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Muay Thai For Old Guys


LaosLover

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11 minutes ago, LaosLover said:

Has any oldie here ever used to Muay Thai for fitness or otherwise?

 

No muay Thai I only watch on Sundays the fights with just the bandage hand fighting. 

These days I have to know my limitations and use my multi gym in my kitchen to exercise.

Have blood pressure equipment.

Have a oxymeter.

Have 3 monthly appointments at our local govt hospital for check ups.

Ride my super sports bike.

Do Archery on my farmland.

Shoot targets on my farmland.

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I'm in my early 60's and started working out at home again,  but when I check out gyms in my area, some offered "Muay Thai workout" programs.  I gave it a pass, but I do have a punching bag in my garden that I'll punch & kick around now & again.  Those MT workouts seem like a good way to stay in "fighting" shape.

 

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A million years ago, I stayed at a Muay Thai place near the river in Ubon for a week. They had me turning over a giant tire over and over again. Great camaraderie. Def a few Santips at the end of the day.  

 

These days, I want a/c. My trainer was my guy for my 10 kg loss. If I can double that loss in the next year, life expectancy tables take me out to 92-94.

 

'Have to give some appreciation to Lacesit who posts here.

 

He started training past 70 too. Not much advice out there for such late starters. I don't agree with every last thing he says (his war on carrots), but he def helped me out a lot. Khun La was another help.

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1 minute ago, BangkokReady said:

Would judo be better for that?

Would love a martial art in the mix when I am stronger.

 

I tried Aikido while in Hua Hin, loved it, but if you're doing that, it pretty much crowds out other exercise. They have it near me at CM Uni. (I think).

 

I still need to exercise alone until I am sure that I am not a burden on a group.

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Good effort. Hope I do it too for a long time.

Loved Ong Bak. Sequels less good though fun seeing it in Australia.

I got a few lessons and did it at gym myself but then they got rid of boxing bags to put in a womens gym. Now I do shadow boxing and kicking as part of workout which may look a bit ridiculous sometimes but It gets to muscles not used in other parts of workout.

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14 minutes ago, Fat is a type of crazy said:

Good effort. Hope I do it too for a long time.

Loved Ong Bak. Sequels less good though fun seeing it in Australia.

I got a few lessons and did it at gym myself but then they got rid of boxing bags to put in a womens gym. Now I do shadow boxing and kicking as part of workout which may look a bit ridiculous sometimes but It gets to muscles not used in other parts of workout.

I had an Oculus Quest VR headset and they have a boxing game.

So basically, you can shadow box with the VR boxer.

It was pretty cool and a good workout, but the headsets go for 400USD+

 

 

 

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On 8/21/2023 at 5:10 PM, LaosLover said:

I subscribe to Ahhhnold's daily motivation newsletter. He doesn't sell your name and his advice is pretty good.

 

In a year, very on and off and finding my way, I lost 10 kilo's. Not fantastic, but I'm fighting both a busted thyroid and Pad Thai availability on tap. Most 70 year olds are putting on 10 kilo's, not losing it.

Just turned 69 and hitting the gym three times a week with a personal trainer for 6 months now. I heard that one or two of the trainers are into muay thai. I did a few years of  tang soo do in my twenties. I'd love to do some but the bruises from being kicked worry me. The pad thai is a weakness of mine as well. They make a good one at Dang Dum on Pattaya Klang.

 

In that year I'm down 1 or 2 kilos at 72 Kg now for 173 height. I think I'm swapping about a kilo of body fat for muscle every month..

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All you guys seem in great shape at ages between about 65 and 75.

That's great.

That's important, too, and not just for longevity considerations.

 

I would like to get into better shape.

But I find it too boring.

I would find it far less boring if I could find a woman (40-yo) to exercise with me.

How much would it cost to rent a housewife, or something; but only one physically fit and interested in exercise?

 

Or, are there any female trainers in my area, I wonder?

What would be the going rate?

Twice a week, 50 minutes per session might be enough.

 

If I do not begin exercising again, I shall surely reach a point of no return, fairly quickly, because I can already feel it in my bones.

 

 

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16 minutes ago, GammaGlobulin said:

All you guys seem in great shape at ages between about 65 and 75.

