Getting old-how you...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Getting old-how you coping with the aches, pains & injurys?

109 Posts
77 Users
0 Reactions
397 Views
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

And before we start don't even post here if you're younger than 50, forty something is not old you're still a child.
From about fifty onward it starts getting difficult to recover from stuff, falls, tendon rips things like that.

As documented elsewhere I'm struggling with a bloody frozen shoulder which now seems to have migrated to my other forearm for no particular reason, trails are drying out, went for my first half decent ride today and it's bloody painful.

So I'm interested in swapping stories with the other old codgers on here that are soldiering on through the pain.

Not looking for sympathy, more for hints and tips, team ibuprofen stuff.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 6:59 pm
 ton
Posts: 24124
Full Member
 

i am 49, but after 5 years on heart meds and heart surgery last august, i feel old enough to comment.
i just seem to take over getting over stuff now. picked up a sore throat last weekend, turned into tonsillitis. take until today to clear up.
last december i ended up with pneumonia, laid me low for a month.
and i seem to feel pain more and am able to manage it less.

ordered a homeopathy book this week..... 😳


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:07 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

Is it full of blank pages that have the memory of words?


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

55, currently with a neck injury and 8 months into trying to fix a frozen shoulder here 🙂

Oh, and my knees have gone too


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Im 45. Is it really going to get worse?! 😯

Just bought a road bike. I know that it will be my future...


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Turned 50 las March.
Until that day I played league hockey, volleyball, cycled and seemingly was indestructible.
Since then I have had an achillese tear, 2 lots of abdomnal surgery, developed back ache, started to need specs, and slowed down by 40%.
I now only ride and am supported in this by industrial quantities of brufen.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:19 pm
Posts: 13356
Free Member
 

I can truthfully say 'I'm 60 next year' & it doesn't get any better for me, I had flu (like proper flu) at new year & I've now got a right good snotty head cold. My teeth are fubared, my eyes don't work properly, my knees are knackered, I've got tinnitus, my MOJO's emigrated so I haven't ridden a bike for about 3 months & I have the shape of Mr Blobby only I've got more facial spots. (WTF is that all about?) If I lived on my own & didn't have 2 sons to think about I'd consider self euthanasia.
Plus, after 2 weeks in Goa we come home to find the dog has died & I'm back at bastid work on Monday afternoon.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:20 pm
Posts: 10761
Full Member
 

49... Sciatic pain in my right leg, bursitis in my left hip, lower spine hasn't bent for years, right shoulder is always on the edge of tendon pain, left upper arm has never really recovered from decompression illness years ago, and my right hand won't form a fist because of soft tissue damage after a bike crash in Dec 2011... And you're telling me it gets worse next year?


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

In a word .. badly


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:28 pm
Posts: 4675
Full Member
 

53 this year.
I don't run now, which I miss, but cycling is ok. I think you just have to slow down a bit, and accept you'll feel more tried. if I cycle to work every day (20 mile round trip) I fall asleep on the sofa.
Only other thing is the skin on my hands is peeling off, started this week. What's that about?


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:29 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

53....cocodamol is your friend.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:30 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Cocodamol is your friend.

Especially with a Tramadol chaser at bedtime


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:32 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Stop! FFS! You're supposed to be cheering me up, telling me if you do this it'll do that..

Keep using it or you'll lose it, try this remedy, stuff like that.

Yes it gets worse, but there are (I'm told) work arounds, the pains come and go, someone is trying to get me to do pilates, can't bring myself to last time I went with a mate, we letched the younger women as you do, got the giggles and had to leave.

I ride a bike to save the knees, i can no longer pound the pavements as I once did, I stick to offroad as it's lower impact imv than road, (my road bike I've used twice a stupidly expensive carbon thing I swapped for some kites).

The Frozen shoulder I've persevered with the Bowen thing and it is working a bit, got a bit more movement in the bad side, but it has migrated as someone on here said it might to a kind of golfing elbow thing, I've taken to sleeping with deep heat at night and the smell which i hate also clears my head from the man cold that seems to have returned since xmas when I thought it had gone away.

