These butt-kicking senior trainers are getting their peers in shape

These butt-kicking senior trainers are getting their peers in shape

It’s time to put your notions of old age out to pasture.

Far from retiring, these NYC seniors are having the time of their lives working as fitness instructors — and using their years of training to sculpt, tone and perfect bodies of all ages. Who said that jocks had to be young?

While the average age of a personal trainer is 39, according to a small 2016 survey in Orthopedic Reviews, clients often prefer instructors whose perspective — and years — mirror their own.

“When you’re older, you really need an older teacher,” Marjorie Jaffe, a senior personal trainer who focuses on older clients, tells The Post. “You’re really not interested in [toning] your arms or your butt. You’re more interested in your balance, keeping your body straight and not limiting your life.”

Seasoned instructors also possess a self-assurance that younger clients can benefit from — and look forward to. “By 40,” says Jaffe, “you’re going to have so much confidence. And that’s a fabulous thing to have.”

Here, New York City’s senior fitness instructors — who range in age from 68 to 82 — tell The Post what it’s like to still kick butt, creaky hips be damned.

Roger Puckett, 82, and Yvonne Puckett, 81 Rashid Umar Abbasi

Even recent knee-replacement surgery can’t keep Roger off his feet.

A month after his procedure, the dance teacher was back in the studio.

“I’m not doing pirouettes or double tour jetés, but I am teaching,” he says.

He credits his lifetime of dancing for his quick recovery — a skill he and his wife, Yvonne — also a professional dancer, spent decades honing.

The couple, who have been married for 50 years, teach classes at the McBurney YMCA on West 14th Street. Between them, they’ve worked alongside Bob Fosse and Elvis Presley and have danced in movies and shows both on Broadway and off.

“The energy I have now at 81 is equal to what I had when I was 21,” Yvonne says.

And it shows: She teaches 15 classes a week, while Roger teaches 11. They’ve also designed a program, Grooves Young at Heart, aimed at seniors.

The most important rule of the class? Never stop moving. “I don’t even let them stop in between songs!” Yvonne says.

Besides, there’s no reason to slow down.

“We love dance, and we love each other,” says Yvonne, prompting Roger to chime in: “I feel like this is the happiest time of my life.”

Cardio jazz dance with Yvonne, Saturdays from 1:45 to 2:45 p.m., and core train with Roger, Saturdays from 2:45 to 3:15 p.m., at the McBurney YMCA, $25, YMCANYC.org

Lennox Blackmoore, 68 Stefano Giovannini

A professional boxer for 17 years, Blackmoore now does private coaching at Gleason’s Gym in Brooklyn, where he’s trained champions from all weight classes — including Sonya Lamonakis, Julio Cesar Green and Vivian Harris.

He’s currently working with a 64-year-old woman — “a real fighter,” he says — whom he finds “inspiring.”

During a session, Blackmoore helps his clients with drills, footwork, core strength and stamina. He still spars with up-and-coming fighters, but only to a degree. “I don’t go heavy; I need my energy and my strength,” he says.

Back in his boxing days, the Guyana native jogged 10 miles a day. Now, he’s more strategic — and he uses his limitations to his advantage. “Boxing is a sport of rest,” he says. “You have to control your energy supply.

“I have a lot of wisdom in me,” he adds. “Things I didn’t get to do during my time in the final [fight], I can put it in other people,” he says. “So I love it.”

Train with Blackmoore at Gleason’s Gym, sessions: $40/hour, GleasonsGym.com

Marjorie Jaffe, 73 Tamara Beckwith/NY Post

Jaffe has run her own Midtown fitness studio for nearly 40 years — and her clients, who range in age from 60 to 90, have aged alongside her.

“I never thought about getting older,” says the personal trainer, who opened Back in Shape in 1980. “Since then, I’ve been busy as hell and having the time of my life.”

Jaffe specializes in back health, which is vital at any age, although there are specific issues that arise over time. “You have what’s like a jelly donut between each of your vertebrae. As you get older, that jelly disappears and you flatten,” Jaffe says. “Unless you learn how to keep your rib cage lifted, you get a big stomach.”

Her classes and one-on-one sessions incorporate a mix of stretching and strengthening exercises meant to “keep your joints flexible and your muscles strong,” she says.

Jaffe, for one, doesn’t plan on slowing down anytime soon.

“You have your chronological age, but [also] your emotional age or spiritual age or sexual age,” she says. “As long as you keep it going, your chronological age is just a number.”

Flex with Jaffe at Back in Shape, Mondays from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m., $20, MarjorieJaffe.com

Finis Jhung, 81 Brian Zak/NY Post

Despite having his hip replaced in 2017, Jhung continues to teach adult beginner ballet classes at the Ailey Extension in Hell’s Kitchen.

“I’m in perfect health,” Jhung says, even if he no longer does “big jumps.”

The professional ballet dancer has been teaching since 1972, although these days his focus is on amateurs seeking physical and mental stimulation.

“They don’t do things perfectly, but that’s not what they’re looking for,” he says. “They’re starting to work their muscles, they’re starting to improve their balance and they’re learning how to move to music. So it’s almost like a meditation.”

Jhung says that Buddhism helps him stay inspired: “You must keep doing something, and you have to keep inventing,” he says.

That outlook certainly helps him inspire others.

“They like me, because I’m older than they are,” Jhung says. “I’m still able to stand and balance and show them what’s possible.

“Absolute Beginner Ballet” with Jhung on Sundays from noon to 1:30 p.m., $22, AileyExtension.com

Suzanne Barraza, 70 Annie Wermiel/NY Post

Barraza is proud of her age — and the New York Sports Club instructor is not afraid to reveal it to her students.

“I want them to realize … what 70 is,” she says. “You don’t have to look like the thing that’s in your mind.”

Barraza taught herself yoga as a teenager after reading an article in Seventeen magazine. But it wasn’t until her forties that it became her career. Today, she teaches hatha, vinyasa and restorative yoga classes to people of all ages.

“I can’t say that I would ever retire,” Barraza says. “Non-movement is the enemy of the body — that’s how you age rapidly.”

Still, she has adjusted her practice somewhat now that she’s at risk for glaucoma and has low blood pressure.

“[My doctors] told me, ‘Please don’t do the head stand, please don’t do the shoulder stand,’” she says. “But I still sneak one in once in a while.”

But ultimately, she says, yoga is an emotional workout just as much as it is a physical one — “just going there and finding out what kind of joy can we have each day,” she says.

Vinyasa yoga with Barraza, Wednesdays at 8:15 to 9:15 p.m., New York Sports Club Third Avenue at 91st Street, $25, NewYorkSportsClubs.com

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