That's great.

That's important, too, and not just for longevity considerations.

 

I would like to get into better shape.

But I find it too boring.

I would find it far less boring if I could find a woman (40-yo) to exercise with me.

How much would it cost to rent a housewife, or something; but only one physically fit and interested in exercise?

 

Or, are there any female trainers in my area, I wonder?

What would be the going rate?

Twice a week, 50 minutes per session might be enough.

 

If I do not begin exercising again, I shall surely reach a point of no return, fairly quickly, because I can already feel it in my bones.

 

 

Just walk daily up hills. Muay Thai is overrated and kind of boring  after a few sessions.

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5 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said:

 

 

 

What would be the going rate?

 

 

 

About 800 baht a pop. I foolishly bought 50 sessions to commit myself, so for me it's 500 baht a session. 6-12 sessions are all you need. After that, he (not many women do this) was more of an accountability partner than a trainer. I still have 20 sessions to use up, hence the Muay Thai try.

 

My Muay Thai training session was super-basic. I punched forcefully into a big mitt he held up. I lifted my knee hard like I was kneeing someone in the you-know-whats. I held on to a pillar to steady myself for some high kicks. 

 

Very exhausting, even with breaks, and I am still pretty sore 2 days later. It made me skip a weights day. Still, I'll try again today.

 

Moderate walking won't do it. You need to be fairly out of breath and sweating a bit, for about 10-20 minutes continuously. Leisurely strolling up a hill is better than nothing, but not doing much for your heart. The golden rule is that if you can carry on a conversation, you're not working hard enough.

 

This is why my year 1 results were so tepid: What I thought was a strenuous workout was too easy to really progress much. It took me a whole year just to get confident that I wouldn't injure myself.

 

Still, even with a modest program, you'll def soon get more energy and slightly better posture. Also, you'll sleep like a rock and feel about 15% more positive about everything.

 

The endorphin effect is real, even after the first hard 10 minutes. I thought it would be more rah-rah, like in a Nike commercial. It's a very subtle low buzz of optimism that lingers throughout the day.

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12 hours ago, LaosLover said:

Moderate walking won't do it. You need to be fairly out of breath and sweating a bit, for about 10-20 minutes continuously. Leisurely strolling up a hill is better than nothing, but not doing much for your heart. The golden rule is that if you can carry on a conversation, you're not working hard enough.

Several years ago, I lived closer to the mountain, and I would do winds sprints, 20 to 30, up and down a fairly long section of the steeper inclines.

But then, I moved away from that more hilly terrain, and I miss that great free gym of mine.

 

These days, I am thinking I might need to build my own hill of sand in my back garden.

I would need only a few truckloads of sand, and then I would be good to go.

How much might a 100 tons of sand cost in Chiang Mai? (Delivery Costs?)

 

Here is what I am talking about, and this is about the most effective exercise I know:

 

 

One thing though:

I now have the "Front Yard" for this.

All I need is a few truckloads of sand.

 

And, no need to cut the glass!

 

What do you guys think?

 

Would this be a good money-maker for me, on the side?

I could charge the locals for the privilege of climbing my neighborhood hill of sand.

 

 

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Old people, with poor balance, + steep, uneven steps = crippled old people. Plus, the heat. He should walk on flat terrain in cool weather, have a little sit, and then walk back.

 

Promise me you'll never become a physical trainer.

 

It's about choices. I pluck half the crunchy noodles off the top of the Khao Soi. Two desserts, two decent cocktails a week.

 

At the roof top bar near me, they have a plausible Mango and Sticky Rice Martini. So that would be a two for one for me. Prob have one on Sunday.

 

But not with a burger and fries. Post-70, I have to pick.

 

Sunset view of Doi Suthep. We go once a week

https://www.theakyra.com/chiang-mai/dining/akyra-manor-rise-bar/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=gmb-rise-chiang-mai

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20 hours ago, bignok said:

Just walk daily up hills. Muay Thai is overrated and kind of boring  after a few sessions.

The most important, is to do something, hill walking, stair climbing, muay thai, swimming, treadmill, rowing, lifting, what gets you going, makes you a champion compared to those who do nothing (else than complaining and those who always knows better) 

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