Edit: EselG sorry to hear about the dog, it's horrible when you lose them.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:39 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

49, and im a catalogue of physical problems that tend to keep me off the bike for at least half of the year, we plod on but I Love to moan and tell everyone who'll listen how im a martyr to all my many aches and pains 😆


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 7:53 pm
Posts: 90
Free Member
 

Never mind the physical aches and pains, what about the altered interpersonal interactions?

That moment when you catch the eye of a younger women, only to see pity there (with a hint of disgust)... And you realise that you have become the very wrinkly old git chasing his lost youth that, as a young man, you so dispised...

With regard to diminishing physical abilities, I find the 'anything is better than nothing' approach helps. Oh, and above all else, never give up!


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:10 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
 

A mere youngster at mid 40s, but I now see a physio for massage whenever I pull anything. I never used to bother, but it does really seem to make a difference in speeding up recovery / reducing pain.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:14 pm
Posts: 13164
Full Member
 

25 miles on road commuting 4 times a week and it would appear Rule 5 is aimed at us 50 plus blokes. Lower back pain after a longer day is my constant friend. Nothing as bad as the sciatica I had in my 40's so I ignore it. Occasional use of anti inflammatory drugs or off the cycling for a short break if necessary. Stretches are your friend.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:22 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

but I now see a physio for massage whenever I pull anything
I see a "physio" for massage...normally when I don't pull anything.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:23 pm
Posts: 3899
Free Member
 

Don't get me started on my feet...


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:24 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

I see a "physio" for massage...normally when I don't pull anything.

You probably pay extra for that.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:26 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Physios do massage? Pfft - nae luck to those physios.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:29 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

🙂


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:32 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Nearer 60 than 50 here. The current pain in my left heel, right ankle, right middle finger and right shoulder mean I'm not feeling the pain in my left knee so much! After cycling about 8 miles this morning then a walk of only just over 3 miles, I now can hardly even get out of my chair 🙁 Getting old sucks!


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 8:46 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:07 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Steelfreak - Member
Never mind the physical aches and pains, what about the altered interpersonal interactions?

That moment when you catch the eye of a younger women, only to see pity there (with a hint of disgust)... And you realise that you have become the very wrinkly old git chasing his lost youth that, as a young man, you so dispised...

With regard to diminishing physical abilities, I find the 'anything is better than nothing' approach helps. Oh, and above all else, never give up!

This is me. My morning ride.. she comes bounding down the road, vaults the style, lythe, gorgeous married to one of the officers, but would that have ever worried me, she's nice enough, but there's no coyness, just friendly to an old man on his bike and his peculiar dog...


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:11 pm
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

51, and just when I was getting to the fittest I'd been in years, was playing tennis in the summer and got the old plantar fasciitis. Refused to stop rugby/football/tennis and now I can't do any of them as the pain in my foot won't go away. Luckily, I can still cycle without issue, but it feels like I'm done with the rest of it forever. It's miserable. Really miserable.

I suppose the thing to remember is - if you do feel an injury coming on, stop, don't stress it and give it a chance to recover.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:11 pm
Posts: 1
Free Member
 

58 in May, I've been on blood pressure tablets for quite a few years and had 7 weeks of radiotherapy and a bit of chemotherapy for cancer in my throat a couple of years ago. I managed to do 20000 meters of climbing in last months Strava climbing challenge, it's surprising what you can do if you MTFU. 😉


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:14 pm
Posts: 130
Free Member
 

Jeez,what a bunch of creaky gates!
I'm 53 & until I read all this I was feeling alright.
I got back into cycling in my mid thirties after damaging my knee circuit training,it just aches a bit these days but,touch wood nothing bad.
I had proper flu from late November until mid January & anything that I had damaged in the past started aching.Kept off the bike for 5 or 6 weeks,had a couple of good days around Rivi today & last Sunday & the only ache I have is my dodgy knee,here's hoping it stays that way!


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

37 too young for this thread? 😆


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:15 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

61 this year - am I winning?
I have a few issues - often think of the sketches Les Dawson used to do as 2 old ladies exchanging their medical conditions - but they don't stop me from being fit & active.

