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Experts say weight training is good for children
Training improves bone mass density of children, which helps keep at bay osteoporosis. Photo/FILE
Posted Wednesday, March 17 2010 at 00:00
My dad, God rest his soul, was a great story teller.
We looked forward to evenings when he would captivate us with tales about people he had met and places he had been.
What we loved most, however, was the undisguised padding he wrapped his stories with every time he told them again. We were usually in stitches.
We listened to his stories with anticipation even when he had told the same story only the day before because we knew we would laugh, a lot.
We laughed because we could detect a detour, a sweet detail that wasn’t there the last time.
When the peals of laughter ebbed a little he would continue with his embellishment and now we would all laugh, he included, because he knew we knew his game.
Well, I have just broken a cardinal rule that shouldn’t be broken; dads, especially lovable cheats like my dad don’t lie.
They simply don’t tell the truth all the time, and there is a difference.
Some of his stories were of course myths into which he would weave his own details and interpretation.
Like the myth that has been peddled in the physical fitness circles for years that children should never do weight training because it would retard their growth.
According to this enduring myth, allowing children to train with weights is not advisable because it would damage the composition of growth plates from which bone continues to emanate until optimum skeletal growth is reached, effectively turning them into dwarfs, oops! little people.
You won’t find evidence of that in any scientific journal so most likely it was a tale once told around a campfire and then picked up by a person with a rich repertoire of lovable non-lies like my dad, to eventually become an urban myth.
The truth is actually the very opposite of what you may have heard.
Done properly, with moderation and for a noble purpose strength training is good for children, not least because it gives them greater strength than their peers who don’t strength train.
You don’t want to hear the scientific explanation I read the other day on how this happens, do you?
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