The Future You is a Four-Part Vodcast Series from Menâs Health & Womenâs Health, Produced in Partnership with °”ÍűTV Langone Health

°”ÍűTV Langoneâs Dr. Michael J. Alaia and Richard Dorment, editorial director of Menâs Health and Womenâs Health, engage two top athletes in a discussion about redefining strength as we age.
Credit: °”ÍűTV Langone Staff
For elite athletes, strength often means power, endurance, and even pain. âWhen a sport is your livelihood, thereâs pressure to stay in the game to keep a roof over your head,â maintains Ali Krieger, who endured broken bones; torn ligaments, including MCL and ACL injuries; and back issues on her way to two World Cup titles with the U.S. Womenâs National Soccer Team.
But what happens when the body starts pushing back?
In this episode of The Future You, a vodcast hosted by Richard Dorment, editorial director of Menâs Health and Womenâs Health at Hearst Magazines, Krieger joins Olympic freestyle skier Gus Kenworthy and °”ÍűTV Langone sports orthopedic surgeon Michael J. Alaia, MD, for a wide-ranging conversation about redefining strength, learning to listen to your body, and how even the highest performers eventually must adapt.
Injury as a Wake-Up Call
Kenworthy, a three-time world champion and Olympic silver medalist, was only 11 or 12 when he learned just how abruptly a day on the slopes can go wrong. âI came up a little short on a jump,â he recalls. âI told my friends I broke my leg, but they didnât believe meâthey left and did another lap.â By the time ski patrol arrived and he was taken down the mountain and to a clinic, Kenworthy anticipated there was a real diagnosis. âI told the nurse, âI really hope itâs broken, because Iâm going to be so embarrassed if itâs not.ââ It was: Both his tibia and fibula were fractured.
While Kenworthyâs wake-up came early, Kriegerâs was slowerâbut just as defining. Growing up competing against her brother in backyard soccer games, she pushed herself hard. âBut it wasnât until I turned pro that I really focused on preparing my body to compete,â she says. âThatâs what allowed me to play until 39.â
Kenworthy echoed the sentiment. âWe didnât warm up. We just met at the top of the lift and started skiing,â he says. Not until he reached the Olympic level did he begin training with intentionâan approach that would prove essential for long-term performance and recovery.
Even for those of us not counted among the worldâs elite athletes, awareness of whatâs happening to our bodies off the field is important, says Dr. Alaia. âWhat weâre putting into our bodies, how weâre exerting ourselves, stretching, strengtheningâitâs all important,â he says.
The Trouble with Pushing Through Pain
Both athletes acknowledge a culture of pushing through pain in high-performance sports. âWe would risk entire seasons to play one game,â says Krieger. Kenworthy agrees, calling out the badge of honor around playing while injured. âEven when I hit my head and got a concussion, I was like, thank God itâs not a broken bone. I can still ski.â
Dr. Alaia observes that this âno pain, no gainâ mindset isnât limited to world champions. For instance, most recreational skiing injuries happen late in the day. âYouâre most likely to get hurt when youâre out there for âjust one more runâ on wobbly legs after eight hours on the slopes,â he notes.
The key, he says, is to understand the difference between discomfort and painâand to listen to your body. âDiscomfort you can work through. Pain tells you something important.â
Strength for the Long Game
Injuries and aging eventually forced both Krieger and Kenworthy to change their approach. For Krieger, it was her calves giving out in her final season. âI realized my core wasnât strong enough. That impacted everything.â
Itâs common for training needs to evolve over time, explains Dr. Alaia, as strength and flexibility break down with aging and hormonal changes. âIf you work your quads and ignore your hamstrings, or your chest but not your back, youâre setting yourself up for injury,â he says. âTrue strength comes from balance, from core to floor.â
People of all ages should pay attention to these targeted needs, he adds. âAt every stage, itâs about how you can feel better in your body and help it perform better.â
for an insightful and inspiring discussion on feeling better in your body, at every age. Some highlights:
- when noisy knees might be normal, but pain is not
- the role of sleep and diet in conditioning your body for strength and longevity
- why â50 is the new 30â and how promising next-generation therapies could help us perform better and longer
Krieger and Kenworthy remain deeply activeâand intentional. They both share new goals, from Pilates to mountain climbing, and their excitement about continuing an athletic lifestyle with a new level of awareness.
Kenworthy recently completed a 545-mile charity bike ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles. âI still want to do things to push myself and push my body,â he says.
For media inquiries, please email News@°”ÍűTVLangone.org.