I play hard games of Squash about 3 times a week - often against those 1/3 of my age - & get out on the bike about twice. Once today on the road bike for about an hour and a regular Sunday morning off road for about 2-3 hours in the mud fest we call Hertfordshire.

I've managed to keep reasonably slim & still have my hair - so not all bad........


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:15 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

seosamh77 - Member
37 too young for this thread?

You're an embryo bugger off.. come back in 30 years 😉


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:19 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

On a serious note...when your body says enough's enough to the strenuous stuff you can always learn a new skill based activity.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:20 pm
Posts: 13164
Full Member
 

John hair on the head top counts. Unruly eyebrows, ear and nostril hair doesn't 😀


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:22 pm
Posts: 79
Free Member
 

68 in April. Injured back 28yrs ago with ups and downs ever since. Regular physio visits during last 5 yrs to keep supple. Both knees operated on for cartilege tears. Slight arthritis pain now 🙁

Almost 50yrs walking/climbing/biking in the mountains so not too bad (and I have my hair too!)


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:36 pm
Posts: 4599
Free Member
 

Cheer up it's not that bad . In 2007/8 I found out I had 2 crushed vertebrae and was diagnosed with Osteoporosis , specialist told me to NEVER ride off road again . Too much jarring for my back ( ironically suggested taking up running especially on hard surfaces to load my bones ???? ) Got a 2nd opinion from my GP who also MTBs , carry on as I was just be aware of limitations . Since then I've took the money and run from Royal Mail , did a season in Whistler,rode Moab,Sedona,Crested Butte and Slovenia to name a few . Follow up bone density scan revealed a 10% improvement overall in density and a 27% improvement in my spine ???? They consider 4% improvement significant apparently ! I'm 60 in November and am due another scan , be interesting to see the results . Still riding on average 100 miles a week a mix of off and on road , not bad ?


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:37 pm
Posts: 10315
Full Member
 

That moment when you catch the eye of a younger women,but..

Yep, but the pool of women who are younger than you gets larger every year - brilliant


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 9:44 pm
Posts: 17779
Full Member
 

I'm 61 and was starting to whinge about aches and pains but having read the above I'm feeling quite chipper now.

My knees hurt at the moment and I think it's because last year I virtually stopped all hill walking in favour of mountain biking which is comparatively low impact and over the winter I've started walking again and done very little biking. I damaged ligaments in both knees years ago skiing, recovered by building up muscle to compensate for dodgy ligaments, but muscle is probably in decline at my age so knees are getting wobbly again.

Also persistent pain in my elbow as though I've bashed it. Which I haven't.

So, a bit slower and creakier than I was 10 years ago but not bad for an old un.


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 10:02 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm only 40 but I was a hardcore substance abuser in a former life so I have the body of a 70 year old (feels like)

I had a frozen shoulder this time last year which took a whole summer of hot sun to thaw it out, it got better about october last year but as soon as it got cold just after chrimbo, I did some throwing sticks for the pooch and the shoulder misery was back with a vengeance..

a month later and now seriously lacking sleep and unable to turn my head i hit the ibuprofen and paracetamol combo hard to no avail, got some expert massages from a beautiful woman.. nothing..
I could not shift it..

As a last resort I sauntered casually down to visit a local backstreet witchdoctor who gave me a bag of valium... hey presto! Am cured

just now have a niggling fear that those valium may prove a little too moreish for my willpower


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 10:14 pm
Posts: 658
Full Member
 

I'm 59 today 😀 Mrs Fruitbat was 57 in January. We both cycle off-road at least once a week. I play badminton twice a week. Mrs Fruitbat does a Pilates class once a week.
We both feel younger than our friends who are in their forties! 😀


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 10:15 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Some of that is more encouraging.. valium? For a frozen shoulder? How does that figure, what does valium do, I thought it was a mental thing, so is stress part of this? Someone else suggested it might be a contributory factor, I've had a fair amount of it the last couple of years. It's pretty damned debilitating, buttering some of the other stuff up there I guess I've been pretty lucky.

