http://big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/FBLOGO_0.png With summer just around the corner, most of us are panicking at the thought of donning our swimsuits in our post-winter-excess bodies. But not Charles Eugster. At 95, he's the world's fastest 200-meter indoor sprinter in the 95 and up category, and he says age is just something that propels him forward.
And the proof is in his record-breaking sprint, which he ran in just over 55 seconds, smashing the previous world record. Eugster sat down with HuffPost Live this week to share how he stays fit at his age.
"I like to think one can have a beach body at 90," Eugster told HuffPost Live. "I want to turn heads of the sexy 70-year-old girls on the beach." Nice.
He's somewhat of a fitness addict and used to be a rower before he took up running, saying he found it difficult to find rowing partners around his age. Though his racing creds are impressive, Eugster humbly insists he's got much room for improvement.
"I'm not a runner," Eugster told HuffPost Live. "I've just started running less than a year ago." He said he ran his first race with just two weeks of training which he joked was "very poor."
When asked why he started running in his 90s, his answer was simple. "I want to change the world. Our perception of age is completely faulty ... you can start something new at any age."
Eugster said we should only train our bodies harder as we get older.
Besides Eugster, we've recently been inspired by the endeavors of other post 50s as well. Just last week a 54-year-old Texas man set a world record for the most pull-ups in a 24-hour period. And just a few days ago, a great-grandma celebrated her 100th birthday by going skydiving and made plans to go scuba-diving with sharks this week.
There goes every excuse you had not to work out today.
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from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/healthy-living/
And the proof is in his record-breaking sprint, which he ran in just over 55 seconds, smashing the previous world record. Eugster sat down with HuffPost Live this week to share how he stays fit at his age.
"I like to think one can have a beach body at 90," Eugster told HuffPost Live. "I want to turn heads of the sexy 70-year-old girls on the beach." Nice.
He's somewhat of a fitness addict and used to be a rower before he took up running, saying he found it difficult to find rowing partners around his age. Though his racing creds are impressive, Eugster humbly insists he's got much room for improvement.
"I'm not a runner," Eugster told HuffPost Live. "I've just started running less than a year ago." He said he ran his first race with just two weeks of training which he joked was "very poor."
When asked why he started running in his 90s, his answer was simple. "I want to change the world. Our perception of age is completely faulty ... you can start something new at any age."
Eugster said we should only train our bodies harder as we get older.
Besides Eugster, we've recently been inspired by the endeavors of other post 50s as well. Just last week a 54-year-old Texas man set a world record for the most pull-ups in a 24-hour period. And just a few days ago, a great-grandma celebrated her 100th birthday by going skydiving and made plans to go scuba-diving with sharks this week.
There goes every excuse you had not to work out today.
Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter |
from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/healthy-living/
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