Living to 100: Lessons in Living to Your Maximum Potential at Any Age
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As featured in Time, on Good Morning America, National Public Radio, and Dateline, life lessons based on the landmark Harvard Medical School New England Centenarian Study. There are currently more than 50,000 centenarians in the U.S., almost three times the number there were in 1980. By the year 2030, the over-65 population will have grown at more than twice the rate of the general population growth. Through their research and study of "the oldest old" through the New England Centenarian Study (NECS), Drs. Perls and Silver see todays centenarians as forerunners of the most significant social trend of the new millennium: a greatly extended life span for millions of people; ninth and tenth decades of life filled with opportunity, lucidity, mobility, and good health. Drawing on the cutting-edge results of the NECS, Living to Be 100 sets forth the latest findings on aging, debunks popular myths, and portrays the lives of centenarians in an array of surprising richness and diversity: 101-year-old Alfred Benedetti bowls twice a week; Mrs. Strandel still runs her household at 100, and cooks for her 70-year-old son and daughter; 101-year-old former MIT professor Dirk Struik has just published an article on mathematics; Anna Morgan, 100, gives her daughter marital advice.
Filled with personal profiles, informational sidebars, and quizzes, Living to Be 100 presents a groundbreaking, and hopeful vision of longevity -- soon to be a reality for more of us than ever before-- based on the only current medical and psychological study of the oldest old. |
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| 01-01-08 | 2 | (NA) |
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A good book. Not particularly an interesting read, but it does have some good information in it. I was introduced to it by a show, but it was over rated.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-18 06:17:05 EST)
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| 05-31-04 | 5 | 7\7 |
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Actually, the idea of living to 100 never seemed appealing to me -- until I read about these active, vital centenarians. Like the nun's study (Aging with Grace), this is a hopeful, optimistic book. Some make it to 100 -- others don't. But following the advice in this book will give you the best possible chance of making it with a sound mind and sound body.
A fun read, a "feel-good" book. Phyllis Staff, Ph.D. author, "How to Find Great Senior Housing" and "128 Ways to Prevent Alzheimer's and Other Dementias" (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-02 09:19:19 EST)
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| 05-31-04 | 5 | 5\5 |
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Actually, the idea of living to 100 never seemed appealing to me -- until I read about these active, vital centenarians. Like the nun's study (Aging with Grace), this is a hopeful, optimistic book. Some make it to 100 -- others don't. But following the advice in this book will give you the best possible chance of making it with a sound mind and sound body.
A fun read, a "feel-good" book. (Review Data Last Updated: 2006-02-18 12:45:19 EST)
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| 08-03-03 | 5 | 7\8 |
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This book is fascinating due, in part, to the many anecdotes about actual centenarians. The sub-title, Living to your maximum potential at any age, is exactly what this book is about. While genes, lifestyle choices, diet, activity, etc, certainly can contribute to living to 100, the author shows that there is no sure-fire way to become a centenarian, but we all can take a lesson from those who have made it that far--live life and live it well. A very informative and fun read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-06 16:53:08 EST)
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| 07-12-01 | 4 | 9\11 |
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This book taught me that living long is a function of many factors, namely one's physical, social, mental, and spiritual health. Some of the factors are totally out of our control such as the genes we are born with and the time period and location we are born into. Also, I learned that longevity and quality of life go hand in hand. For example, a person who smokes heavily all their life not only will die sooner but suffer less enjoyable health in the mean time. This book provides a profound understanding of the factors that determine our well-being and makes a great guide to improving our well-being. I also found it engaging to read. Few of us can make it to 100 or beyond, but by emulating those who have, we can live longer, better lives. It must be nice to live to see your great-grandchildren graduate college and get married and everything.
Also recommended: "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" by Dr. Stephen Covey, also a great guidebook for improvement. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-06 16:53:08 EST)
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| 06-21-00 | 5 | 15\16 |
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This was easily one of the best books I've ever read. The best part was this: there are no magic cures, no miracle herbs, no eternal elixers to living to a "ripe old age." This book paints a realistic picture of aging, namely: how old you lives will depend mostly on genetics, and the best we can do is maximize our genetic potential by doing a few smart, common-sense things. And then the authors give us those things. I have changed my life to incorporate what I can to maximize my potential, and I'll go from there. What else could you ask for?
