Exercise
Strength training is now recognized as essential for human health, and is a mandatory requirement in WHO guidelines. Beyond physical longevity, lifting weights triggers neurological growth and stabilizes emotions for sharper cognitive performance.
Fundamentals

Walking is the simplest way to lose fat and keep it off
Walking works for fat loss because most people can do it every day without pain or fear. It builds a…
Walking at the right time helps you reach 12 percent body fat
Most people try to lose fat with hard cardio, but low-intensity walking can work better when you do it at…
Ultra-processed foods linked to weaker muscles and higher fat in thighs
A UCSF study finds eating ultra-processed foods adds fat to thigh muscles, making them weaker and raising arthritis risk, even if you exercise.
Walking like the most active people could add 5 to 11 years to life
A new study finds that matching the activity level of the top 25% of Americans could add 5 years to life expectancy, and up to 11 years for the inactive.
An hour of exercise may add five or more hours to life, and also improves focus and mood
Regular physical activity is one of the most reliable habits linked with longer life. Large population studies report that even…
Exercise strengthens your immune system by improving blood flow
A study published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports highlights that moderate physical activity, such as…
Lifting weights boosts brain function
Contrary to the stereotype of weightlifting being associated with brute strength, research shows that regular weight training can improve…
Physical activity reduces the risk of developing depression
A meta-analysis of 49 studies involving over 266,000 participants found that higher levels of physical activity significantly reduce the risk…
Lifting weights regularly may improve focus, mood, and even your earning potential
Weightlifting is linked to increased longevity through muscle preservation, better metabolic health, and reduced chronic disease risks. Lifting heavy weights…
Optimizations
Regular exercise cuts anxiety and depression drug use, Norwegian data show
A large Norwegian cohort study following more than 32 000 adults for eight years found that people with better cardiorespiratory…
A 2min walk after eating helps prevent blood sugar spikes
Taking just a couple of minutes to stroll after a meal can noticeably soften the rise and fall of blood…
Smart strength training after 50 keeps muscles strong and minds sharp
Building and preserving muscle is far more than a cosmetic pursuit. Muscle tissue is now recognized as a direct marker…
Sleep is when your muscles actually repair after a workout
The relationship between sleep and recovery from exercise-induced muscle injuries, with a focus on athletes and military personnel. Insufficient sleep…
Five familiar habits can add a decade of disease-free life after 50
Sticking with five well-known behaviors, eating a plant-rich diet, exercising regularly, keeping weight in the healthy range, limiting alcohol and…
Why older people gain weight as fat and muscle change
Aging can make fat gain easier because fat turnover slows, muscle falls, and daily energy use declines. That helps explain later-life weight gain, but no single mechanism explains it all.
Emerging
A training method that stretches muscles under load may double muscle growth
Lengthened supersets are an effective workout strategy that combines exercises targeting the lengthened (stretched) phase of muscle movement. This approach…
Every-minute-on-the-minute training keeps rest short and muscle growth high
EMOM (Every Minute on the Minute) workouts involve completing a set of exercises every minute, using the remaining time for…
videoYoung adults today are less physically active and sicker than previous generations
This speech, delivered by a passionate advocate, calls for urgent action against the societal tsunami of physical inactivity and sedentary…
Resting 2-3 minutes between sets maximises muscle growth, while 3-5 minutes gives the best strength gains
Lifting weights keeps muscle tissue strong, bones dense and joints stable, which maintains mobility and lowers the risk of falls…
Vigorous exercise may briefly harm muscle cells, a study finds
A new study on vigorous exercise suggests that exhaustive workouts may temporarily harm mitochondria by increasing oxidative stress in elite athletes.
A pill that mimics some effects of exercise is being tested in mice
A molecule called SLU-PP-332 boosted the metabolism and helped muscle gain and weight loss in mice – though it will…