A fitness director who works in a longevity clinic recommends three simple compound exercises for healthy aging:
- the squat
- the Romanian deadlift
- and the pull-up.
These moves use many muscles at the same time, they mirror daily actions like sitting down, lifting from the floor, and pulling a door, and they help protect joints and the spine by building balanced strength.
Why these three moves matter
- They are compound. A compound exercise is a movement that uses more than one joint and several muscles together. Training the whole chain in one move builds useful strength for real life and lowers injury risk.
- They map to daily tasks. Squatting trains standing up and down. The Romanian deadlift trains the hip hinge, which is how we pick things up while keeping the back neutral. Pull-ups train the back and grip, which support posture and the ability to carry and pull.
- They support independence. Higher muscle strength, including grip strength, is linked to better function and lower risk of early death. Building and keeping strength helps you stay mobile, manage your own tasks, and avoid falls and back pain.
How to keep it safe and simple
- Squat: Sit back and down within your own range, keep chest up, then stand tall. Add a dumbbell or bar only when your form is steady.
- Romanian deadlift: Hinge at the hips with a straight back, keep the weight close to the legs, move only as far as you can while holding a neutral spine, then stand up by squeezing the glutes.
- Pull-up: Hold a bar, pull until the chin passes the bar, then lower with control. If a full pull-up is not yet possible, use a band or do body rows with feet on the floor to reduce load.
How often to do them
Global health guidance encourages adults to do muscle-strengthening activity that trains all major muscle groups at least two days per week. These three moves cover the main patterns, so they fit well inside a short, repeatable plan. Add walking or other aerobic activity for heart health, and progress slowly by adding small amounts of weight or easier to harder variations as form allows.
British Journal of Sports Medicine – Muscle-strengthening activities are associated with lower risk of mortality and major non-communicable diseases, a systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies – 2022
Across prospective cohorts, doing muscle-strengthening activities is linked with a lower risk of death from any cause and with lower risk of major diseases. The analysis supports including resistance training in weekly routines.
World Health Organization – 2020 guidelines on physical activity and sedentary behavior – 2020
WHO recommends that adults perform muscle-strengthening activities for all major muscle groups on two or more days per week, alongside weekly aerobic activity, because these provide additional health benefits.
The Lancet – Prognostic value of grip strength, findings from the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology study – 2015
Lower hand-grip strength is associated with higher risk of death from any cause and cardiovascular causes. Grip strength, a simple marker of whole-body strength, is a stronger predictor of mortality than systolic blood pressure in this cohort.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research – Resistance training for older adults, position statement – 2019
Expert consensus concludes that resistance training improves strength, muscle mass, power, and functional capacity in older adults, supporting programs that use multi-joint movements like squats, hip hinges, and pulling patterns.


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