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-06 16:53:08 EST)
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| 06-20-00 | 5 | 15\16 |
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This was easily one of the best books I've ever read. The best part was this: there are no magic cures, no miracle herbs, no eternal elixers to living to a "ripe old age." This book paints a realistic picture of aging, namely: how old you lives will depend mostly on genetics, and the best we can do is maximize our genetic potential by doing a few smart, common-sense things. And then the authors give us those things. I have changed my life to incorporate what I can to maximize my potential, and I'll go from there. What else could you ask for?
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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| 07-13-99 | 5 | 18\22 |
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Jason Taylor is looking for some miracle diet to get him to 100 and it sounds like 150. If he read more than 10 pages of Living to 100 he would realize that there is no miracle diet (SURPRISE!). He proposes that they must have had an amazing diet of some sort to get to 100... when in fact what these authors/real scientists indicate is that genes play a very important role in getting to 100. Diet plays a key role for the majority of us who don't have the genes and therefore can't indulge. For us then some common sense guidelines and suggestions about antioxidant vitamins, exercise etc are outlined in the book.
I thought the book was incredibly well written, full of thought-provoking new ideas about aging and extremely credible. Jason Taylor seems to work for NASA... he's out in space on this one to! (Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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| 07-03-99 | 1 | 36\65 |
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Book review of "Living to 100: Lessons in Living to Your Maximum Potential Age"
When, less than an hour ago, this book arrived, I was excited because it's authors interviewed over 100 centenarians to find out what they did to make it that far. So I had hoped there would be something truly useful: information about what foods they ate. You see, if you take a large enough sample of objects in which each object's properties is a smooth function of several random variables, the variables upon which each object's properties primarily depend can be easily picked out just by looking at just the similarities between the extreme objects. In English: each extremely long lived person must have been on a longevity diet, of had longevity genes, _and_ of lived a longevity lifestyle. I can't change my genes, don't want to change my personality/driving habits, and already think I know nearly everything about exercise, so the one thing I wanted to learn from this book was what type of diets the centenarians ate. Unfortunately, it wasn't in this book. Instead, there are lots of pictures of old people doing things like playing golf. I learned nothing new. The only thing I could find was on page 59: "One of our centenarians had been eating bacon and three eggs every day for breakfast for 15 years. Had he survived so long in spite of or because of this diet? Other centenarians swore by dietary concoctions they had invented, such as James Hanlon's breakfast combination of oatmeal, olive oil, raisins, apples, and other fruits. There was no rhyme or reason to the results we saw." But the real truth is that these authors simply were too narrow-minded and lazy to ask questions about what the centenarians used to eat. They didn't obtain the relevant data but formed a conclusion anyways. A classic example of bad science that looks good on paper. What is most pathetic is that they actually did perform a limited survey using an inappropriate questionnaire which only asked what the centenarians are eating right now. About the questionnaire, they write (on page 58), "After looking at responses from only 20 centenarians, it was clear that studying self-reported diet would not prove fruitful for several reasons. In the first place, we were interested in the conditions that allowed people to live to 100---what they were doing once they arrived at that age was often a different story. Many of our subjects had lost their robust appetites, and were no longer consuming full diets. We found a number of centenarians with deficiencies in important nutrients. They had to some extent migrated away from their lifelong dietary habits, and those potentially health-sustaining practices were the ones that interested us." I agree with them that the questionnaire they used was stupid. But to then say that lifespan is independent of diet is in blatant contradiction with the scientific method. (In fact the above supports the theory of calorie restriction.) It's like saying that because it is relatively difficult in studies about heart disease to measure the saturated fat to poly-unsaturated fat ratio in diets that heart disease is not a function of it. Their attitude is summed up on page 118 in this blatantly ridiculous paragraph: "Newspapers and magazines are full of fountain of youth prescriptions: hormones, extracts of ginkgo and garlic, yogurt. Fruit flies don't take any of these nostrums. Their variation in longevity did not appear to be linked to differences in diet or environment." Regardless of his opinions on calorie restriction, I think Doug Skrecky (along with 100's of others) has shown that the opposite is true. If you are 60 and want to feel inspired about being active while old, read this book. You can have my copy. If, on the other hand, you hate fluff, don't waste your time with this book. Jason A. Taylor, Ph.D. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-06 16:53:08 EST)
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| 07-02-99 | 1 | 31\58 |
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Book review of "Living to 100: Lessons in Living to Your Maximum Potential Age"
