stronger muscles and bones require adequate mechanical loading. Pilates can improve movement quality and control, but it generally does not create the level of muscular demand needed to substantially improve bone mineral density.Amy explains how Pilates may help improve posture and reduce common issues such as low back pain and neck discomfort. Research supporting Pilates is strongest in areas related to movement quality, postural improvements, and pain management.Dr. Fisher contrasts Pilates with The Exercise Coach’s strength training approach, which focuses on high levels of muscle fiber recruitment. The goal is to increase strength, muscle mass, and bone density to support long-term health and functional ability.Amy and Dr. Fisher agree that the role of a personal trainer extends beyond simply guiding exercise technique. For Amy, structured supervision helps ensure appropriate resistance, proper form, and consistent progression toward strength and health goals.Learn why effective strength training can deliver many of the same benefits associated with Pilates while also providing additional physiological adaptations. Improvements in muscular strength and bone health can contribute to greater quality of life as people age.Amy explains that exercise goals often determine which training approach is most appropriate. Individuals seeking improvements in strength, muscle mass, and bone density may benefit from prioritizing resistance training as a foundation.Dr. Fisher suggests that Pilates can complement a strength training program rather than replace it. Adding Pilates may provide additional opportunities to develop body awareness, movement control, flexibility, and coordination.Dr. Fisher explains that some forms of Pilates may require a baseline level of strength, balance, and stability before participation. In contrast, The Exercise Coach allows individuals to begin training safely from their current functional capacity and progress over time.Learn how personal training can support long-term improvements in strength, muscle mass, and functional capacity. A personal trainer can help maintain accountability while ensuring workouts remain aligned with changing fitness needs and goals. Mentioned in This Episode:The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions!Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.
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    10 mins
  • Cardio Before Weight Training: Does Exercise Order Really Matter?
    Jun 23 2026
    Do you really need to eat before or after your strength training workouts? In this Q&A episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down two listener questions about nutrition timing around exercise, focusing on what you should eat before and after a workout, and whether you even need to eat at all in certain situations.They unpack how pre-workout nutrition, post-workout protein, and meal timing actually affect performance, recovery, and results, while challenging common myths like the “anabolic window” and fasted training for fat loss.Learn why pre-workout nutrition is often less important than many people believe. Dr. Fisher explains that people do not need to feel obligated to eat before exercising, especially if they are following a calorie-restricted diet or simply do not feel hungry.Dr. Fisher explains how meal timing before exercise can support workout performance. For those who choose to eat before training, consuming carbohydrates two to three hours beforehand may provide energy for the session.Learn why post-workout nutrition recommendations have shifted toward protein intake. According to Dr. Fisher, protein consumed after resistance training can help optimize muscle protein synthesis and support muscle growth and recovery.Dr. Fisher challenges the traditional concept of a narrow “anabolic window” after exercise. Rather than needing food immediately after a workout, people can still benefit from protein consumption within several hours of completing their training session.Learn how personal preference should guide nutritional decisions around exercise. Some individuals feel hungry after a workout, while others prefer hydration or a protein shake, making flexibility an important part of long-term consistency.Amy and Dr. Fisher explain why there is no single perfect formula for workout nutrition. The primary goal is ensuring that the body has sufficient energy for exercise and adequate nutrients to support recovery afterward.Dr. Fisher explains how personal training should focus on individual needs rather than rigid nutrition or workout rules. What works for one client may not apply to another, especially when it comes to meal timing and training preferences.Learn how fasting before a workout may influence exercise performance. Dr. Fisher notes that prolonged periods without food can increase fatigue and reduce workout output, even though they do not necessarily prevent people from exercising effectively.Dr. Fisher explains why fasted workouts are not a guaranteed strategy for weight loss. Current evidence does not clearly demonstrate superior weight-loss results compared to exercising after eating, making overall lifestyle habits more important than fasting alone.Learn why resistance training and cardiovascular exercise are both important components of a healthy fitness program. Dr. Fisher emphasizes that health guidelines encourage people to engage in both forms of exercise to support overall wellbeing.Learn how fitness goals should determine whether cardio or resistance training comes first. Individuals focused on building strength and muscle are generally better served by prioritizing resistance training before cardiovascular exercise.Dr. Fisher highlights that people seeking improved cardiorespiratory fitness may benefit from performing cardio before strength training. The order of exercise should align with the outcome that matters most to the individual.Learn how personal training allows exercise order and fueling strategies to be adjusted based on specific goals like strength, muscle gain, or endurance. The most effective approach is the one that supports performance and consistency for that individual. Mentioned in This Episode:The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions!Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.
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    12 mins
  • The Science-Based Pros and Cons of Working Out With a Partner
    Jun 16 2026

    Does having a workout partner push you toward better results, or increase the chances of injury, distraction, and inconsistency? In this Q&A episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down a listener's question about strength training with a partner. They unpack the surprising psychology behind workout buddies, the role of supervision versus competition, the power of social motivation, and why the right training environment can dramatically shape both your results and your long-term commitment to strength training.

