A Complete Guide to Private Training, Nutrition, Recovery, and Transforming Your Health in Los Angeles
By François & Tina — Focus Camp, Los Angeles
Hey friend,
I want to tell you about Marcus. He’s 63, a retired architect, came to me about eight months ago. First thing he said was, “I don’t want to look like a bodybuilder. I just want to tie my shoes without holding onto something.”
That landed with me. Because that’s the real stuff. That’s what actually matters when you’re over 50. Not six-pack abs. Not running a marathon. Just being able to live your life without your body getting in the way.
Marcus is now doing single-leg deadlifts with 20-pound dumbbells. He hikes with his wife on weekends. He told me last month — and I’m not going to pretend this didn’t hit me right in the chest — “I feel like I got ten years back.” Ten years. That’s what the right kind of training does when it’s designed for your body, your age, your life.
I’ve been doing this work in Los Angeles for over twenty years. Started out young, thought I knew everything. Quickly learned I didn’t. Spent the next decade learning — from certifications, from research, from the hundreds of people who’ve trusted me with their bodies. And here’s the single biggest thing I’ve learned: the older you are, the more the approach matters. A 25-year-old can do a random workout from Instagram and be sore for two days and fine. A 55-year-old does that same workout and ends up in physical therapy for six weeks. The stakes are higher. The margin for error is smaller. And the payoff — when you get it right — is bigger than anything I saw in my twenties.
Today I’m going to give you everything I know about healthy lifestyle coaching after 50. Not a summary. Not the highlight reel. The whole thing.
Let’s go.
What “Lifestyle Coaching” Actually Is
A trainer gives you exercises. That’s fine. Nothing wrong with that. But a lifestyle coach gives you a system — a complete, personalized framework for living better that goes way beyond what happens during a workout.
Let me give you a concrete example. Last year I started working with a woman named Janet. She’s 56, works in finance, had been going to a big-box gym three times a week for two years. She was doing the same routine every session — treadmill for 20 minutes, a few machines, some crunches, done. She wasn’t getting hurt, but she wasn’t getting anywhere either.
When we sat down for her intake, I spent 45 minutes just talking to her. Found out she was sleeping five hours a night because of stress. Found out she was skipping breakfast and eating most of her protein at dinner. Found out she had a shoulder issue from a car accident ten years ago. Found out she was taking a medication that affected her heart rate response to exercise.
None of that showed up on the gym’s intake form. None of it was addressed in her “program.” And every single piece of it was affecting her results.
Within six weeks of working together — better sleep strategies, protein redistribution, exercises chosen specifically for her shoulder and her goals — she felt like a different person. Not because I did anything magic. Because we addressed the whole picture.
What a real lifestyle coaching relationship includes:
- A real intake conversation — We talk about everything — your health history, injuries, medications, sleep, stress, schedule, goals. The stuff that actually shapes your program.
- A movement assessment — I watch you move — squat, reach, balance, walk. I find out exactly where your body is right now.
- A program built for your body — Not a template. A program designed around your specific joints, history, goals, and schedule.
- Nutrition that makes sense for your age — Specific protein targets for your body weight. Meal timing that works with your actual life.
- Recovery and sleep guidance — Sleep optimization. Stress management. Active recovery protocols. What you do between sessions matters as much as the sessions.
- Real accountability — Someone who notices when you’re dragging, adjusts when life gets chaotic, and celebrates wins that have nothing to do with the scale.
- Progress tracking that goes deeper — Strength benchmarks. Mobility changes. Energy levels. Sleep quality. Body composition. Functional milestones.
At Focus Camp, this is how Tina and I have worked for years.
What’s Actually Happening Inside Your Body After 50
Your body is changing. That’s biology, not failure. But here’s the part that took me years to fully appreciate: every single one of these changes responds to the right kind of movement. None of this is a life sentence. It’s a starting point.
Your Muscles Are Disappearing (Sarcopenia)
Starting around age 30, you lose roughly 3–5% of muscle mass every decade. After 50, it accelerates. Your metabolism slows because muscle burns calories even at rest — less muscle means your body burns fewer calories, which means weight gain creeps in even if your eating hasn’t changed.
The good news is that muscle is remarkably responsive to training at every age. A study in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise tracked adults aged 60–75 through 12 weeks of resistance training. The average result: 2.4 pounds of muscle gained and a 38% improvement in leg press strength.
