DaraTorres-related stories
Dara-spired
Diet & Weight Loss, Fitness, Motivation
That's Fit gals are all talking about her -- Dara Torres -- the Olympic swimmer and middle-aged mom. Jacki recently shared an informative overview of Torres and Kristen provided specifics on her fitness routine. Consider us Dara-spired. Hint to Kellogg's marketing squad, 35-and-over women will pounce on boxes of Special K if Torres is on it.
Dara-spiration exudes through her beautiful smile, her ability to tackle motherhood and develop into an even more powerful Olympic-level swimmer with a fitness regimen that works for her age. Accepting and creatively making accommodations for our aging or injured bodies is key to lifelong fitness. Torres recognized her body needs more recovery time between workouts than when she was younger, so she works out differently. Not only that, Torres raised her hand to become one of a dozen athletes openly submitting to a new, comprehensive drug-testing program by the United States Anti-Doping Agency -- she's clean.
I'm 41-years-old, just like Torres. I have a four-year-old daughter and a six-year-old son. I love competition, whether it's a golf tournament or "who can run around the house the fastest." I want to exit my 40s -- typically the decade of getting soft -- Dara-lean and taut. Witnessing Torres anchor the relay team to a silver medal at the 2008 Games delivered a jolt of spine-tingling Dara-spiration and pride. After that performance, I wouldn't be surprised if middle-aged moms everywhere ate right the next morning and headed outdoors for a bike, jog or a few laps in the pool. Anyone else Dara-spired? Check out these new pics of Torres in the gallery!
What has Dara Torres done to her body?
Fitness, Celebs & Entertainment

Have you looked at the body of Olympic swimmer Dara Torres lately? I mean really looked at it? Lean, mean, and 12 pounds lighter than she was at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, this 41-year-old medalist and mom of a two-year-old, is in better shape now than she was 20 years ago, at age 21. What exactly has she done to her body to achieve such physical greatness and beat her 1998 Olympic 100m speed by 2.47 seconds? She's worked her butt off, that's what. She's pumped up her weight training regimen by practicing a resistance stretching and flexibility and strength-building program that uses her own force to work out muscles -- while most strength-building exercises involve contracting muscles, her program contracts and stretches muscles during a repetition. It makes her lighter in the water, she says, and makes her stroke more efficient.
Some want to know not what Torres is doing to her body. They want to know what she's putting in her body. Nothing that isn't approved by the USADA, she says. In fact, she switched her asthma medication to a lower dose because it relieves symptoms without increasing lung capacity. She wants no unfair advantage and takes only an amino acid supplement for muscle recovery and strength. Doubt her? Don't. She'll submit to any test available -- urine, hair, DNA -- to prove she's the real deal.
Train like an Olympian: Dara Torres, swimming
Healthy Aging, Fitness, Celebs & Entertainment
With age, Dara found that she needed more recovery time between workouts. Where she used to swim 10 practices a week, she now swims less than half the distance. However, she does the same workouts as her teammates, with perfect form and enthusiasm.
Dara has considerable help in her training -- she has strength, sprint, and speed coaches, masseuses and chiropractors at her disposal. And while she does plenty of training in the pool, she says her "secret weapon" is resistance stretching. As far as strength training, her strength trainer, Andy O'Brien has changed her routine, moving away from heavy, static weightlifting and instead focusing on "balanced, dynamic exercises that stimulate her central nervous system." They use exercise balls for weightlifting, doing crunches, and cross-body pulls.
























