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Tips on how to stay young!
(unknown source)
Researchers have
found that people who generally live longer do so partly because of good
habits. Here, Dr Vernon Coleman and others provide some of the following
good habits for longevity.
1. Laugh & have fun,
don't be gloomy.
2. Let bygones be bygones.
Dwelling on the past inflicts unnecessary stress.
3. Early to bed, early to rise, is healthy & wise.
4. Stay lean, being just 30% overweight is not healthy.
5. Keep learning,
reading & socializing
- an alert & active mind keeps brain cells healthy.
6. Keep working,
doing something you like. Don't retire. It slows down
your body.
7. Reduce stress by working out in a gym.
Or taking
walks.
8. Too many pills ruin your body. Take just what you need.
9. Constantly alternating between weight gain & loss is not
healthy.
10. Exercise,
quit smoking
& eat less fatty foods.
Giving oxygen to those tired blood cells helps you live
longer.
11. Do something to enjoy your life! Go camping, hiking, biking,
dancing.
Anything that makes your heart and body move.
12. Take care of your body, it will take care of you.
HOW TO STAY
YOUNG
(George Carlin)
1. Throw out nonessential numbers. This includes age, weight and height.
Let the doctor worry about them. That is why you pay him/her.
2. Keep only cheerful friends. The grouches pull you down.
3. Keep learning. Learn more about the computer, crafts, gardening,
whatever.
Never let the brain idle. " An idle mind is the devil's workshop."
And the devil's name is Alzheimer's.
4. Enjoy the simple things.
5. Laugh often, long and loud. Laugh until you gasp for breath.
6. The tears happen. Endure, grieve, and move on.
The only person who is with us our entire life, is ourselves.
Be ALIVE while you are alive.
7. Surround yourself with what you love, whether it's family, pets,
keepsakes, music, plants, hobbies, whatever. Your home is your refuge.
8. Cherish your health: If it is good, preserve it. If it is unstable,
improve it.
If it is beyond what you can improve, get help.
9. Don't take guilt trips.
Take a trip to the mall, to the next county, to a foreign country, but NOT
to where the guilt is.
10. Tell the people you love that you love them, at every opportunity.
AND ALWAYS REMEMBER:
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take,
but by the moments that take our breath away.
Life Extension
from Health World
by Leon Chaitow N.D., D.O., M.R.O.
Only one method of life
extension has been proved to be effective, beyond any reasonable doubt,
and that is the use of calorie restriction diets within the framework of
full intake of all other nutrients. Even antioxidant nutrition, for all
its known health benefits (whether through diet or supplementation), has
only been shown to extend life in some species (not in all those tested,
unlike calorie restriction). Reduction in oxidation activity is, in any
case, itself a feature of what happens on calorie restriction diets. Also,
a feature of what happens in calorie restriction is the reduction in
metabolic rate and the consequent lowering of core temperature.
The best way to extend your life, and to improve
the quality of your life in terms of health, is to apply the calorie
restriction diet. This can best be helped by periodic fasting, general
supplementation, antioxidant supplementation, good stress coping skills,
adequate sleep and exercise, access to negative ionization, and the
application of methods such as meditation which encourage slower metabolic
rates. So, just what is on offer in the
marketplace of ways of increasing the human life span?
Hormones, serotonin
inhibitors and the benefits of negative ions
-
Hormone replacement therapy in menopausal women
is an example of the way in which a more youthful appearance, and some
health benefits, can be created by use of medication. Possible
side-effects are apparent in most cases, and none of the hormone
replacement methods currently in use make any claim to extend life,
merely to ensure that what remains of it has less physical impact.
-
L-dopa, a drug used in the treatment of
Parkinson's disease, has been found to have remarkable effects on rats
in terms of starting elderly female animals ovulating again long after
menopause, and in extending the average life spans of mice fed large
amounts of the drug. In humans, when the drug is used therapeutically to
help control the tremor of Parkinson's disease, many older patients
report a return of sexual urges, long since absent. There are many
reported negative side effects when the drug is used in any quantity and
there is no evidence of it having any capacity to enhance longevity,
making its use of similar value to that suggested for synthetic
antioxidants.
Whatever 'youthening'
effect l-dope has is considered by many to relate to its antagonism to
serotonin, a substance used in the body in nervous system activities, but
which tends to accumulate with age. There are theories which relate the
accumulation of serotonin with a 'death hormone' release, and the benefits
of l-dope with its suppression of excessive buildup of levels of
serotonin. Serotonin accumulates more rapidly with age, more rapidly on a
very high protein diet, and also more rapidly when atmospheric conditions
tilt towards an excessive level of positive ions in the air.