I've had a good run of it, other than a nasty prang kitesurfing a few years back which knocked out my heelside perception snowboarding, presumably as a result of concussion or the six or seven minutes oxygen starvation as I was out of it having swallowed my tongue and it took a while to get my act back together, but since then I'd been ok until the dreaded cricket match.

I'm 67 so sport wise I am a bit on borrowed time, but have always been a firm believer in use it or lose it which has worked so far and biking offroad is low impact, well unless you have a silly shunt, which touch wood I've escaped to date.

This has been bloody interesting to read, sometimes it's a bit of a lonely world facing age on your jack jones doing this stuff often having to be in the company of much younger guys n girls, so thanks all for posting, I'm off to google valium...


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 11:04 pm
Posts: 130
Free Member
 

+1 For the use it or lose it attitude.I also think,& my friends of a similar age agree that we have gone from taking risks,having crashes etc to riding more within our limits & trying to preserve what we've still got.
One thing which has surprised me is that in my forties I thought that by the time I got to my early fifties I would be to old for MTB'ing but thank god I got that wrong! We also know someone in his seventies who regularly mountainbikes,although at the moment he's out in the alps (again) for 3 months living out of his van & skiing!Legend & inspiration!


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 11:40 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

52 this year and had Psoratic Arthritis for last 4 years so on loads of meds (sulfalazine/methotrexate/nefopam for pain) took about 18 months for the docs to get the meds right and as a result had to retire due to ill health. But now working again in a new role and commute daily on my bike and do lightweight rides as off road beats me up. Play golf every weekend even though it kills the hips to do it.

For me life is on the up only downside is meds will finish me off most probably but nowt to moan about.

And do yourselves a favour avoid Tramadol its evil took me 6 months to get off the crap ended up cold turkey locked in the spare room. (think french connection 2) 😉


 
Posted : 07/02/2015 11:41 pm
Posts: 17187
Full Member
 

49th birthday yesterday. Was fit as a fiddle and riding loads. Asked doc an off the cuff question and ended up diagnosed with prostate cancer, surgery 10 weeks ago today - radical prostatectomy (removal). Been out on cx bike for a few 25 mile road rides last 2 weeks and back to a 3k sat am swim, so getting there ....


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 12:21 am
Posts: 2310
Full Member
 

Well, this is all very encouraging. Iainc - what kind of " off the cuff question"?


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 1:21 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Finally a thread I can contribute to!
Will be 53 in March. All the usual issues mentioned above as my body starts to run down - need glasses for just about anything now whereas I was always the one with exceptional eyesight, can't hear what people are saying if there's the slightest background noise, have to get up and pee three times a night, tiredness overwhelms me most afternoons and I need a nap, taking months to recover fully from colds - just colds, not anything really serious for pete's sake! Worst was a slipped disc 18 months ago that had me limping around and bent over like a proper comedy old man stereotype for about six months - that [u]really[/u] made me feel old.
But on a more positive side, here's my recipie for beating the slow and inevitable decline of age:-
1. Physically 'use it or lose it' really is the mantra, but be realistic, you need to slow down a bit as injuries will take a lot longer to recover from, and you may never get back the pre-injury level of fitness.
2. Slow down a bit career wise. We can't all retire early (and I'm not sure I'd want to) but if you haven't made it to the rarefied ranks of top management by now, sorry to tell you this but you're unlikely to ever. So, take it easy, laugh off the office politics, try and go part time or move to a less stressful job, and spend more time on the things you enjoy.
3. Surround yourself with people younger than you - no, not cynical 40 year olds, but really young and enthusiastic people. I have a ten y/o daughter, and her energy and enthusiasm for everything is just infectious. I also went back to Uni five years ago and made a lot of 20 somethings friends, and their passion (and yes naivety) about everything couldn't help but rub off on me.
4. Learn something new - keep challenging the brain - rediscover that delight in gaining knowledge. As above, I enrolled back at Uni at the age of 45 on a totally new (to me) subject and got an MSc. But more important, unencumbered with the need to drink myself to oblivion and/or shag everything that moved like when I first went there in my twenties, the experience was really fulfilling.
5. If all the above sounds like too much trouble - then just start taking Testosterone supplements! I'm only half joking - why should hormone replacement therapy only be for menopausal women? There's growing evidence that the sharp decline in Testosterone levels in the late forties and fifties has a lot to do with the overall decline of the body and mind - not just sex. Most doctors will dismiss this as 'natural', but when we chemically/surgically enhance so many other areas of our life these days, why shouldn't we get a bit of help hanging onto our youthful energy?