38%
Improvement in leg press strength after 12 weeks of resistance training — adults aged 60–75
Your Bones Are Getting Thinner (Osteopenia / Osteoporosis)
Bones are alive. They remodel constantly. After 50, especially for women after menopause, the balance tips toward breakdown. The National Institutes of Health confirms that weight-bearing exercise is one of the most effective non-pharmaceutical interventions for bone health.
Your Joints Are Getting Stiff
Cartilage thins. Tendons lose their elasticity. But here’s what most people get wrong: they think the answer is to protect their joints by moving less. That’s exactly backwards. Movement is medicine for your joints. When you move a joint through its full range of motion, you pump synovial fluid through it — the natural lubricant and nutrient delivery system for cartilage.
Your Heart and Lungs Are Weakening
VO2 max drops about 10% per decade after 30. The American Heart Association says regular moderate-intensity exercise can reverse cardiovascular deconditioning at any age. Adults who start aerobic programs in their 60s and 70s see VO2 max improvements of 15–25% within three to four months.
Your Balance Is Declining
A study in the British Medical Journal found that structured balance training reduced fall rates in older adults by 23%. Add strength training and the reduction jumps to 34%.
The Big Picture
| What’s Changing | Is It Reversible? | When Will I Notice Improvement? |
|---|---|---|
| Muscle loss (3–5% per decade) | Yes — highly responsive to resistance training | 8–12 weeks for noticeable strength gains |
| Bone density decline | Partially — can slow loss and modestly improve density | 6–12 months for measurable changes |
| Joint stiffness and cartilage wear | Movement nourishes joints; can dramatically reduce pain | 2–4 weeks for reduced stiffness |
| Heart and lung deconditioning | Yes — cardiovascular system responds at any age | 12–16 weeks for significant improvement |
| Balance and coordination decline | Yes — responds well to targeted training | 4–8 weeks for meaningful improvement |
| Flexibility and mobility loss | Yes — consistent stretching restores range of motion | 3–6 weeks for noticeable change |
| Metabolic slowdown | Resistance training directly counteracts this | 8–12 weeks for metabolic improvement |
Why Private Training Is the Only Thing That Actually Works After 50
I spent the first five years of my career running group classes. For my younger clients, it worked great. For my older clients? They kept getting hurt. They kept dropping out. Then I started working one-on-one with a woman named Diane — 58, torn rotator cuff, early-stage osteoporosis, genuine fear of exercise because her last trainer had her doing box jumps in a group class and she fell. Within two months of working together privately, Diane was doing things she hadn’t done in a decade.
You Don’t Get Hurt
In a private session, I’m watching your knees track over your toes on every single squat. I’m noticing when your shoulder starts to compensate. One bad rep under load at 55 can mean a disc herniation. One GOOD rep with proper coaching builds confidence that keeps you coming back for years.
You Get Results Faster
A study in the Journal of Sports Science & Medicine found that supervised personal training produced 40% greater strength gains than unsupervised training — even when the unsupervised group trained more often.
You Stay Consistent
Motivation fades. A private coach who knows your name, your story, and your goals becomes the anchor that keeps you steady when willpower alone isn’t enough.
The Real Comparison
| Factor | Gym Membership | Group Classes | App/Online | Private Coaching |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personalization | Zero | Minimal | Some | Total |
| Safety | On your own | Limited | None | Every rep supervised |
| Nutrition Help | Not included | Rarely | Generic | Specific to your body |
| Recovery Guidance | Not addressed | Not addressed | Basic tips | Comprehensive |
| Accountability | Self-driven | Social pressure | Push notifications | Real human relationship |
| Monthly Cost | $30–$80 | $100–$250 | $15–$50 | $300–$1,200+ |
| Still Training After 12 Months | ~20% | ~40% | ~10% | ~75%+ |
What the First Six Months Actually Look Like
Before Day One: The Conversation
Before we ever touch a weight, we sit down and talk. For real. Your health history — every surgery, injury, chronic condition. Your medications and their side effects. Your sleep patterns. Your stress levels. Your real goals — not “I want to lose weight,” but what that actually means to you. Your movement assessment — I watch you squat, reach, balance, and walk.
Month One: Teaching Your Body to Move
The first four weeks are about movement quality. Not intensity. Not volume. Teaching your body the fundamental patterns:
- Chair squats — sitting down and standing up with controlled form
- Wall push-ups — with proper elbow positioning at 45 degrees
- Glute bridges — waking up muscles dormant for years
- Bird-dog — core stability, balance, coordination
- Standing balance holds — single foot, eyes open
Every session starts with a 10-minute warm-up and ends with a 10–15 minute outdoor walk. The initial soreness fades after the first week. You start sleeping better — usually the first change people notice.
