Research shows that ageing is a series of powerful shifts. Understand each stage to align with your body, grow stronger, and thrive.
Most of us imagine ageing as a gradual, steady line — a slow and even process that carries us from our early years into later life. But new research suggests something different: ageing moves more like a staircase than a slope, with distinct stages where your body shifts more noticeably.
The Science Says...
Researchers looking at thousands of blood samples found that the proteins in your blood — the ones that help regulate inflammation, repair, and immunity — don’t change at an even pace. Instead, they shift more strongly at certain ages: around 34, 44, 60, and 78.
These aren’t hard rules or strict deadlines, and not everyone feels the changes in the same way, but the pattern is striking. And the research is helpful because awareness gives you choice. Here’s how to approach each new step.
Around 34
You may notice subtle changes — your energy feels a little different, recovery takes a little longer, and your metabolism doesn’t bounce back as easily.
What helps: Prioritise strength training to build muscle for the decades ahead, experiment with nourishing foods that support metabolism, and establish restorative sleep routines (well, as much as possible if you have kids!) by hitting the hay a little earlier some nights.
Around 44
Sleep may feel less restorative, stress leaves clearer imprints on your body, and balance becomes essential.
What helps: Try yoga or Pilates for resilience, add regular cardio to support heart health (hello physie!), and explore stress-reducing rituals like journaling, meditation, or a walk outdoors each week.
Around 60
Strength, cardiovascular health, and bone density need more of your attention. This is the decade where keeping your body strong ensures your freedom and vitality.
What helps: Weight-bearing exercise, daily stretching, and plenty of protein. Stay socially connected and keep learning new things — both keep the lights on and the vibes high.
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The shifts I've felt in my 40s and early 50s have shown me that surrender isn’t weakness — it’s where wisdom and strength take flight.
Around 78
Your immune system and repair processes slow, but this is also a season of deep wisdom and vitality if you nourish yourself well.
What helps: Gentle but regular movement (walking, tai chi, swimming), community connection, and creative outlets that bring joy. Sleep, laughter, and a diet rich in colourful whole foods become powerful tools for resilience.
Why it Matters
Ageing can sometimes feel like a series of little losses. But it’s also a time of feedback and VIP invitations: to grow stronger, to live more wisely, to align with what your body needs so you can keep doing the things you love.
Life, it turns out, is a staircase (and mine’s in a Paris apartment!). With each step, you gain not only new perspective, but new power: the power to move, to choose, to thrive — à l’aventure!
This article draws on recent research into blood proteins and molecular ageing, including work published in Nature Medicine (2019) and a 2024 Stanford University study on biomolecular shifts across the lifespan. Summaries of this research are available from the National Institute on Aging and Stanford Medicine News.