    • Dr. Fisher explores whether having a training partner is beneficial or harmful during a fitness journey. Survey responses revealed that many people preferred training with a partner instead of supervision, yet also reported a higher risk of injury.
    • Learn why unsupervised partner workouts can sometimes create unintended risks. According to Dr. Fisher, competition between training partners can reduce focus on proper technique and controlled movement, increasing the likelihood of injury.
    • Dr. Fisher explains that supervised environments, such as semi-private sessions at The Exercise Coach, create a different dynamic than unsupervised partner training. The presence of a personal trainer helps maintain safety, technique, and appropriate intensity.
    • Learn how social bonding becomes a powerful benefit of training with a partner. Shared workouts can strengthen relationships and create deeper emotional connections through a common experience.
    • Dr. Fisher introduces the concept of “emotional amplification,” where experiences feel more intense when shared with another person. Training with a partner may increase emotional investment and attachment to the fitness journey.
    • Dr. Fisher explains why long-term training with a friend can strengthen commitment to health goals. Building strength, improving body composition, and increasing functional capacity often feel more meaningful when someone else shares the journey.
    • Learn how inviting a friend into an established fitness routine can create additional motivation and encouragement. Experienced members often enjoy supporting others through the same exercises and milestones they once experienced themselves.
    • Dr. Fisher highlights that the social element of exercise can be highly positive when approached in a healthy and supportive way. The key is maintaining encouragement without allowing competition to override proper training habits.
    • Learn why excessive competitiveness during partner workouts may become counterproductive. Without supervision and attention to form, competition can shift focus away from safe and effective exercise execution.
    • Amy and Dr. Fisher explain how social motivation naturally increases effort levels during workouts. Simply having another person present, whether a coach or peer, can encourage greater consistency and performance.
    • Learn why supervision plays such a powerful role in exercise outcomes. Research suggests that even the silent presence of a personal trainer or a coach can enhance effort, accountability, and training adaptations.
    • Dr. Fisher and Amy emphasize that peer influence in fitness environments can positively shape workout intensity and commitment. The feeling of shared participation often motivates people to push themselves further than they would alone.

    Mentioned in This Episode:

    The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions!

    Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com

    This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

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    10 mins
  • GLP-1 Muscle Loss: How to Make Sure Your Weight Loss Is Actually Fat Loss
    Jun 9 2026
    Is your weight loss journey secretly setting you up for even greater weight gain down the road?Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher discuss the hidden muscle loss risk that comes with GLP-1 use and why the number on the scale tells you almost nothing about the quality of your progress. They unpack how strength training is the critical missing piece in most weight loss journeys, why protein becomes more important when you cut calories, and what genuine health success actually looks like when the real goal isn't weight loss.Dr. Fisher explains what most people fundamentally get wrong about GLP-1 use. The goal isn't weight loss itself, but the health that weight loss is supposed to deliver. When you press past the surface answer, most people admit they want a better quality of life, not just a lower number on the scale.Dr. Fisher breaks down how GLP-1s work at a biological level, describing them as medications that mimic a natural hormone originally developed to treat diabetes. They stimulate insulin release, reduce glucagon, slow gastric emptying, and create a feeling of fullness that drives reduced calorie intake.Dr. Fisher explains why GLP-1s can be a genuinely valuable entry point for people who are overweight or obese. The psychological and physical barriers to exercise, low confidence, pain, and fear of gym environments, make medication a realistic first step that behavioral advice alone cannot replace.Learn why the number on the scale is one of the most misleading metrics you can track during a weight loss journey. It cannot distinguish between fat loss, which is beneficial, and muscle loss, which is metabolically and functionally devastating.Dr. Fisher reveals that between 20 and 40 percent of the weight lost through GLP-1 use is lean tissue, typically thought of as muscle mass. Losing that much muscle while trying to get healthier is directly counterproductive to the actual goal.Dr. Fisher explains why losing muscle during a weight loss journey sets the body up to regain fat more easily afterward. Muscle is the body's primary storage site for carbohydrates, and shrinking that storage capacity increases the likelihood of fat accumulation once the journey ends.Learn how the "fat but fit" paradigm reframes what health actually looks like. Research suggests that increased strength is associated with lower mortality risk regardless of body composition, meaning being strong matters more for longevity than being lean.Dr. Fisher paints a picture of what weight loss without muscle retention actually looks like in practice. He points to frail older adults who are dependent on others, use walkers, and have severely diminished functional capacity as the endpoint of losing weight without preserving strength.Dr. Fisher explains why strength training is the critical signal the body needs to retain muscle during a GLP-1 journey. Mechanical loading through resistance training stimulates muscle protein synthesis and tells the body to hold onto lean tissue even when overall energy intake is reduced.Learn why the type of muscle fiber you target in strength training matters enormously during a weight loss journey. Type 2 muscle fibers are the most responsive to growth, the most metabolically valuable, and the most important to recruit and retain as the body ages.Amy highlights a counterintuitive truth that many people on weight loss journeys are uncomfortable confronting. Neglecting muscle while losing weight is essentially signaling to the body to store fat more aggressively the moment the intervention stops.Dr. Fisher explains why body composition measurement is a non-negotiable part of any GLP-1 journey done right. Tools like InBody assessments go beyond scale weight and give a real picture of whether you are losing fat or losing muscle, which determines whether the weight loss is actually high quality.Learn why supervised workouts produce meaningfully better outcomes than unsupervised ones, especially for people on a GLP-1 journey. Having a personal trainer present creates accountability, improves technique, and opens space for the kind of conversations that keep people from feeling isolated on what can be a very personal health journey.Dr. Fisher explains why protein intake becomes more important, not less, when someone is in a calorie deficit. Most people reduce protein alongside fats and carbohydrates when cutting calories, but the right approach is to protect protein intake and reduce the other macronutrients instead.Learn how GLP-1 medications change what people eat without necessarily improving what they eat. Reduced satiety often leads to smaller portions, but the nutritional quality of those portions, including protein content, frequently remains poor without deliberate attention.Amy explains why tracking muscle mass throughout a GLP-1 journey is just as important as tracking weight loss progress. Without that data, there is no way to know whether the body is shedding fat or cannibalizing the very tissue that ...
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    26 mins
  • How to Stay Consistent With Exercise: Why the First 6 Months Are Fragile
    Jun 2 2026
    Most people don’t fail at strength training because the program doesn’t work; they fail because they quit before real results even have a chance to show up.Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher discuss what research shows about how to make healthy new habits stick, why people fall off the bandwagon, what you can do, and the mindsets you can adopt to stick with strength training long-term. They unpack how habits are formed, why the first few months are the most fragile, and what actually keeps people showing up long enough to see real results.Dr. Fisher explains why the first four months of a fitness journey are often the most fragile. Most people are not failing because they are lazy, but because new behaviors naturally compete against old routines.Dr. Fisher breaks down the six stages of the Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change. People move from simply thinking about change, to preparing for it, to finally taking action and eventually making it automatic. The ultimate goal is reaching a point where healthy habits feel as natural as brushing your teeth.Amy explains that starting a health journey requires more courage than most people realize. She says there are subtle forces constantly pulling people back toward their old routines and comfort zones. Long-term success depends on recognizing and resisting those forces early.Dr. Fisher explains why beginners often experience rapid strength gains in the early weeks of training. Much of that improvement is neurological rather than physical at first. The brain simply becomes more efficient at activating existing muscle fibers.Dr. Fisher covers why visible physical changes take longer than strength improvements. Neurological adaptations happen quickly, but actual changes in muscle size and body composition require more time. Early progress may not always look dramatic, even when important changes are already happening internally.Dr. Fisher explains that many of the most meaningful health benefits appear later in the fitness journey. Improvements in cholesterol, blood sugar, bone density, and metabolic health often emerge after several months of consistency. These long-term outcomes are usually more important than the short-term cosmetic changes people chase initially.Amy highlights that some of the most dramatic transformations happen after the six-month mark. She points out that quitting too early means missing the phase where the biggest physical and health rewards begin to appear.Dr. Fisher explains why most people begin exercising for external reasons but stay for internal ones. Early motivation is often tied to appearance, fear, or health scares. Long-term adherence happens when exercise becomes connected to identity, wellbeing, and fulfillment.Amy explains that real success happens when fitness becomes part of your identity rather than a temporary goal. Once healthy behaviors feel automatic, maintaining them requires far less mental effort. The shift from “something I do” to “someone I am” changes everything.Amy debunks the myth that motivation must come before action. Research shows that taking action is often what creates motivation in the first place. Waiting to feel motivated usually keeps people stuck.Amy explains why guidance from a personal trainer is especially important during the early months of a fitness journey. Beginners are still vulnerable to doubt, inconsistency, and emotional discomfort. Support, education, and accountability help people push through the fragile stage.Dr. Fisher explains that the first few months are less about performance and more about consistency. The real goal early on is simply continuing to show up despite obstacles and distractions. Adherence matters more than perfection.Dr. Fisher covers why self-belief is critical when starting strength training. Many people are intimidated by the perceived complexity of exercise or doubt their physical capability. Personal training helps people realize they are far more capable and adaptable than they initially believed.Amy explains why building emotional connections inside the gym environment matters. Developing trust with trainers and other people exercising alongside you creates support and accountability. Those relationships often become a major factor in long-term consistency.Amy and Dr. Fisher discuss the plateau many people experience between months three and six. Early strength gains often slow down after the initial dramatic improvements. This phase is normal and reflects the body adapting to a more sustainable pace of progress.Amy explains why plateaus are not signs of failure. She describes them as a necessary rebuilding phase where the body strengthens itself internally before larger breakthroughs occur later. The plateau is often the bridge to more dramatic long-term results.Amy asks what people should focus on after surviving the difficult first six months of training. By this point, consistency has usually improved and exercise starts feeling more ...
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    31 mins
  • ACSM Resistance Training Position Stand - Stop Overcomplicating Your Training
    May 26 2026