Months Two and Three: Building Real Strength
We add resistance — dumbbells, kettlebells, resistance bands. Movements get more complex: lunges, rows, overhead presses, Romanian deadlifts. We introduce circuit-style training. Every session is tracked — weight used, reps completed, rest periods, perceived exertion. This data lets me make precise adjustments every week.
Months Four Through Six: The Transformation
By month four, training stops being something you have to do and becomes something you look forward to. We introduce more advanced work: single-leg deadlifts, push-up progressions, loaded carries, higher-intensity intervals. We reassess everything and build the next phase based on where you are now.
Typical Week at Month Three
| Day | Session | Duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | Private Strength — Lower Body | 50–60 min | Squats, lunges, bridges, step-ups |
| Tuesday | Active Recovery | 20–30 min | Mobility, foam rolling, outdoor walk |
| Wednesday | Private Strength — Upper Body | 50–60 min | Push-ups, rows, presses, core |
| Thursday | Yoga & Mindfulness | 45–60 min | Flexibility, balance, breathing, stress |
| Friday | Private Conditioning | 50–60 min | Circuits, cardio intervals, functional movement |
| Saturday | Outdoor Group Session | 60–90 min | Beach workout, park session, or hike |
| Sunday | Complete Rest | — | Walk if you want. Meal prep. Rest. |
The Six Movement Patterns That Matter Most After 50
1. The Squat
You squat every time you sit down, stand up, get out of a car, or pick something up. We build it from chair squats to goblet squats with a dumbbell. Each progression happens when your body is ready.
2. The Push
Getting up from the floor. Pushing open a door. We build from wall push-ups to incline to knee to full push-ups. The key cue: elbows at 45 degrees, not flared to 90.
3. The Pull
The most neglected pattern — and arguably the most important for posture. Pulling strength counteracts the rounded-shoulder posture that decades of desk work create. We build from band rows to dumbbell rows to inverted rows.
4. The Hinge
Bending at the hips with a flat back. The foundation of deadlifts — the single most functional strength exercise for older adults. We start with the “wall touch” drill and progress to Romanian deadlifts.
5. The Carry
Picking something heavy up and walking with it. Builds grip strength, core stability, shoulder stability, and mental toughness. Directly translates to groceries, luggage, and grandchildren.
6. The Balance
Non-negotiable after 50. Single-leg stands, tandem walking, reactive drills. This is the exercise pattern that prevents falls and keeps you independent.
Sample Exercise Plan (Month 2–3)
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goblet Squats | 3 | 10–12 | 60 sec | Leg and glute strength for daily life |
| Incline Push-Ups | 3 | 8–12 | 60 sec | Upper body pushing, shoulder health |
| Dumbbell Rows | 3 | 10–12/arm | 60 sec | Back strength, posture correction |
| Romanian Deadlifts | 3 | 10 | 60 sec | Hamstring strength, hip hinge pattern |
| Glute Bridges | 3 | 12–15 | 45 sec | Glute activation, lower back support |
| Farmer’s Carries | 3 | 30–40 sec | 60 sec | Grip, core, real-world carrying ability |
| Single-Leg Balance | 3 | 20–30 sec/leg | 30 sec | Fall prevention, proprioception |
| Pallof Press | 3 | 10/side | 45 sec | Anti-rotation core strength |
Nutrition After 50: The Real Story
Protein Is Non-Negotiable
After 50, your body develops “anabolic resistance” — your muscles become less efficient at using protein to build and repair. You need more protein than a younger person to get the same effect. A meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine found that adults over 50 need 1.2–1.6 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight daily.
