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Why Most Fitness Advice Falls Apart After 40

Because your body isn’t the problem — the guidance you’re following is.

Marek Bowers's avatar
Marek Bowers
Nov 14, 2025
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Most fitness advice falls apart after 40 — not because your body changes, but because your life does.

(Honestly, the cracks start to show in your late 30s — tighter hips, slower recovery, more stress. By 40, you just can’t ignore it anymore.)

Earlier this week, I wrote about the stretching routines I’ve been following — the ones taught by women in their 50s and 60s on YouTube.

Yes, that post was about stretching… but what it revealed was bigger:

Your training isn’t failing because your body is older — it’s failing because most fitness advice is built for a life you’re not living anymore.

The stretching videos I kept returning to weren’t extreme. They were realistic for where I’m at. They matched my actual body and my actual week. That’s why they worked.

Most fitness advice doesn’t fail because it’s wrong — it fails because it doesn’t account for the reality of midlife: more stress, less recovery, and a body with history.

The advice isn’t bad. It’s just not built for this chapter.

That’s why so many plans fall apart in your late 30s, then 40s and 50s — not because you’re declining, but because the advice wasn’t built for this stage of life.

What does work in midlife is something different:

  • Training that prioritizes tomorrow

  • Guidance that respects your limits

  • Teachers who understand the difference between discipline and punishment

  • Workouts you can repeat, not dread

  • Strategic intensity instead of random intensity

  • Consistency instead of chaos

This is the part of fitness nobody teaches you in your 20s because you don’t need it yet. But once you hit your late 30s and early 40s, you need it more than ever.

Here’s how to tell instantly whether fitness advice will help you — or burn you out.

The 5-filter method for midlife training advice

These filters work because they’re built for the bodies and lives we actually have in our late 30s, 40s, and 50s — not the ones we had in our 20s.

Filter 1: If it asks for intensity before a baseline → NO

Intensity is great — but only after your body is ready for it. Consistency > intensity in every decade after 35.

A good plan builds:

  • a strength baseline

  • movement quality

  • stability

  • core patterns

  • joint prep

  • an aerobic base

  • realistic expectations

THEN it ramps intensity.

A bad plan assumes you can jump straight into:

  • heavy lifts

  • high-impact intervals

  • fast progressions

  • advanced movements

  • aggressive volume

Your body will tell you when intensity works for you. But it has to be earned, not assumed.

The remaining four filters are the exact ones I use to avoid burnout, bad programming, and setbacks — and to build a training plan that actually fits a midlife life.


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