    Are your workouts actually building strength or just burning time? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down the latest 2026 guidelines from the American College of Sports Medicine on how you should be training today. They unpack why consistency beats perfection, how minimal training can still deliver real results, and where most people waste time and effort. Tune in to simplify your approach and start training in a way that actually works.

    • Dr. Fisher explains what the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) actually does. It’s one of the main bodies shaping exercise science, from research journals to certifications that guide the industry.
    • Dr. Fisher shares why resistance training is still massively underused. Around 60% of adults aren’t doing any strength work, and only a small percentage hit the basic guideline of twice per week.
    • Learn why consistency will always beat the “perfect program.” You don’t need the smartest plan on paper if you’re not showing up for it. What actually moves the needle is turning up regularly and putting in some effort, even on the days it feels basic.
    • Amy covers how to choose a program you’ll actually stick with. There’s no shortage of “best” routines out there, but most of them fail because people don’t follow through. The real win is picking something that fits your life so well that skipping it starts to feel uncomfortable.
    • Dr. Fisher explains how to progress your training without overthinking it. If the weight, reps, or sets aren’t gradually increasing, your body has no reason to adapt. Progress doesn’t have to be dramatic, but it does need to be intentional.
    • Amy covers why a personal trainer can quietly make all the difference. Most people fall into the habit of repeating the same weights and routines because it feels comfortable. A good personal trainer steps in to push progression just enough to keep you improving without burning out.
    • Learn how working with a personal trainer improves more than just your results. You’re not just getting guidance, you’re also getting accountability, structure, and a reason to show up. That consistency alone is often what separates people who see change from those who stay stuck.
    • Dr. Fisher explains why resistance training feels complicated (but isn’t). Many people avoid it because they’re unsure where to start or think it takes too much time. In reality, even two short 20-minute sessions a week can deliver meaningful results if done properly.
    • Amy covers how to keep strength training simple and effective. Building strength is naturally repetitive. You don’t need constant variety; you need consistency in doing what already works.
    • Amy and Dr. Fisher agree that the basics will always outperform every “new hack.” Sleep well, eat decently, and challenge your muscles regularly is the foundation. Amy adds that it’s easy to chase complexity, but most results come from doing simple things well over time.
    • Dr. Fisher explains how eccentric overload can unlock more strength. Traditional weights give you the same resistance up and down, which limits how much you can challenge the muscle. With advanced tech like exerbotics devices, the lowering phase can match your strength more closely, creating a stronger stimulus and better results.

    Mentioned in This Episode:

    The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions!

    Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com

    This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

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    30 mins
  • Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Lifespan
    May 19 2026

    Could lifting weights actually change how long and how well you live? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher bring an end to the Strength Training Reverses series. They unpack how strength training influences lifespan, disease risk, and long-term health. Tune in to learn why building strength might be one of the simplest ways to stay healthier, so you can keep your independence as you age.

