This 122 Year Old Woman Has The Most Important Secret To A Life Of Longevity

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I though some of you would enjoy this ... cheersgif

<header class="post-header" style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); font-family: 'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 21px;">This 122 Year Old Woman Has The Most Important Secret To A Life Of Longevity

<time class="post-date" datetime="2014-05-02T01:41:23+00:00">May 2, 2014</time> by Dr. Bruce King.




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The primary determinant of health for the average person is thought. Not genetics, not exercise or nutrition, but the mind. This has been shown over and over again by the scientific fields of psychoneuroimmunology, psychoneurocardiology, psychoneuroendocrinology, not to mention cancer research and all the various psychosomatic disorders that have been studied.

If you doubt that thought affects health then I will be happy to have a truckload of research evidence dumped at your doorstep (at your expense) that you can take the next few years perusing. On second thought, why don’t I just relate a story.The oldest documented person that ever lived was a French woman named Jeanne Calment who made it to 122 years, 164 days on this earth.What was her secret? According to French researcher Jean-Marie Robine, “She never did anything special to stay in good health.”Jeanne Calment smoked cigarettes (started at age 21), drank port wine and ate a couple of pounds of chocolate sweets a week until she was 119 years old.She credited her longevity to laughing a lot and not getting stressed out.

She is quoted as saying “If you can’t do anything about it, don’t worry about it.”(1) It probably didn’t hurt that her life circumstances — born into wealth and married wealth — enabled a life of ease and comfort; in other words, no mental stress.Let’s contrast this with someone I knew personally that lived a very healthful lifestyle, ate right, exercised and could be described as being disgustingly healthy. He dropped dead of a heart attack at age 61. Funny enough, this didn’t surprise me because I knew this person had a type “A” personality. I also recall never having seen him laugh; not even once.Personal stories are all well and good but what does the research say about thought and the major causes of death — heart disease and cancer?

The studies on thought and cardiac disease are so well known there is really no point in covering it, but what about cancer?According to the Journal of Psychosomatic Research, “Extreme suppression of anger was the most commonly identified characteristic of 160 breast cancer patients.” (2)In other research: “Extremely low anger scores have been noted in numerous studies of patients with cancer. Such low scores suggest suppression, repression, or restraint of anger. There is evidence to show that suppressed anger can be a precursor to the development of cancer, and also a factor in its progression after diagnosis.” (3)In my opinion, the most interesting thing in this article is that a woman that lived 122 years smoked cigarettes for 100 years without any ill effect. Why didn’t smoking lead her to an early grave? I would say, “Because thought is more important than lifestyle.”

http://www.collective-evolution.com...most-important-secret-to-a-life-of-longevity/
 

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someone pay one of these old timers to go public and say the secret to longevity is daily blowjobs
 

Scottcarter was caught making out with Caitlin Jen
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someone pay one of these old timers to go public and say the secret to longevity is daily blowjobs

Betall and defying should live forever with the amount of time they spend together.
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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not getting stressed out is very important, but I'm not sure it outweighs genetics when considering the worldwide population
 

Scottcarter was caught making out with Caitlin Jen
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not getting stressed out is very important, but I'm not sure it outweighs genetics when considering the worldwide population

Agree. Seems like stress just eats people up. I saw two of my coworkers have had heart attacks that are younger than me. One was overweight, but they were both stressed a lot.
 

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It's all genetics man. Everybody on my mother's side of the family lived well into their 90's. None died early, including her parents and 7 brothers and sisters. And lets just say that some of them had some very questionable lifestyles and weren't exactly the picture of health. But it didn't make any difference. Unfortunately everybody on my dad's side of the family died young, or relatively young. So I have no idea which side I inherited. If I stop posting you'll know...
 

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it's not 100% genetics.




a study aimed to find the characteristics of those that hit the century mark (sorry, no link to it, going off memory)- diet, weight stability, sleep (they averaged 7.5 hrs), a positive outlook, genetics.



here's another article;


http://www.bumc.bu.edu/centenarian/overview/


However, the centenarians we have studied do have a number of characteristics in common:
  • Few centenarians are obese. In the case of men, they are nearly always lean.
  • Substantial smoking history is rare.
  • A preliminary study suggests that centenarians are better able to handle stress than the majority of people.
  • Our finding that some centenarians (~15%) had no significant changes in their thinking abilities disproved the expectation by many that all centenarians would be demented.[SUP]4[/SUP] We also discovered that Alzheimer’s Disease was not inevitable. Some centenarians had very healthy appearing brains with neuropathological study (we call these gold standards of disease-free aging).[SUP]5[/SUP]
  • Many centenarian women have a history of bearing children after the age of 35 years and even 40 years. From our studies, a woman who naturally has a child after the age of 40 has a 4 times greater chance of living to 100 compared to women who do not.[SUP]6[/SUP] It is probably not the act of bearing a child in one’s forties that promotes long life, but rather, doing so may be an indicator that the woman’s reproductive system is aging slowly and that the rest of her body is as well. Such slow aging and the avoidance or delay of diseases that adversely impact reproduction would bode well for the woman’s subsequent ability to achieve very old age.
  • At least 50% of centenarians have first-degree relatives and/or grandparents who also achieve very old age, and many have exceptionally old siblings. Male siblings of centenarians have an 17 times greater chance than other men born around the same time of reaching age 100 years and female siblings have an 8½ greater chance than other females also born around the same time of achieving age 100.[SUP]7[/SUP]
  • Many of the children of centenarians (age range of 65 to 82 years) appear to be following in their parents’ footsteps with marked delays in cardiovascular disease, diabetes and overall mortality.[SUP]8[/SUP]
  • Some families demonstrate incredible clustering for exceptional longevity that cannot be due to chance and must be due to familial factors that members of these families have in common.[SUP]9[/SUP]
  • Based upon standardized personality testing, the offspring of centenarians, compared to population norms, score low in neuroticism and high in extraversion.[SUP]10[/SUP]
  • Genetic variation plays a very strong role in exceptional longevity (see below)
 

She is either funnin' or bunnin' or else I am runn
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I guess the only factor that would be strange is to outlive your kids. Maybe even your grandkids.
 

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I am gonna start smoking, drinking and eating chocolate!


kramer-smoking-and-drinking-o.gif
 

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