-
Another theory has recently emerged which links
decline in the levels of l-dope to a reduction in levels of growth
hormone (Beth-EI, D., 'Rejuvenating effects of natural L-Dopa content in
Vicia Faba Golden Beans' Israel Journal of Anti-Ageing Research (1990)
4:9-11). Researcher Dr Dan Beth-EI of the Institute of Gerontology in
Israel says: 'There is a progressive age-related decline in secretion of
the hormone from the third to the ninth decade of life, and there is a
direct biochemical relationship between this decline and lower levels of
l-dope.' He sees deficiency of l-dope as leading to growth hormone
deficiency, resulting in slowness of movement, and speech, memory and
thinking defects. At the same time bone density and body mass reduces
while cholesterol and skin thickness, as fat deposition, increases (in
other words: aging). One of his main answers to this is the abundant use
of natural l-dope derived from broad (V~cia Faba golden) beans.
'The amino acid l-dope is
present in only one species of plant, and it is easily oxidized. Two or
three days after harvest it declines and is absent by the time the plant
finishes its growing period and starts to get dry.' Two cupfuls (200
grams) of pods and seeds contain around 600 milligrams of 1-dope when
picked fresh. Three days later this is down to 400 milligrams, and by the
time they are marketed 200 grams of beans contain under 90 milligrams.
These beans are now
commonly used as a 'natural' treatment of Parkinsons disease, at which
time youth enhancing/anti-ageing characteristics are said to be evident.
Dr Beth-EI states: 'A constant daily inclusion of natural l-dope in meals
will avoid exhaustion and later atrophy of the human brain dopaminergic
system . . . prolonging the youth period of human life, and at the same
time adding strength and capabilities to many body functions.'
This extremely useful and
apparently valid approach seems to help maintain youth, an outcome which
is highly desirable but which is not the same as the achievement of life
extension.
-
Positive ions, which encourage serotonin build-up
in the nervous system, are increased by various phenomena - such as
electrical storms, strong dry prevailing winds (like the mistral of
southern France), modern synthetic furnishing materials, electrical
equipment such as TV sets and VDUs, very poor ventilation in buildings
(often associated with central heating, air conditioning, very low
humidity and sealed windows), cigarette smoke and other atmospheric
pollution - all of which stimulate production of serotonin (because of
the positive ion levels).
These effects can be
reversed by exposure to negative ions, produced by plants, found in fresh
air of reasonable humidity, and nowadays by special machines (ionizers)
which are inexpensively available from electrical equipment stores.
Negative ions reverse the build-up of serotonin and are therefore a far
safer and more natural way of combating the damage this substance can
cause, when present in excess, than by the use of drugs.
-
Experimentally it has been shown that animals
kept on a low tryptophan diet (tryptophan is the constituent amino acid
of protein from which serotonin is synthesized) have their lives
extended almost as efficiently as those on calorie restriction programs.
Perhaps some of the benefits of calorie restriction is the result of the
relatively low protein (and therefore tryptophan) intake which it
demands
Ana Aslan's Discovery
Romanian physician and researcher Ana Aslan
has been responsible for developing a widely used anti-ageing substance
called GH3. To understand the story behind this, we need to understand the
effects of yet another important substance related to nervous system
activity. We all have present in our systems an enzyme called monoamine
oxidase (MAO), the job of which is to restore to normal levels any
excessive amounts of certain neurohormones which might appear in tissues,
and which are vital to normal function, such as epinephrine (adrenaline).
As we age we build up larger and larger amounts of MAO which means that
the deactivation of vital neurohormones can actually become excessive, to
the point where this affects the nervous system and brain activity, often
leading to depression.
Drugs called MAO inhibitors are prescribed in
such conditions. However, these can, under different circumstances, lead
to a wide range of unpleasant symptoms including both very high and very
low blood pressure swings, breathing and heart difficulties. The
remarkable substance, GH3, developed in Romania, has been found to act as
a safer MAO inhibitor than most other medications, and it is claimed that
it also has a marked anti-ageing potential.
Ana Aslan reports that, in the 1940s, when she
was using the local anaesthetic substance procaine in the treatment of
arthritis and other pain conditions, she began receiving reports from
patients of reduction in depression, and feelings of greater vitality and
youthfulness. Later, on becoming head of a geriatric institute, she found
that she could improve the likelihood of these benefits appearing by
adding a number of additional substances such as benzoic acid and a
potassium compound to the product, calling the result Gerovital H3 or GH3.
