Integrating Strength Training and Yoga into Your Wellness Routine Podcast Por  arte de portada

Integrating Strength Training and Yoga into Your Wellness Routine

Integrating Strength Training and Yoga into Your Wellness Routine

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Heather shares strategies for integrating weightlifting and yoga into a balanced weekly schedule without feeling overwhelmed. She provides specific examples of alternating days between weight training and various types of yoga to maximize efficiency and recovery. Heather also emphasizes the importance of rest days and offers insights on how to integrate both practices throughout the day. The video is designed to help those in midlife build strong, healthy bodies that can carry them well into old age. 00:00 Introduction: Balancing Fitness and Yoga00:47 Identifying Your Fitness Profile01:23 Creating a Balanced Weekly Schedule02:33 Exploring Different Yoga Styles04:35 Combining Yoga and Weightlifting05:22 Personal Tips and Strategies06:38 Conclusion and Final Thoughts https://youtu.be/Dj1MSGROtTg?si=cs4fMv4m86e6tV2K There’s a very specific kind of question that tends to show up in midlife. It doesn’t usually sound dramatic. It’s not urgent. It’s quieter than that. It sounds more like this: “I know I need to be lifting weights… but I love yoga.”Or, “I’ve been doing yoga for years, but I keep hearing I should be strength training.”Or sometimes simply, “How am I supposed to fit all of this in without feeling like my entire life revolves around working out?” And I understand that question deeply, because I’ve been every version of that woman. There was a time when my training was almost entirely strength-based. I was lifting four, sometimes five, days a week, focused on performance, progress, and pushing. Yoga was something I would occasionally add in when I felt tight or needed to stretch. And then there were seasons when yoga became the anchor. It was grounding. It kept me mobile. It kept me sane. But eventually, I had to be honest with myself; mobility alone wasn’t enough to protect my muscle mass or bone density as I moved through my 40s and beyond. At some point, if you care about longevity, you realize this isn’t an either/or conversation. It’s a both/and. The real question becomes how to combine them intelligently. The First Thing We Have to Do Is Get Organized Most overtraining doesn’t happen because someone is “too motivated.” It happens because there is no structure. We react to how we feel that day. We add a class because it sounds good. We lift because we feel guilty for missing a workout earlier in the week. We say yes to a hot yoga session on what was supposed to be a recovery day. And suddenly we’re exhausted and wondering why our joints ache. The solution is far less exciting than people expect. You look at your week. You decide — ahead of time — which days are strength days and which days are yoga days. If you’re lifting three days per week — say Monday, Wednesday, and Friday — that’s your strength foundation. Those sessions are about building. Not burning. Building. That distinction matters more than most people realize. Strength training, done properly, is about creating capacity in your body. It’s about teaching your muscles and bones to handle load. It’s one of the most important investments you can make for your future self. Then you look at the other days. That’s where yoga lives. Maybe Tuesday and Thursday are your practice days. Maybe Saturday becomes a longer mobility session. Maybe Sunday is true rest. But the decision is made calmly, not emotionally. That alone prevents most overtraining. Not All Yoga Is the Same This is where nuance comes in, and nuance is something we don’t talk about enough in the fitness world. There is a profound difference between a heated power yoga class that leaves you drenched and shaking… and a slow, restorative practice where you hold a pose for ten minutes and allow your nervous system to settle. If you are strength training with intention — challenging loads, progressive overload, real muscular effort — and then you stack intense yoga sessions on top of that, you are not recovering. You are layering stress on stress. Midlife bodies are incredibly resilient. But they are also honest. If you push without allowing adaptation, they will tell you. The version of yoga you choose should support your training, not compete with it. Sometimes yoga is the challenge. Sometimes yoga is the repair. Knowing the difference is maturity. Can You Do Both in One Day? Yes. But timing matters. When I lift, I prefer to lift first. I want my nervous system focused. I want my energy directed toward building strength. Afterward, when my body is warm and my spine is open, I might spend time working on a pose I’m building toward. Something technical. Something that requires mobility and control. If I’m taking a full yoga class, I usually separate it from my lift by several hours. That space allows your body to shift gears. We are not twenty-five anymore. Recovery is not optional. It’s part of the process. And if longevity is the goal — not just aesthetics — then your programming has to reflect that. ...
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