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 4:10 am
 hora
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Visit a Osteopath or Chiropractor. Seriously.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 4:41 am
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

Come to work for me with for a few days. You aches and pains will soon be put into perspective.

Me, although I'm not 50, 25 years in the NHS has had some toll on me mainly my shoulders. Cocodamol is my friend, ibuprofen is a horrible drug effective but horrible.

Still the aches I have now are nothing compared to the bone tumour I had in my late teens. That stung a bit.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 5:56 am
Posts: 342
Free Member
 

Wow, i'm 39 this year and though coping with exercise induced heart palpitations was bad. Makes me realise it can get plenty worse and i guess that is the message: plenty people in worse positions (though always worth trying to get sympathy off the wife)


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 6:29 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

@ perthmtb, I like your style 😀

52 this March for me and apart from the falling testosterone levels, I'm feeling in pretty good nick. I have a physical job, so am always moving and active and despite many years from my mid-20's to mid-40's with lower and upper back issues, I've had only very minor twinges for the last 5+ years or so. Invest in a very good mattress! A grand felt like a stupid amount to spend on one, but a few years ago we did and I don't seem to creak getting outta bed in the morning as much as I used to! The other is a fit-ball and keeping the core working, although I could do more.

Every single day I give thanks for two working arms, legs, eyes, ears etc. there are many folks both older and younger who are not as fortunate and gratitude goes hand in hand with attitude for me.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 6:48 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Early 40's so not officially allowed to comment but I'm in pain pretty much constantly

Frozen shoulder for months, often get a stiff and painful neck that leaves me in agony for days, legs ache, hips give me gip, knees are knackered, my eyes are old and bent...

I did some grouting of the bathroom floor on Thursday evening. It's a small bathroom, but all day Friday and Saturday I can hardly walk, and I'm not exaggerating. I had to hold on to the sink to lower myself onto the loo. I've been like this since my 30's


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 6:57 am
Posts: 17834
 

Have been taking glucosamine for over 20 years so that means I don't make those awful sounds when getting up from a chair! Had been in good shape, the best for years, then it all came crashing down when I was spending 18 hours a day sleeping and going up the stairs wiped me out. 🙁

Now have two permanent health conditions one of which is osteoporosis although I haven't stopped riding, or rather pootling.

Getting very frustrated with sexist and ageist attitudes from people who should know better and I just won't tolerate it.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 7:10 am
Posts: 13164
Full Member
 

@perthmtb if you haven't had one request a PSA test from your GP. 3 times a night is a bit much. (For an accurate PSA result no sex or riding the bike for 48 hours before the blood is drawn).


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 7:16 am
 hora
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Jools182 I had cartledge(?) that used to pop out of my shoulder/always stiff and hip pain. Went to see a 'body worker' and he said the muscle in my ass/round hip was too tight etc etc. After just 3 visits I felt brand new.

We spend so any hours hunched, crouched and tense on a bike no wonder we are stiff/tight etc.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 7:30 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Hora - was it a normal physio that you went to see?

Do you have their details?

If there is some way of getting relief it has to be worth a try


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 7:41 am
Posts: 10980
Free Member
 

I've suffered far fewer injuries since I went over to road cycling; one of the aspects of road riding is that fact that you are in the saddle for much longer periods of time so you've got to get the bike set up right. I ride a Roubaix SL4, which is utterly satisfying to ride yet super-comfortable and at the moment at almost 59 I'm injury-free. Touch wood....

(As a side benefit I'm FAR fitter than I ever was in 24 years of mountain biking.)


