James Burke
Being a grandpa is more fun than working
So I visited the assisted care home where my mom stays, and I walked away with a ton of questions last week.
One of mom's new friends is ten years her senior. And at 91 years old, the little gal prances around there like a spring fawn. She even pushes mom (who happens to outweigh her by 2:1) around in the wheel chair.
I happened to watch two elderly ladies out on the veranda one afternoon, and after a bit of conversation they both stood up and moved their discussion indoors. The elder of the two used a rolling walker, but the younger trailed along without any hint of hesitation. Mom turned to me and said that the pair was mother and daughter...and that the mom was 102 years old. As the daughter trotted on out to her car, I mentally crunched some numbers and figured her to be around 80.
So then, I either want to know what's in the water they've been drinking...or what else they're doing right. I know genetics has a lot to do with it, but so does epigenetics (the ability for genes to express themselves differently, primarily the result of a healthy lifestyle).
And then there's "functional aging", which is sort of like training for the Olympics but only better. Instead of competing for a gold medal, you're awarded good, or perhaps better than average health throughout the golden years.
I'm just curious if this is on anybody else's radar?
JB
One of mom's new friends is ten years her senior. And at 91 years old, the little gal prances around there like a spring fawn. She even pushes mom (who happens to outweigh her by 2:1) around in the wheel chair.
I happened to watch two elderly ladies out on the veranda one afternoon, and after a bit of conversation they both stood up and moved their discussion indoors. The elder of the two used a rolling walker, but the younger trailed along without any hint of hesitation. Mom turned to me and said that the pair was mother and daughter...and that the mom was 102 years old. As the daughter trotted on out to her car, I mentally crunched some numbers and figured her to be around 80.
So then, I either want to know what's in the water they've been drinking...or what else they're doing right. I know genetics has a lot to do with it, but so does epigenetics (the ability for genes to express themselves differently, primarily the result of a healthy lifestyle).
And then there's "functional aging", which is sort of like training for the Olympics but only better. Instead of competing for a gold medal, you're awarded good, or perhaps better than average health throughout the golden years.
I'm just curious if this is on anybody else's radar?
JB