Ageing Gracefully
Friday, February 15, 2019
age,
ageing,
anti wrinkle,
degenerative,
disease,
high blood pressure,
lifestyle,
lines,
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Ageing Gracefully
For many people, maturity conjures up ghastly
pictures of impairment and predicament. So, panic-stricken, we fork out
thousands of dollars for anti-wrinkle creams, blood-pressure pills and Botox.
Yet straightforward fashion changes and a touch of quaint discipline will get
back decades.
A small however terribly definite vertical line
recently appeared on my prime lip. It's like one among the various you see
round the mouths of long-run smokers, or on ill-tempered those that specific
their annoyance by ofttimes pursing their lips. I'm neither of these,
nonetheless no quantity of anti-wrinkle cream is dislodging it.
'It's hereditary, you know,' my husband opined
as I glared into the mirror. 'You're wasting your money on all those so-called
miracle creams.' He's right. My father has a (slightly deeper) line in exactly
the same spot.
'It's not the lines you should be worrying
about,' persisted the marital sage, 'it's the other stuff you could have
inherited.' And he listed them: high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes,
breast cancer, bowel cancer, cataracts... I had to lie down.
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| Ageing Gracefully |
Age terrifies me. I don't like that my breasts
no longer point perkily skyward when I lie down. I'm frightened of the way my
back stiffens when I've been sitting in front of the TV for a while; and I hate
that I need glasses to read, and a different pair to drive. Ageing is forcing
me to change my lifestyle. I've had to give up running and take up yoga and
swimming instead. I drink less wine and I need more sleep. And every decade
another barrage of tests is suggested by my GP.
Apparently, that's good news. Because science
now knows so much about how we age, it can slow the process - or, at the very
least, make it more comfortable. It has proven that genes affect the way we age
and that some diseases we carry in our DNA.
It also has ample evidence to show that
environmental scavengers strip our minds and bodies of their youthful vigor.
And it has proof of the impact healthier choices have on the speed at which we
age, and how we age.
'We have been taught to think that dysfunction
and degenerative disease are a natural consequence of time passing. They most
certainly are not,' says Leslie Kenton, author of the best-selling Age Power.
Kenton made television history when an
anti-ageing program she designed for the documentary To Age or not to Age
physiologically transformed the lives of participants in medically measurable
ways in just five weeks.
'Scientists William Evans and Irwin Rosenberg
cited that when it comes to how old you are, it is your biological age that is
important, not your chronological age. But, unlike your chronological age,
which cannot be altered, how old you are biologically is fundamentally under
your own control,' Kenton says.
When I was 20, my mother sent me for my first pap
smear; since I turned 40, I've endured two mammograms. Every year, I visit the
dermatologist and have annual cholesterol, glucose, blood pressure,
lung-function and eye tests. My husband has prostate checks and blood tests.
Hypochondriacs?
Given our family history - and our
understanding of the benefits of preventative care - our doctor doesn't think
so. My grandmother died in her early 60s of lung cancer. She had been a heavy
smoker (I never have) but she also had several cancerous skin lesions (from excess
sun exposure) excised during her adult years. My husband's brother died at 43
of mestastised bowel cancer. He was a committed runner, and when stomach pain
persisted he simply ran harder. Had he gone to his doctor when his digestive
discomfort first arose, he might well have beaten the disease.
There is plenty of science-backed evidence to
suggest that simple lifestyle changes, such as regular exercise, a balanced
diet, enough sleep and reduced stress, have a significant impact on age-related
illness; but so does preventative medicine. It's a case of knowing thy enemy
and sharpening your sword as each decade rolls in.
Something as simple as cutting your salt intake
from the average 2-3 teaspoons per day to one can have a marked effect on your
risk of heart disease.
Jennifer was managing director of one of the
top financial and corporate communications companies. At the age of 50, she
gave up 16-hour days to retire to the Nevada desert, where she has improved her
diet and cut down on the many hours she used to spend in front of a computer.
'I have quit stress. I sit far less during the
day, and I am fairly religious about exercising - Pilates or yoga - and I walk
a lot more. My diet changed completely about a year ago when I discovered I had
high cholesterol. I eat far less meat, fat, and other cholesterol-laden or
-inducing foods and I eat loads more grains, seeds, vegetables, salads, fruit
and fish, which is no easy thing in the middle of the Nevada.'
'While it is true that genetic diseases can
shorten life, studies have also shown that how you live and how you eat have
the most powerful influence on whether you actually develop a disorder to which
you have inherited a genetic tendency,' says Kenton. 'The MacArthur Study,
carried out from the mid-80s, showed that heredity is far less important than
environment and lifestyle in determining how, and how fast, we age. And, as we
get older, our genetic inheritance becomes far less important and our lifestyle
factors become far more important.'
In fact, only a small portion of the genetic
information in our cells is expressed. 'Our diet, lifestyle and environment
modify the nature of this information.' The Cancer Association says that 90
percent of cancers are caused by environmental factors, and these include
lifestyle-related factors, which account for up to 40 percent.
Scientists also once believed that the loss of
our brain cells with age was inevitable, and that once lost, there was no
possibility of growing new ones.
'This is not true,' says Kenton. 'Your brain
can grow neurons regardless of your age, so long as your body is functioning
well and is supplied with adequate minerals, vitamins, protein and essential
fatty acids. Loss of mental capacity is the greatest fear most people have
about getting older. Everything you do to protect your body from ageing, you
must do for your brain - but even more so,' she says.
To maintain a youthful brain, implement a
program that combines correct nutrition, vitamin and mineral supplementation,
physical and mental exercise, and adequate relaxation as well as brain
stimulation and cut down on stress. Prolonged stress can actually kill brain
cells.
Believe you have control. Findings from a large
research study showed that those who believed they had greater control over
their physical and cognitive health had better memory and intellectual
functioning as they aged. 'When folks feel they do not have management, they're
likely to be anxious and distressed. Those feelings can interfere with
performance,' says the American Psychological Association.
Give your brain a workout. Engaging in mentally
stimulating activities like reading, aiming to categories or taking part in
musical instruments will improve your psychological feature functioning.
Exercise your body. Exercise prompts new neural
connections in a part of the brain responsible for age-related memory decline.
'We have inherited an albatross. It hangs about
our necks in the form of a widely accepted, negative and highly destructive
view of ageing. Your emotions, your state of mind and your unconscious
assumptions can influence both your susceptibility to illness and the rate at
which you age,' says Kenton.
The notion that age degeneration - including
the loss of good looks and the onset of long-term illnesses such as arthritis,
coronary heart disease and cancer - is a normal experience of growing older is
simply untrue.
These conditions develop primarily as a result
of eating foods that the body has not been genetically programmed to deal with,
the build-up of toxicity in the body over long periods, lack of physical
exercise or crash dieting, which shrinks lean body mass.

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