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 7:52 am
Posts: 17187
Full Member
 

@neil & perth - my off the cuff question was about getting up to the loo during the night. Worth a check, certainly in my case.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 8:08 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

@ sandwich & iainc - I get the 'finger' about every 18 months these days just as a precaution, but you're right I'm about due for another one so maybe I'll request the GP does a PSA this time. Thanks for your concern and the suggestion.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 8:40 am
Posts: 126
Free Member
 

No problems at all yet! 55 this month.

Like slackalice I have a very physical job, whilst workmates have moved on thinking physical work beneath them I chose to continue with it.

I also ignore my age. Off in a moment to lead the clubs fast 100, none of the quick twenty year olds know I'm old.

Lucky so far I guess.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 8:40 am
Posts: 1
Free Member
 

46 next week and I've never felt fitter but I do know not to burn candle at both ends these days. In the last five years I've lost about 4 stone too so guess that helps.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 8:46 am
Posts: 405
Free Member
 

I have no answer for the aches and pains but please don't think your mountain biking has to end at 50, 60, 70 or even 80. I'm 63 in April and I ride twice a week with a 65 year old, 79 year old and an 80 year old. We regularly do the Dog and Monkey on Cannock Chase and we haven't found an off piste trail, on the Chase, we can't do. My average time for the Dog is usually around 44 minutes and for the Dog and Monkey just under two hours. Injuries the older we get take longer to heal but my advice is stick at it for as long as you can.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 8:58 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm only 28 but have the skeleton of a 60 year old so can I post in here?

I keep it (arthritis) at bay with some pretty nifty drugs - since I started on them my life has changed a lot. I am feeling pretty darn decent again, however I still cannot run, which is a small price to pay to be able to walk & bike properly again!


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 8:59 am
 hora
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Jools182-Osteopath.

I was thinking(and talking) in terms of not riding soon due to the discomfort. I thought my hip was wearing. The Osteopath quickly diagnosed and sorted it. He was a big bloke but even he had to use his whole body/weight and literally bounce (no jokes) on top of me- especially the shoulder. It hasn't been sore/popped out since.

The GP simply tried prescribing me painkillers previously.

Ive been to two female Physio and a Osteopath. Both had minimal impact as they weren't strong enough. That isn't sexist as a decade ago another female was ridicously strong by comparison. Painkillers are NOT a solution.

Some people refer to 'bodyworkers' (derogative term) as quacks. Spend even just one session then bin the 'old age pain' nonsence. Unless its cartledge or arthritis you should NOT be taking painkillers. Sort the cause not hide from it.

Sports professionals need a good work over on the table after sport (what's 4hours in the saddle?) And sports stars are young and fit. So why don't we need them?


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 9:04 am
Posts: 915
Full Member
 

'i'll be 54 in March you know'
sat here writing this ,Mrs g out on the road with her mate but she is only 40 something,my ankle and knee hurting from mtb yesterday,already heavy bike picked up approx.30 Kg of mud. I will get off to gp soon. Overall fairly happy with physical state. there are many youngsters in a much worse state than any on here so just carry on and enjoy


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 9:16 am
 hora
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

2yrs ago I flipped OTB and landed face first into soft grass (phew) and suffered like crazy with numb hands, stiff neck, headaches etc etc. Painkillers could have helped but I decided on getting my neck etc pummelled. Sorted.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 9:18 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

51 here, never felt better, can't remember last time i was ill. Started going to the gym 3 mths ago and much to my surprise have lost 5% body fat and am now waiting for the call to do the photo shoot for the cover of Mens Health. I was doing some 20kg weighted pull ups the other day and a young fit woman said it was impressive. Couldn't get me hat on. [stops waving willy] 8)
Sorry guys, but some of us are going down fighting.

