‘I feel more alive’: Elderly people turn to parkour

‘I feel more alive’: Elderly people turn to parkour


CONFIDENCE BOOSTER:
’After parkour … you dare to do a lot of things that you think only young people can do,’ a 67-year-old parkour enthusiast said

In a corner of suburban Singapore, Betty Boon vaults a guardrail, crawls underneath a slide, executes forward shoulder rolls and scales a steep slope, finishing the course to applause.

“Good job,” the 69-year-old’s coach cheers.

This is “geriatric parkour,” where about 20 retirees learned to tackle a series of relatively demanding exercises, building their agility and enjoying a sense of camaraderie.

Photo: AFP

Boon, an upbeat grandmother, said learning parkour has aided her confidence and independence as she ages.

“When you’re weak, you will be dependent on someone,” she said after sweating it out with her parkour classmates in suburban Toa Payoh, under the shadow of government-built apartment blocks.

“I feel more alive, it’s a whole new world,” she added.

Photo: AFP

The discipline has gained a devoted following of senior citizens in the city-state, which is among the world’s fastest-aging countries.

Singapore is projected to become a “super-aged” nation this year, meaning the proportion of residents aged 65 or above exceeds 21 percent.

By 2030, one in four Singaporeans would be aged 65 or above, according to the health ministry.



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