The latest (November) issue of the AARP Bulletin, has now amped up for its readers the terrific benefits of being a "Super ager":
This is an elder person who fairly well beats all the 'old age' assumptions to a pulp. In the intro, we read for example:
"A small percentage of overachievers in their 80s and 90s have the memory, thinking skills, and zest for life of people decades younger – and researchers are determined to find out how and why. What they’re finding is fascinating: a range of physical, mental and spiritual attributes that can add up to extraordinary longevity, resilience and happiness – aging as we all want it to be."
In a way it follows on from an earlier piece in February that made regular media headlines, e.g.
Want to live to be 100? Here’s what experts recommend
The AARP piece is loaded with terrific advice which might be of interest to anyone who aspires to also live to 100+, including six markers to live to 100 or more:
(i) Stay active, each day. Build small exercises into every day activities from regular walking to just climbing up and down stairs to doing certain chores, e.g. vacuuming.
(ii) Cognitive reserve: Some brains have: "an added power that allows them to continue deep functioning despite the presence of disease or cognitive decline." These are largely the brains of super agers.
(iii) Life achievement: "People with higher levels of education or career attainment tend to have greater cognitive reserve." So even if you lack the genetic basis you can acquire the greater cognitive reserve with more education and career achievement.
(iv) Prioritizing sleep: Super agers do not stay up all hours looking at screens or texting, they prioritize their sleep and get 7-9 hours each night.
(v) Lifestyle markers: Healthy aging researchers have identified four common lifestyle habits:
"A physically and intellectually active lifestyle.
The willingness or ability to constantly challenge oneself.
An active social life and a wide social network.
Moderation in all indulgences but allowing for the occasional glass of wine, beer or savoring ice cream or dark chocolate."
(vi) Super agers protect their vision and hearing: Both cataract surgery (for sight) and hearing aids (for hearing) "showed cognitive and memory losses from 20 to 48 percent lower" than for those who did not have such assistance.
Unmentioned is how much the medical treatments, tests etc. to preserve health advantage cost. For example, the cataract surgeries for both of us have totaled well over $25,000 which Medicare - along with our supplemental insurance - has paid for. Meanwhile, Medicare is forecast to become insolvent in 3 years or less, given how Medicare Advantage is bleeding it dry, e.g.
Here is the Truth: Medicare Advantage Is Neither Medicare Nor an Advantage
We further learn that based on a 2022 estimate by the United Nations, there are 593,000 centenarians around the world now and "it's a fast-growing age group". The United Nations projects there will be 3.7 million centenarians alive by 2050. Complicates retirement? You better believe it. Even if most of these high elder millions remain relatively healthy they will still have to deal with arthritis, mobility issues, and cancers that accompany old age. They will need home care and assistance. More critically many will need to find a way to pay for whatever support resources they need. Get jobs and work for support? That's fantasy dreaming.
But let's be clear: This lady is the exception and not the rule, similar to one Orville Rogers (another centenarian) featured in a MONEY magazine issue from November, 2018, e.g.
"At just 2 percent inflation the gallon of milk that cost you $3.75 today will cost you $6.79 in 30 years."
That means a 65 year old today will need to sock away at least $5 million in a nest egg to be able to live to at least 100 years - and that assumes only one nursing home stay (or nursing assistance at home) of no more than 6 months. And that is one time over the balance of her life, i.e. duration of 35 years.
How will the super elderly then maintain financial security and their implied independence until they finally shuffle this mortal coil? These are pertinent questions given Social Security will reduce benefits 25% by 2035 and Medicare faces insolvency by 2026 - meaning many seniors will face having to enter privatized plans. Neither of the articles in PARADE, or MONEY or an earlier one in TIME (March, 2015)e.g.
Addresses any of these matters, choosing to nibble around the edges with impractical baloney, babble and false hope i.e. "corporations will have to change" - which is not a plan. WHO is going to make them change? A 105 year old granny who likes to do sprints? Give me a break.
TIME - in its own (2015) take- wrongly assumes in its prologue that: "Everyone wants to live longer", but that desire comes with caveats galore for rational folks . For example, why would anyone today, at say age 67 or 68, want to live to even 100 when numerous "climate hells" are set to be unleashed especially as greenhouse warming hits numerous tipping points? After all we've already beheld all -time temperature records broken this year, e.g.
If you think the climate hiccups being experienced now - including the hottest year ever- are a big deal, stay tuned for the first year of no seasons and ensuing heat waves lasting 90-120 days with mean temperatures 100-110F. Even before then, say by 2025-2030 we will likely see electrical blackouts over extended periods, water shutdowns (or breakdowns of decaying urban water delivery systems, since we haven't done shit to repair them) and even power grids collapsing from excess demand - with tens of millions trying to "stay cool", keeping thermostats at 81F.
Fortunately, many of us remain rationally grounded. And while "super aging" confers definite advantages - especially in crushing (or delaying) the specter of cognitive decline - it is not a panacea for living to 100 or even past it. Bottom line: Humans were never meant to live that long, and certainly not in a world already overpopulated with 8.2 billion - most of whom can't get decent living quarters or food.
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