BeckyReece.com

BeckyReece.com

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Owner of BeckyReece, llc. Certified Functional Medicine Health Coach and Trainer. It is my passion to be your personal health advocate.

Do you wish to be in better shape, have more energy, and no longer be addicted to foods and drinks that are sabotaging your mental and physical health? Would you like to learn how to cook simple, but nutrient rich meals your entire family will love? Possibly you are looking to grow your career, education or change the direction your finances are going in. I will help you find the balance your life

A 10-year study tracked 324 twins and found a consistent pattern
the twin with greater leg strength had a larger brain and experienced slower cognitive decline over time

Same genetics
Same environment
Same early-life advantages

The difference came down to leg strength

What makes this even more interesting is that lower-body strength outperformed other common health markers
including grip strength, lung capacity, muscle mass, and cardiovascular fitness
when it came to predicting brain aging

Leg strength reflects the long-term condition of both the neuromuscular and metabolic systems
which appear to play a key role in preserving brain function over time

There is also a clear biological link

Lower-body muscles produce BDNF, a compound that can cross into the brain and support the growth and survival of neurons

Because the legs contain some of the largest muscle groups in the body
they are capable of producing more of this signal compared to smaller muscle groups

Each lower-body workout sends a direct stimulus that supports brain health

Even relatively small increases in leg power were associated with meaningful differences in brain aging
differences that can accumulate quietly over decades

Your legs are not just for movement
they play a role in keeping your brain functioning long term

Save this and send it to someone who avoids leg day

References

Steves CJ et al. (2016). Kicking back cognitive ageing: Leg power predicts cognitive ageing after ten years in older female twins. Gerontology, 62(2), 138–149.
Erickson KI et al. (2011). Exercise training increases size of hippocampus and improves memory. PNAS, 108(7), 3017–3022.

Disclaimer

For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional before starting any new exercise program, especially if you have pre-existing conditions. 09/05/2026

A 10-year study tracked 324 twins and found a consistent pattern the twin with greater leg strength had a larger brain and experienced slower cognitive decline over time Same genetics Same environment Same early-life advantages The difference came down to leg strength What makes this even more interesting is that lower-body strength outperformed other common health markers including grip strength, lung capacity, muscle mass, and cardiovascular fitness when it came to predicting brain aging Leg strength reflects the long-term condition of both the neuromuscular and metabolic systems which appear to play a key role in preserving brain function over time There is also a clear biological link Lower-body muscles produce BDNF, a compound that can cross into the brain and support the growth and survival of neurons Because the legs contain some of the largest muscle groups in the body they are capable of producing more of this signal compared to smaller muscle groups Each lower-body workout sends a direct stimulus that supports brain health Even relatively small increases in leg power were associated with meaningful differences in brain aging differences that can accumulate quietly over decades Your legs are not just for movement they play a role in keeping your brain functioning long term Save this and send it to someone who avoids leg day References Steves CJ et al. (2016). Kicking back cognitive ageing: Leg power predicts cognitive ageing after ten years in older female twins. Gerontology, 62(2), 138–149. Erickson KI et al. (2011). Exercise training increases size of hippocampus and improves memory. PNAS, 108(7), 3017–3022. Disclaimer For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional before starting any new exercise program, especially if you have pre-existing conditions.

19/04/2026

Population studies have found a correlation between regular aerobic exercise and decreased risk of at least 35 different diseases, including heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and cancer. https://see.nf/3XGSyNc

14/03/2026
03/03/2026

So much of our stress comes from living everywhere except where we are. We rush toward the future or replay the past, convinced we’re running out of time when in truth, time unfolds most generously in the present moment.

Presence creates space. When attention is rooted in now, clarity replaces urgency, and life reveals its natural rhythm. What needs to be done finds its moment. What matters becomes obvious. Time isn’t something we chase; it’s something we inhabit.

03/03/2026

Target says that by May 31 it will stop selling breakfast cereals made with certified synthetic food dyes.

That may seem like small news. It’s not a federal ban. It’s not sweeping legislation. It’s a retailer changing its standards.

But scale matters.

Target operates nearly 2,000 stores across the country. When a retailer that size updates what’s allowed on its shelves, manufacturers reformulate.

When you remove ingredients that don’t add value, even small ones, you lower the overall chemical load people are exposed to day after day. No single change transforms health. But small reductions, multiplied across millions of families, shift the baseline.

That’s often how food evolves in the United States. Not through one sweeping reform, but through steady adjustments driven by consumer expectations and retailer standards.

It may look incremental. But when companies of this size adjust their ingredient expectations, it reshapes the marketplace. This is a win in my book.