There’s something strangely familiar about sit-ups. Most of us have done them at some point — in school gyms, during a brief health kick, or on the living room floor while promising ourselves that this time we’ll stick with it.
Even if life has replaced workout routines with work, family, or a tired back, our core strength still shapes far more of our daily life than we notice.
The part of your body that works even when you don’t think about it
Your core muscles aren’t just for aesthetics. Physiotherapists describe them as the body’s internal support system — the group of muscles that quietly stabilizes you every time you walk, lift grocery bags, bend down to empty the dishwasher or try not to slip on a wet pavement.
When the core weakens, everything from balance to posture tends to follow med.
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Age changes the numbers — not the need
Experts stress that you don’t need to chase intense ab routines. Instead, they use simple, age-adjusted benchmarks to help people understand what a healthy level of core strength typically looks like.
These numbers aren’t tests or expectations — just helpful indicators of how your body is holding up.
The recommended sit-up count by age
Below are the general targets used by physiologists in their assessments:
- Ages 30–39: around 40 sit-ups
- Ages 40–49: around 30 sit-ups
- Ages 60–69: around 10 sit-ups
- Ages 70+: around 5 sit-ups
These figures aren’t meant to be strict rules. Technique, injuries, everyday fitness and body type matter just as much as repetition count.
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And as one physiologist pointed out, there will always be older athletes who outperform people decades younger — consistency matters more than age.
Artiklen er baseret på informationer fra Daily Mail og Unilad
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