This was administered intramuscularly three times weekly, and she claimed
that it produced a number of anti-ageing effects.
Her claims have been variously proved and
disproved over the years (poor results were usual when procaine has been
tested alone without Dr Aslan's additional substances which seem to
improve its usefulness). One of the more important positive investigations
took place at the University of Southern California, where it was
discovered that GH3 was a mild MAO inhibitor. Apparently it was
specifically inhibiting that form of MAO which influenced levels of
particular neurohormones such as norepinephrine, but not others. It
therefore had many of the benefits of MAO inhibitors without their
drawbacks.
Various animal studies indicate a slowing of the
ageing process of cells of animals when GH3 is added to them, but no
evidence as yet exists for life extension, as such, being achieved. More
probably it acts by retarding some of the effects of ageing, which is
enough justification for many people to undergo GH3 therapy, but is really
not sufficient justification for adding it to a life extension program.
Sulfa drugs
A commonly used drug, employed in treatment
of certain bowel disorders, and based on sulphur, has been shown to
markedly increase health, and to have a rejuvenating effect on humans and
animals. Sulfadiazine (salazopirin in Europe) is almost non-toxic, only
producing side-effects in about one person in a thousand, and has been
shown in human geriatric patients to improve hearing, vision, sexual
function, general state of tissues and sense of well-being. There is,
according to John Mann (Secrets of Life Extension, Harbor, 1980) only
limited evidence of actual life extension, though, when used in animal
studies, and the drug probably allowed the animals to live longer than
animals not treated, rather than actually extending their natural life
spans.
Cellular therapy
Swiss doctors have for over half a century
been promoting the use of live cell injections in order to reverse the
ageing process. Cellular therapy is now commonplace throughout Europe. It
involves cells from embryonic animals (commonly sheep) being injected
intramuscularly after being mixed in a saline solution. Additionally,
organs and glands of various animals are injected for specific effects.
The general idea is that the genetic material (DNA and RNA) from these
relatively uncontaminated creatures will transfer to the cells of the
recipient helping them to function more normally as they age. Unlike cells
from adult animals, the relatively immature immune systems of the embryos
results in the cells not being rejected as foreign protein, it is thought.
There are well substantiated claims for a rejuvenating effect from such
methods, although no claims of actual life extension.
A logical development of this idea is gaining
support, that cells should be taken from young people and stored until
later in their life, when they could be injected in this way, acting as a
boost to regeneration and immune functions. While there is little doubt
that people receiving cell therapy seem to feel better, have better memory
and general function, and often look much younger than previously, this
does not constitute life extension.
Nucleic acid therapy
Nucleic acids (RNA and DNA), often derived
from yeasts and sometimes from animal sources, are being used in an
attempt to encourage life extension. This method has been promoted in the
US for many years by Dr Benjamin Frank (Dr Frank's No Aging Diet, B. Frank
and P. Miele, Dell, New York, 1976) with apparent success. It is claimed
that in animal studies a 30 to 50 per cent increase in life span has been
achieved.
Dr Frank says: 'RNA from foods and supplements,
when combined with metabolically associated B vitamins, minerals, amino
acids and sugars, will enter the cell and in so doing will bring about
normal enzyme synthesis and activation' He believes that nucleic acid
therapy encourages the production of ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which
can be synthesized from nucleic acid, and therefore lead to more efficient
cell function, and indeed regeneration. Food sources of nucleic acids are
brewer's yeast, sardines, anchovies, mackerel, lentils and most beans,
chick peas, animal liver, and oysters.
Supplementation with health store purchased
DNA/RNA tablets is suggested by Dr Frank in doses of 100 to 200 milligrams
daily. Benefits, which should emerge within two months on the program, he
says, include fewer wrinkles, improved color, and improved strength and
well-being.
The use of nucleic acid will increase levels of
uric acid, which, as we have seen, is a powerful antioxidant itself, but
which we also know can trigger conditions such as gout when in excess. It
is worth noting that the benefits which are claimed for nucleic acid
therapy are similar to those which calorie restriction would produce
anyway, including improved cell function; and the calorie restriction diet
emphasizes the use of foods rich in nucleic acid.
Whether you should add supplements of RNA/DNA to
the program must be a personal choice. It can do little harm unless uric
acid levels are high, and it might (just) help a calorie restriction diet.
However, it would certainly add to protein intake, and this should be
taken into account when assessing protein levels in relation to your
weight.
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