Shoulder problems are common because of the knock on from poor posture and musculature imbalances, i always do thoracic extensions before any exercise.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 9:32 am
Posts: 2874
Free Member
 

I turned 54 last month and after reading this thread I'm feeling pretty fortunate. No joint issues other than arthritis in a couple of finger joints, no long term injuries and just recovered OK from a badly sprained wrist after coming off my road bike. I wear glasses but have done since my mid 20s. All I can say is don't smoke, keep the fat off, alcohol in moderation and don't make age an excuse not to do something. Since I turned 50 I've cycled faster and further than I've ever done. Did one Marmotte when I was 50 and another the following year and I do numerous sportives each year. Mainly road ride these days but that's from choice. I still run and hillwalk. I will blame age for making me much less motivated to get out in bad weather, cold or mud (which probably explains less mountain biking). As above use it or lose it.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 9:36 am
Posts: 13164
Full Member
 

@perthmtb The finger is only the start. There's a description of the TRUS procedure in the Snip Snip thread if you're feeling brave. I have a family history of enlarged/dodgy prostates to rely on. My dad had a rebore in his mid-fifties, his dad had a prostatectomy and my mum's dad had problems too (not sure what they were as he was a private chap). At 52 the consultant says I'm young for the symptoms I display.
Pelvic MRI for me on Tuesday prior to another biopsy under general sometime in my future.

Brother in law asked why I didn't stop riding bikes which as a COPD sufferer who still smokes is a bit rich. Use it or lose it works for me.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 9:50 am
Posts: 10567
Full Member
 

I'm 61 and there are a few things I do to keep me going.

First, if you got this far and are doing OKish, you'll probably manage to keep going a good bit longer. So don't think your good days are numbered. Chill a bit.

By now, you should be more of an expert on your body than any GP. So if you find that big dose CoCodamol and Naproxen or Diclofenac work for you and don't kill your gut, keep a good stock of them. After all over 60 they're free! Day Nurse capsules are my best buck-you-uppo remedy so I keep a good stock (although I'm not "supposed" to take them with my blood pressure meds).

Get used to the fact that you can't keep the pace up like you used to for the same length of time. When I go riding with younger buddies I work hard to stick with the pace for the first half but then split and make my own way to the end point. That means you're not making them wait all the time, so they won't groan when you turn up at the start.

As you can't ride as fast or with the same intensity think of getting a different sort of bike. That means your old familiar trails will have to be ridden at a different rhythm so it freshens them up.

The biggest surprise for me is in windsurfing. I used to head off to the Welsh coast when the strong south-westerlies came through and spend all day there. Now I can manage maybe an hour battling the waves and I'm finished for the day. I have a choice - keep bashing my head agains a brick wall or go out in different conditions but find a way of presenting myself with new challenges.

Oh - and what they say about us not being able to bounce any more after a tumble... If you're going fast enough, you'll still bounce - believe me.

[b]kjcc25[/b] - is that "Old John" Malin you're riding with? If it wasn't for him, I'd be the Old John! Give hime my best, and when do you go out? I might try to join you.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 10:19 am
Posts: 5182
Free Member
 

2 years off the stated five-oh, but was injured/incapacitated when 30 so have 18 years of pain and (variable) disability behind me (and an unknown amount ahead). Foot joints are knackered/biomechanics fubard. Considered voluntary amputation, decided against. Still not sure whether should have or not, attachment to even poorly functioning body parts is a strong feeling! What keeps me going are small (some might say microscopic) improvements year-on-year. That, and a dogged, overwhelming desire for personal mobility/being outdoors. The decision to not be destroyed by painkillers was a big factor too, yet ever-present pain can be a mood-killer, and needs work via meditation/tuning out. Life is good, just to wake up is another chance to do something differently/see people/things that you love. I suppose it is really mindfulness/visualisation that helps me enormously, not to mention patience from loved ones, lucky, otherwise 'the outsider' badge would no doubt send me limping off angrily to Walden Pond or somesuch place for good. It has been hard on my social life, undoubtedly.

