Sit. Stand. Repeat. The trick: You can’t use your hands.
This deceptively simple measure of flexibility and strength can predict who will live longer and whose lives will be cut short, according to a study by Brazilian physician Claudio Gil Araújo. To live longer, you must get moving and maintain muscle and balance.
The study came about when Dr. Araújo observed that many of his patients, particularly older people, had trouble with ordinary motions such as bending down to pick up something from the floor. As people age, he knew, reduced muscle power and loss of balance could greatly increase the risk of dangerous falls.
As a result, Dr. Araújo and his colleagues developed the sitting-rising test, or SRT, to determine a person’s core strength, flexibility, and longevity. It requires no equipment or walking paths — just a clear patch of floor and a willing participant.
Try the longevity test!
- Stand in comfortable clothes in your bare feet, with clear space around you.
- Without leaning on anything, lower yourself to a sitting position on the floor.
- Now stand back up, trying not to use your hands, knees, forearms or sides of your legs.
Scoring (ten-point scale)
- SITTING: Start with five points. Subtract one point each time a limb is used for support. Subtract half a point for loss of balance.
- STANDING: Add five points to your “sitting” score. Now subtract points per rules above.
- RESULTS: According to Dr. Araújo, people who scored fewer than eight points on the test were twice as likely to die within the next six years compared with those who wound up scoring higher; those who scored three or fewer points were more than five times as likely to die within the same period.
Must avoid!
Using limbs for support (see below) as you move from sitting to standing and back again detracts from your final score. The goal is to maintain balance from your core.
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