Technology advancements over the last two decades have enabled vastly more sophisticated research into cellular growth and metabolism. This has led to an increasingly louder buzz on social media as aging baby boomers contemplate their future longevity and healthspan.

Healthspan refers to the period of life spent in good health, free from chronic disease and disabilities associated with aging. Longevity or lifespan refers to the total number of years an individual lives. A google search for healthspan yields more than 5 million hits, while a similar search for longevity yields less than a million.

The National Institute of Health Medicine database of published scientific research lists over a hundred thousand articles on lifespan. In contrast, it lists only a bit more than two percent of that number for published studies on healthspan. Public interest is vastly greater than current knowledge.

Boomers have directly experienced the disabilities, disease and suffering of their own parents and older relatives who lived within the century old paradigm and practices of traditionally trained physicians. As a result of their direct experience, baby boomers want to enjoy the latter stages of their lives in a vastly greater state of good health than their older relatives.

Guidance for achievement of this aspirational goal is increasingly available. It relies on fundamental principles gleaned from published scientific research and enlightened healthcare practitioners. These principles fall into four practical baskets: first, movement and exercise; second, food and diet; third, supplements and nutraceuticals; and fourth, stress management and meditation.

There are knowledgeable and well publicized thought leaders in each of these spaces. Some of them share links to the published research that guides the information they report in their books, videos and podcasts.

Movement and Exercise

There is universal agreement that movement and resistance training exercises are likely the most important ingredient to enable better health during the aging process. The two most vocal exercise proponents are Peter Attia MD and Rhonda Patrick PhD, but there is a difference in their points of view. Dr. Attia promotes the benefits of Zone 2 exercise training. Dr. Patrick emphasizes the importance of vigorous exercise using higher intensity intervals interspersed with brief recovery periods.

Identification of the key research supporting Dr. Attia’s view in his book, Outlive, is not so easily accomplished. In contrast, Dr. Patrick clearly shares links and excerpts to the published research she relies on for her clearly stated views.

The takeaway from recognized experts, as well as from US government recommendations, is the following:

These guidelines promote the vitality and growth of cellular mitochondria. These fundamental cellular components are the powerhouses that produce ATP, the primary fuel for muscles and cellular metabolism. The net result of vigorous movement is that more energy becomes available for the cellular work that slows the aging process.

Food and Diet

Michael Greger MD is the recognized expert who curates voluminous research on diet, disease and aging through his free noncommercial website: NutritionFacts.org. His latest book, How Not To Age, includes links to many thousands of published scientific articles related to the aging process, the hallmarks of aging, and dietary recommendations to slow down the aging process.

Supplements and Nutraceuticals

David Sinclair PhD created quite a buzz with his book Lifespan and related videosHis book documents the scientific background for his information theory of aging. Dr. Sinclair explains how each person’s genes are fixed by the twenty-three chromosomes inherited from each parent. He proposes, however, that these genes can literally be turned on and off by a set of proteins in the epigenome surrounding them, called sirtuinsHe and other innovative scientists study the variables that accomplish this.

Dr. Sinclair promotes the view that nutraceuticals are one of the critical factors for slowing the aging process, along with diet, caloric restriction and exercise. The key nutraceuticals he and his scientific colleagues study tend to be precursors of NAD+, a key molecule that research suggests is involved in mitigating cellular aging.

Stress Management and Meditative Awareness

The inherent mammalian fight or flight response was first identified by Hans Selye MD many decades ago. Dr. Selye discovered a common pattern of unhealthy physiological responses across a wide variety of species when they were subjected to unpleasant harmful conditions. He established the groundbreaking recognition that stress contributes to ill health and disease.

The scientific investigation of stress eventually led American psychologists to study highly experienced Buddhist meditators. Their objective was to understand how to better control bodily responses that were previously believed to be involuntary and not subject to conscious control. This research evolved into establishing the beneficial impact of stress management, and contributed to the investigation of more popularized meditation techniques.

The Beatles popularized transcendental meditation in the 1960’s, but that movement has passed. The buzz now tends to be around mindfulness meditation. This simple and accessible approach involves sitting quietly and observing the breath. When thoughts arise, the practitioner is advised to let the thought go and return their attention and awareness to their breath. This practice enables attainment of a more complete state of tranquility. Standard mindfulness training, however, seems to stop at the point of relaxation.

It’s important to additionally recognize it is possible to go beyond relaxation and enter a temporarily deeper state. This can enable insights to surface in perceptual awareness about the causes of past or current suffering. These insights can be likened to the emergence of personal wisdom. This final stage of adult development cultivates the resolution of persistent problems and supports progress toward important life goals.

Possibly the most important learning
enabling the reduction of one’s personal suffering
is how to extend healthy living during the aging process.

The Beneficial Takeaway

The key strategic takeaway from these four richly developing content areas is the aging process is not controlled by our fixed genes. Instead, combining these four approaches enables the delightful surprise that, no matter how old one is, we can purposefully bolster our healthspan as we age. This means:

Our personal research, conscious decisions and purposeful action are major determinants of our health. This three legged stool can become a stable basis for a delightful journey of discovery. May it be so for all who are awakening to this fresh version of healthful reality. And may they who have awakened, share their journey with others.

🙏💕🌎

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