    • Learn the true meaning of premature death. Dr. Fisher explains it as dying earlier than you realistically could have, based on your body, habits, and circumstances.
    • Why your daily habits matter more than you think over the long run. Amy shares that your genes play a role, but how you live matters more in how long you live. Small choices repeated over time can either work for you or against you.
    • Learn how strength training fits into the bigger picture of your life. It is not just about gym goals or looking a certain way. It is about staying capable, independent, and mobile as you get older.
    • Dr. Fisher explains how being active lowers your risk of common lifestyle diseases like heart disease, diabetes, stroke, and cancer. The basics like moving your body consistently still do a lot of the heavy lifting.
    • Why adding a few extra healthy years is actually more meaningful than it sounds. Amy points out that those years can either be healthy and active or limited and difficult.
    • Dr. Fisher reveals that you do not need to be naturally strong to benefit from strength training for longevity. The advantage comes from the actual act of engaging in resistance training. That means anyone can start where they are and still see real results.
    • How to think about training as something that helps you later, not just today. Amy frames it as doing your future self a favor. You might not notice it immediately, but it shows up when you need it most.
    • Why a personal trainer can help you avoid wasting time doing things that do not move the needle. For Dr. Fisher, many people train hard but do not see results because there is no structure. Having someone guide you keeps your effort going in the right direction.
    • Why strength is closely tied to staying healthier for longer. Lower strength tends to come with higher risk of health issues and earlier decline. Getting stronger shifts things in your favor, even if progress feels slow.
    • Learn how even small strength gains actually count more than people expect. You do not need to go to extremes or train like an athlete. Just getting a bit stronger over time already starts to change your trajectory.
    • How to look at strength as a simple way to lower your overall risk. If your chances of major illness go down, your chances of living longer naturally go up. It is a straightforward trade off that is easy to overlook.
    • According to Amy, working with a personal trainer can make consistency easier. It gives you structure, so you are not guessing what to do each time. That clarity alone helps most people stick with it longer.
    • How to think about personal trainer or personal training as a long-term decision. It is not just about short-term results or quick progress. It is about building strength and habits that support you for years to come.

    Mentioned in This Episode:

    The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions!

    Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com

    This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

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    29 mins
  • Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Disease
    May 12 2026

    Heart disease, diabetes, cancer. What if strength training could help lower your risk of all three?

    Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher continue the Strength Training Reverses series. They unpack how resistance training can help reduce the risk of some of the biggest health concerns people face as they age, including heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and cancer. Tune in to hear why aging is the primary risk factor for numerous chronic diseases, how lifestyle habits compound over time, and why strength training may be one of the most overlooked tools for disease prevention and recovery.

    • Dr. Fisher shares research showing resistance training can reduce cardiovascular disease risk by 10 to 20%, type 2 diabetes by 17 to 46%, and cancer risk by 10 to 31%.
    • Why aging is not the real problem. Amy explains that age alone does not cause disease. It’s the habits repeated over those years that slowly build risk.
    • Learn how metabolism changes with age. Dr. Fisher explains that as we get older, muscle mass often declines and calorie burning slows down. That shift can increase the risk of weight gain and type 2 diabetes.
    • Dr. Fisher shares that while we cannot stop aging, we can control how we respond to it through resistance training. He explains why lifting weights may be one of the strongest defenses against age-related disease.
    • Dr. Fisher covers how many people end up managing symptoms with multiple medications. While medicine can help, it often does not address the root lifestyle causes.
    • The missing conversation in healthcare. Strength training can create long-term change, yet it is not always part of the treatment plan. That leaves many people without one of the most effective tools available.
    • Exercise advice is often too vague. Dr. Fisher reveals that many doctors say “go exercise,” but cannot give detailed training guidance. He explains how personal trainers can turn that advice into a clear plan that fits your goals and health needs.
    • Strength training helps with diabetes. Dr. Fisher explains that training uses stored glycogen in the muscles, creating space for sugar after meals. This can improve blood glucose control and support diabetes reversal.
    • Amy and Dr. Fisher cover how cancer is connected to inflammation and poor cell function. Resistance training helps the body repair, recycle, and remove weaker cells more effectively.
    • Ways lifting weights helps your blood vessels. Dr. Fisher explains that resistance training improves endothelial function and nitric oxide release. That helps arteries and veins stay flexible and healthy.
    • How to strengthen your heart through training. Dr. Fisher shares that exercise can improve the heart muscle’s ability to pump blood. A stronger heart supports better energy and long-term health.
    • Learn the value of strength training if you already have risk factors. Amy explains that even if chronic disease is already present, lifting weights can still improve function and quality of life. It is never too late to benefit.
    • According to Amy, most people want to avoid disease, feel good, and stay capable as they age. Strength training is one of the best tools to make that happen.
    • Why working with a personal trainer can be a game-changer as you age. A personal trainer helps you train safely, build muscle, and stay consistent as metabolism slows down over time. The right plan can help you stay strong and independent for longer.

    Mentioned in This Episode:

    The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions!

    Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com

    This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

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    25 mins