When, less than an hour ago, this book arrived, I was excited because it's authors interviewed over 100 centenarians to find out what they did to make it that far. So I had hoped there would be something truly useful: information about what foods they ate. You see, if you take a large enough sample of objects in which each object's properties is a smooth function of several random variables, the variables upon which each object's properties primarily depend can be easily picked out just by looking at just the similarities between the extreme objects. In English: each extremely long lived person must have been on a longevity diet, of had longevity genes, _and_ of lived a longevity lifestyle. I can't change my genes, don't want to change my personality/driving habits, and already think I know nearly everything about exercise, so the one thing I wanted to learn from this book was what type of diets the centenarians ate. Unfortunately, it wasn't in this book. Instead, there are lots of pictures of old people doing things like playing golf. I learned nothing new. The only thing I could find was on page 59: "One of our centenarians had been eating bacon and three eggs every day for breakfast for 15 years. Had he survived so long in spite of or because of this diet? Other centenarians swore by dietary concoctions they had invented, such as James Hanlon's breakfast combination of oatmeal, olive oil, raisins, apples, and other fruits. There was no rhyme or reason to the results we saw." But the real truth is that these authors simply were too narrow-minded and lazy to ask questions about what the centenarians used to eat. They didn't obtain the relevant data but formed a conclusion anyways. A classic example of bad science that looks good on paper. What is most pathetic is that they actually did perform a limited survey using an inappropriate questionnaire which only asked what the centenarians are eating right now. About the questionnaire, they write (on page 58), "After looking at responses from only 20 centenarians, it was clear that studying self-reported diet would not prove fruitful for several reasons. In the first place, we were interested in the conditions that allowed people to live to 100---what they were doing once they arrived at that age was often a different story. Many of our subjects had lost their robust appetites, and were no longer consuming full diets. We found a number of centenarians with deficiencies in important nutrients. They had to some extent migrated away from their lifelong dietary habits, and those potentially health-sustaining practices were the ones that interested us." I agree with them that the questionnaire they used was stupid. But to then say that lifespan is independent of diet is in blatant contradiction with the scientific method. (In fact the above supports the theory of calorie restriction.) It's like saying that because it is relatively difficult in studies about heart disease to measure the saturated fat to poly-unsaturated fat ratio in diets that heart disease is not a function of it. Their attitude is summed up on page 118 in this blatantly ridiculous paragraph: "Newspapers and magazines are full of fountain of youth prescriptions: hormones, extracts of ginkgo and garlic, yogurt. Fruit flies don't take any of these nostrums. Their variation in longevity did not appear to be linked to differences in diet or environment." Regardless of his opinions on calorie restriction, I think Doug Skrecky (along with 100's of others) has shown that the opposite is true. If you are 60 and want to feel inspired about being active while old, read this book. You can have my copy. If, on the other hand, you hate fluff, don't waste your time with this book. Jason A. Taylor, Ph.D. (Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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| 05-31-99 | 5 | 2\2 |
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Their appearance on the Today Show sparked my interest so I previewed it as a potential gift for my dad. I can't praise this book enough. It is well written, very interesting and most importantly it provides just the morale boost my dad needs. I bought 2 more copies... one for my wife's folks and one for me.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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| 05-22-99 | 5 | 4\4 |
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Very interesting book with a very positive, yet realistic, message to give about aging. Not all of may be able to or want to live to 100, but by practicing good health habits and a healthy attitude we can improve the quality of our old age rather than feeling it's all up to fate. I especially enjoyed the anecdotes about the centenarians the authors studied, and their varied experiences in their younger years -- which to us now are historical times!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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| 05-17-99 | 5 | 3\3 |
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Finally, a realistic and empowering approach to aging --it's opportunities and possibilities. As an older person, I found myself saying "YES!" every page. These authors have nailed it on the head.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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| 05-10-99 | 5 | 3\3 |
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This is the first scientifically based book, let alone about aging, that I have not been able to put down from start to finish! The authors have made this a "page turner", using these incredible hundred year olds to guide us through startling revelations about the wonders of aging and how all of us can make aging an opportunity, not a curse... This book deserves a Pulitzer.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-01 13:48:14 EST)
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