*Edit - oh yeah - regular structured swimming is arguably the best thing to happen to my body in over a decade. Good for the mind also.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 12:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

just now have a niggling fear that those valium may prove a little too moreish for my willpower

Valium is incredibly addictive, I'd be very careful, it also affects your ability to drive. Most doctors are far more conservative handing it out these days.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 1:24 pm
Posts: 17187
Full Member
 

iainc - Member
49th birthday yesterday. Was fit as a fiddle and riding loads. Asked doc an off the cuff question and ended up diagnosed with prostate cancer, surgery 10 weeks ago today - radical prostatectomy (removal). Been out on cx bike for a few 25 mile road rides last 2 weeks and back to a 3k sat am swim, so getting there ....

First mtb ride today too 😀 just a couple of laps of Cathkin, 11 weeks today since last off road ride, up Conic Hill. My fitness has disappeared.....


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 1:28 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

When I was 14 I seriously knackered my knee. I continued to play rugby but gave it up along with pretty much all other field sports before I was 18, when those sports get seriously physical. I did F-all exercise until I took up mountain biking at 25.
The knee hurts occasionally but I'm glad I gave my body a rest in my 20s, as well as giving up field sports. I do the odd run but otherwise its cycling all the way, and even that I don't overdo.
For your body, life is a marathon not a sprint.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 1:28 pm
Posts: 785
Full Member
 

Physical job,right hip resurfacing 4 years ago but its my arthritic hands that hurt the most these days.55 this year but still get out 3 times a week if poss.

Off for a pootle around kinver now 🙂


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 3:06 pm
Posts: 54
Free Member
 

25+ years of running and I'm on an enforced break as I ust cant get rid of achilles tendonitis. Gonnna have to start throwing money at it pretty shortly which is as depressing as having it in the first place. I'm just a bairn at 42 though : (


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 4:21 pm
Posts: 2260
Full Member
 

We also know someone in his seventies who regularly mountainbikes,although at the moment he's out in the alps (again) for 3 months living out of his van & skiing!Legend & inspiration!

Good old Eric!


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 4:39 pm
Posts: 130
Free Member
 

Yep,Eric,inspiration!


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 4:41 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Share the 'use it or lose it' ethos.
54 here, and found the latter half of my forties difficult to deal with as decline in physical capacity became increasingly apparent by the year.
Got to 50 and sat back and looked at those of a similar age & realised that, guess what, in relative terms I was doing ok. I' ve stopped driving myself so hard, accepted that I have to ease off a bit and just enjoy being out there doing it, albeit at a reduced level. Still running after 35 years, on a 4 day cycle: 3 days running, 1 day on the bike, with a day off every couple of weeks.
Other than niggling plantar fasciitis feeling ok. Oh, and echinacea every day to keep colds at bay.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 5:19 pm
 ps44
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

59 this year and still exercising 6/7 times a week, but a mix of biking, running, swimming and circuits. And I windsurf whenever it's windy and warm enough. Slightly dodgy lower back from too many years of rowing, and a mild heart arrhythmia controlled by drugs, and I've definitely slowed down a bit since 55. But I've finally given up being super competitive after 40 years of all sorts of racing, which required a bit of brain re-wiring and I now just do stuff for fun. Still hold a number of local off road KOMs though 😀


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 6:01 pm
Posts: 405
Free Member
 

Hi Big John
Yes it is John and we meet between 10.00 and 10.30am at Birches Valley usually on a Monday and Friday. Always pleased have someone else join us.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 6:21 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Wasn't going to go for a ride today but after reading this thought that I had better - 3 1/2 hours on the cyclocross bike but I bonked a bit in the middle as my fitness is a bit lacking atm 🙁

I like the cross bike as it encourages climbing out of the saddle more than an mtb, and I think that it's good for the knees (as long as you are not grinding too much) - my running is certainly better because of it.

I use a 12kg mace bell to keep my shoulders in some sort of shape, as programming and a few offs and a broken collarbone haven't helped.

Swimming round the island every other day whilst on holiday in the Maldives really helps the shoulders though, I had a rotator cuff injury after a skiing fall and I couldn't lift my arm above my shoulder. Did all the stretches and exercises that you are supposed to, to no avail. 40 minutes of swimming breaststroke round the island fixed it and no pain the next day.


 
Posted : 08/02/2015 6:27 pm
Page 1 / 2

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!