You’re already building real strength — the kind that lets you carry groceries, stand tall in the shower, walk farther without fatigue. That matters. A lot.
And yet you’ve probably seen it, or felt it yourself: someone who looks strong, lifts well, moves with control… and still has a stumble, a near-trip, a moment where the body didn’t catch them in time.
Last month, one of our members, Linda, 74, looked at me after a session and asked the question I hear more than any other:
“I’m stronger than I’ve been in years. So why do I still fall sometimes?”
Linda had built impressive slow strength — she could hold a wall push-up for 30 seconds, carry a laundry basket up stairs without stopping. But when her cat darted across her path one evening, her foot caught the edge of the rug. She stumbled, grabbed the counter, heart pounding. “I thought strength was supposed to protect me,” she said.
Strength is power at a comfortable pace. Power is strength delivered quickly — the explosive burst that catches you when the rug moves, the step that recovers balance when you misjudge a curb, the hand that grabs the railing before you tip.
Research keeps showing the same thing: In older adults, power (rapid force production) is one of the strongest predictors of who stays independent, who avoids falls, who lives longer with quality of life. Slow strength keeps you stable when everything is calm. Power keeps you stable when life isn’t.
When we only train slow, controlled movements, we get very good at slow, controlled movements… and then real life throws something fast. The nervous system hasn’t been asked to fire rapidly in years. The fast-twitch fibers that create quick corrections go quiet. And the body — even a strong one — reacts with the only speed it remembers: slow.
You’ve been giving your body both. The slow, steady strength that builds confidence every day… and the gentle, intentional quickness that wakes up reflexes so the next surprise doesn’t have to become a fall.
This week, try this safe 30-second “wake-up” in a spot where you feel secure (hold a counter if you like):
Stand tall. Then do 5 quick (but controlled) sit-to-stands — up fast, down controlled. Notice how your legs and hips fire more sharply than when you move slowly. That quick “on” switch is power waking up. It’s the part of strength that catches you when life speeds up.
You’re not just getting stronger — you’re getting ready.