| Body Weight | Minimum Daily Protein | Optimal Daily Protein | How to Hit It |
|---|---|---|---|
| 130 lbs (59 kg) | 71 g | 94 g | Three meals × 25–30 g each |
| 150 lbs (68 kg) | 82 g | 109 g | Three meals × 30 g + one snack |
| 180 lbs (82 kg) | 98 g | 131 g | Three meals × 35 g + a shake |
| 200 lbs (91 kg) | 109 g | 146 g | Three meals × 40 g + a shake |
Best Protein Sources for 50+ Adults
| Food | Protein | Why It’s Good After 50 |
|---|---|---|
| 3 large eggs | 18 g | Complete protein, cheap, easy, choline for brain health |
| 1 cup Greek yogurt | 20 g | High protein, probiotics, versatile |
| 4 oz chicken breast | 35 g | Lean, easy to prepare, works with everything |
| 4 oz salmon | 25 g | Omega-3s for joints, heart, and brain |
| 1 cup cooked lentils | 18 g | Plant-based, high fiber, affordable |
| 1 cup cottage cheese | 25 g | Casein protein — slow-digesting, great before bed |
| 1 scoop whey protein | 25 g | Fast-absorbing, convenient post-workout |
Key Micronutrients You’re Probably Missing
| Nutrient | Why It Matters | Best Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D | Bone health, immune function, mood | Sunlight, fatty fish, supplements (1,000–2,000 IU/day) |
| Calcium | Bone density — needs increase after menopause | Dairy, leafy greens, sardines, fortified milks |
| Magnesium | Muscle relaxation, sleep, heart rhythm | Nuts, seeds, dark chocolate, supplements |
| Omega-3s | Joint inflammation, brain health, heart protection | Salmon, sardines, walnuts, flaxseed |
| B12 | Nerve function, energy production | Meat, fish, eggs, dairy, supplements |
| Fiber | Digestion, blood sugar, cholesterol | Vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes |
Sample Day of Eating
| When | What to Eat | Protein |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | 3 eggs scrambled with spinach, toast, avocado | 22 g |
| Mid-morning | Greek yogurt with berries and almonds | 24 g |
| Lunch | Grilled chicken salad with quinoa | 35 g |
| Afternoon | Apple with almond butter | 4 g |
| Dinner | Baked salmon, sweet potato, broccoli | 30 g |
| Evening | Cottage cheese with cinnamon | 20 g |
| Total | ~135 g |
Recovery, Sleep, and Stress
You don’t get stronger during your workout. You get stronger during the recovery that follows. After 50, recovery takes longer — which means it’s not optional. It’s the most important part of the program.
Sleep Optimization
| Strategy | Why It Works | How to Start Tonight |
|---|---|---|
| Same bedtime every night | Regulates circadian rhythm | Pick a time and stick to it — even weekends |
| Cool bedroom (65–68°F) | Body temp must drop to initiate sleep | Crack a window, use a fan |
| Screens off 60 min before bed | Blue light suppresses melatonin | Phone in another room. Read a book. |
| No caffeine after 2 pm | 6-hour half-life | Switch to herbal tea after lunch |
| Magnesium before bed | Promotes muscle relaxation and deeper sleep | 200–400 mg magnesium glycinate |
| Breathing exercise | Activates calming nervous system | 4-7-8 breathing: in 4, hold 7, out 8 |
The Hormone-Exercise Connection
| What’s Shifting | How Exercise Helps | Best Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Estrogen dropping (women) | Preserves muscle, supports bone, reduces hot flashes | Resistance training 3x/week |
| Testosterone dropping (men) | Compound lifts support production | Squats, deadlifts, presses, rows |
| Cortisol elevated (both) | Exercise regulates rhythm; mindfulness reduces levels | Moderate training + yoga |
| Growth hormone declining (both) | Intervals stimulate release; sleep maximizes production | Interval training 1–2x/week |
| Insulin resistance (both) | Exercise improves sensitivity dramatically | Strength training + walking after meals |
The Mental Health Piece
Most of my clients — when they’re being really honest — tell me the mental health benefits matter most. More than the physical changes. More than the number on the scale.
Confidence. Within weeks, something shifts. They complete an exercise they couldn’t do two weeks ago. They carry something heavy without thinking. They walk taller. This is self-efficacy — the belief that you can affect change in your own life. And it ripples into everything.
Loneliness. Research in PLOS Medicine found that social isolation increases mortality risk by 26% — roughly equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes a day. At Focus Camp, even private clients become part of a community.
Cognitive protection. A study in Neurology found that regular exercisers had 35% lower risk of cognitive impairment.
35%
Lower risk of cognitive impairment in regular exercisers over 50 — Neurology
What Private Coaching Costs in Los Angeles
| Tier | Price Per Session | What You Get | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget | $40–$70 | Newer trainers, basic programming | Price-sensitive clients |
| Sweet Spot | $75–$120 | Experienced trainers, real personalization | Most 50+ adults |
| Premium | $125–$200+ | Full lifestyle approach, nutrition, recovery | Best results seekers |
| Elite | $200–$350+ | Top-tier coaches, house calls, medical collaboration | Complex medical needs |
The Math That Matters
A single fall-related ER visit costs $3,000–$30,000+. A knee replacement: $30,000–$50,000+. Managing type 2 diabetes: $5,000–$10,000/year. Prevention through lifestyle coaching isn’t an expense — it’s the best financial decision you’ll make this decade.
