Mar 31, 2026
How old would your body be if you didn’t know your chronological
age?
In this episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher kick off a new
series on aging by unpacking what it actually means to get older.
They explore the gap between chronological age and biological age,
what aging really looks like in the body, and why strength,
independence, and daily function matter far more than the date on
your birth certificate. Tune in to rethink aging and learn how to
stay stronger, longer.
- Amy and Dr. Fisher explain how to measure your real age beyond
the number on your birth certificate. Most people default to
chronological age, but that doesn’t reflect how your body actually
feels or performs.
- Dr. Fisher covers the difference between chronological age and
biological age. You can be in your late 40s but function like
someone in their 30s if your habits support it. The gap between the
two is where lifestyle becomes everything.
- Why how old you feel might matter more than how old you are.
Your internal sense of age shapes how you move, train, and live.
That perception alone can either limit you or keep you active and
capable.
- Dr. Fisher explains why aging changes your willingness to take
physical risks. In your younger years, you move without hesitation
because injury isn’t top of mind. As you age, awareness increases,
and that can quietly reduce how much you challenge your body.
- How personal training builds a body that resists decline over
time. Amy and Dr. Fisher agree that consistent, progressive
training delays weakness and preserves independence. If it’s done
right, it keeps you closer to your physical prime for decades.
- How to slow biological aging even when chronological aging is
unavoidable. You can’t stop time, but you can influence how your
body responds to it. Training, movement, and daily habits determine
whether you age with strength or decline.
- Why weakness and frailty are the real signs of aging. For Amy,
aging shows up in loss of strength, independence, and energy.
Staying capable and self-sufficient is what truly defines
youth.
- How to stay physically independent for as long as possible.
According to Dr. Fisher, the goal isn’t just to live longer, it’s
to function well until the very end. This means building a body
that still allows you to move, explore, and live freely.
- Amy reveals the real goal most people have about aging. People
don’t just want more years, they want better years. The goal is
staying sharp, strong, and capable right up until the final
stretch.
- How personal training can extend your physical and mental peak
years. Structured guidance helps you maintain strength, mobility,
and confidence as you age. The right approach keeps you performing
at a higher level for longer.
- Why working with a personal trainer changes how you experience
aging. A good personal coach pushes you safely while adapting to
your current ability. This balance helps you avoid both injury and
unnecessary decline.
Mentioned in This Episode:
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