Karen Bridges had a moment of clarity that a lot of people over 50 will recognize.
She was having trouble doing ordinary daily things, like working in the garden. Her balance was faltering. Her desk job kept her sedentary all day, and earlier years of being active “off and on” ended with the pandemic.
“I hit a wall of reality,” the 65-year-old says. “I realized that if I didn’t change anything in my life, then nothing would change.”
That mindset shift made all the difference. She found the right gym and hasn’t looked back.
Self-Limiting Beliefs
Here’s something that might surprise you. The biggest barrier to getting fit and staying fit usually isn’t the body. It’s the brain.
Self-limiting beliefs are everywhere.
- It’s too late.
- I was never athletic.
- I can’t stick with anything.
These thoughts feel like facts, but they’re not. They’re just habits of mind that can be changed.
Research consistently shows that people who believe they can improve their health actually do. The mindset comes first. The results follow.
This is how behavior change occurs, not with willpower and guilt-tripping when you stumble.
After 50, you’ve already proven you can do hard things. You’ve navigated careers, raised families, weathered losses, solved problems you couldn’t have anticipated. The trick is applying those lessons here.
Some of the most effective mental shifts include:
- Learning to align your actions with your identity (“I am someone who takes care of my health”)
- Practicing patience with the process instead of demanding instant perfection
- Treating rest and recovery as part of the work, not an escape from it.
And then there’s the move Karen made: go on autopilot.
Just Put on Your Shoes
In the beginning, when Karen didn’t feel like going to the gym, she stopped negotiating with herself. “I forced myself to be on autopilot,” she says. “I had to stop thinking and put on my shoes and get my rear end in the car.”
That was it. The trick worked.
After several months of that, something shifted. The autopilot became intrinsic motivation. It does for countless mature adults who quickly notice they’re getting stronger, improving balance, and posting better cholesterol numbers.
Karen liked that part right away.
“Reaping the benefits reinforces my mindset,” she says. “It builds upon itself.”
A couple of years into this new mindset, Karen is training at the gym two to three times a week, doing yoga and walking regularly, and moving through her garden and her hikes with confidence.
“I want to do things,” she says. “I want to feel better. I want to enjoy life and experiences in the years to come.”
Call us today and let’s get you adopting the right mindset, too.
Holly Kouvo is a personal trainer, functional aging specialist, senior fitness specialist, brain health trainer, writer, and speaker.