Focus Camp Packages
| Package | What’s Included | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|
| Single Session | 50–60 min private session, assessment, program notes | Trying us out |
| 4-Session Package | 4 sessions, assessment, basic nutrition, support | Building the habit |
| 8-Session Package | 8 sessions, comprehensive assessment, nutrition plan | Real commitment |
| Monthly Unlimited | Unlimited sessions, full lifestyle coaching, priority scheduling | Complete transformation |
How to Pick the Right Coach
What to Look For
- Real experience with 50+ clients — ask how many they’ve worked with in the last year
- Relevant certifications — NASM, ACE, ACSM; bonus: CES, SFS, FMS
- Thorough assessment before starting — if they hand you a plan on day one without assessment, walk away
- Explains WHY, not just WHAT — you should understand every exercise’s purpose
- Asks about your whole life — sleep, stress, nutrition, energy, mood
- Patience — never rushes progression
- Outdoor training options — especially in LA
Red Flags — Walk Away
- No assessment before training
- Same program for every client
- “No pain, no gain” mentality
- No continuing education
- Pressure for long-term contracts upfront
What Results Actually Look Like
| When | Physical Changes | Mental Changes | Daily Life Changes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1–2 | Mild soreness, sleeping better | Sense of accomplishment | Slightly more energy |
| Week 3–4 | Soreness gone, first gains, looser joints | Growing confidence | Daily tasks easier |
| Month 2 | Strength increase, clothes fit differently | Better sleep, less brain fog | Stairs easier |
| Month 3 | Body composition changes, less joint pain | Real confidence, better stress management | Walking farther, fewer aches |
| Month 4–6 | Muscle gain, fat loss, cardio improvement | Training is part of life now | Activities you avoided become possible |
| Month 6–12 | Major transformation | Pride, confidence | You’re an active person now |
What Our Clients Actually Say
“I carried all the groceries in one trip for the first time in years.”
“I played with my grandkids for two hours and wasn’t exhausted.”
“I hiked Runyon Canyon. I hadn’t done that in a decade.”
“My doctor took me off my blood pressure medication.”
“I slept through the night for the first time in years.”
“I got down on the floor to play with my dog and got back up without help.”
“I tried surfing at 62. I never imagined I’d do that.”
“I feel like I got my body back.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it too late to start after 50?
No. A study in BMJ Open found that adults who started exercising after age 60 showed a 25–30% reduction in all-cause mortality. Your body responds at any age.
How is this different from a gym membership?
A gym gives you a building and equipment. We give you a personalized system — expert programming, one-on-one supervision, nutrition guidance, recovery planning, and a coach who knows your name and your story.
How often should I train?
2–3 sessions per week for most people over 50. Between sessions, we provide guided homework. Consistency beats intensity every time.
I have joint pain / arthritis / a past injury. Can I still train?
That’s exactly why private coaching exists. We design every program around your specific conditions. In many cases, the right movement actually reduces joint pain over time.
Can I build muscle after 50?
Yes. Adults aged 60–75 gained 2.4 pounds of muscle in 12 weeks of resistance training in a published study. The key: consistent training, adequate protein, and sufficient recovery.
What does this cost?
Private coaching in LA runs $75–$200+ per session. At Focus Camp, we have flexible packages for different budgets.
Can this help me lose weight?
More effectively than dieting alone. Our approach combines strength training with practical nutrition so you lose fat while preserving muscle. Most clients see changes within 6–8 weeks.
I haven’t exercised in years. Is that a problem?
That’s not a problem. That’s a starting point. We begin wherever you are. If five chair squats is your max, we start with five.
What makes Focus Camp different?
Three things: outdoor training (LA’s environment is part of the program), specialization in adults over 50 (our core focus), and a whole-person approach (exercise, nutrition, recovery, mindset, community).
Your Next Step
If you’ve read this far, something here resonated with you.
You’re not too late. You’re not too old. You’re not too far gone.
Let’s have a real conversation. No pressure. No sales pitch.
Book a Session → | Contact Us →
Your healthiest chapter isn’t behind you. It starts whenever you decide it does.
— François
Focus Camp — Los Angeles
Private Lifestyle Coaching • Outdoor Fitness • Yoga & Mindfulness • Strength & Conditioning • Group Training