Dan Buettner: How to live to be 100+

671,748 views ・ 2010-01-06

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00:16
Something called the Danish Twin Study
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established that only about 10 percent
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of how long the average person lives,
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within certain biological limits, is dictated by our genes.
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The other 90 percent is dictated by our lifestyle.
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So the premise of Blue Zones: if we can find the
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optimal lifestyle of longevity
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we can come up with a de facto formula
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for longevity.
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But if you ask the average American what the optimal formula
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of longevity is, they probably couldn't tell you.
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They've probably heard of the South Beach Diet, or the Atkins Diet.
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You have the USDA food pyramid.
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There is what Oprah tells us.
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There is what Doctor Oz tells us.
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The fact of the matter is there is a lot of confusion
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around what really helps us live longer better.
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Should you be running marathons or doing yoga?
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Should you eat organic meats
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or should you be eating tofu?
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When it comes to supplements, should you be taking them?
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How about these hormones or resveratrol?
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And does purpose play into it?
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Spirituality? And how about how we socialize?
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Well, our approach to finding longevity
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was to team up with National Geographic,
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and the National Institute on Aging,
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to find the four demographically confirmed areas
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that are geographically defined.
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And then bring a team of experts in there
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to methodically go through exactly what these people do,
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to distill down the cross-cultural distillation.
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And at the end of this I'm going to tell you what that distillation is.
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But first I'd like to debunk some common myths
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when it comes to longevity.
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And the first myth is if you try really hard
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you can live to be 100.
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False.
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The problem is, only about one out of 5,000 people
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in America live to be 100.
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Your chances are very low.
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Even though it's the fastest growing demographic in America,
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it's hard to reach 100.
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The problem is
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that we're not programmed for longevity.
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We are programmed for something called
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procreative success.
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I love that word.
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It reminds me of my college days.
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Biologists term procreative success to mean
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the age where you have children
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and then another generation, the age when your children have children.
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After that the effect of evolution
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completely dissipates.
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If you're a mammal, if you're a rat
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or an elephant, or a human, in between, it's the same story.
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So to make it to age 100, you not only have to have
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had a very good lifestyle, you also have to have won
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the genetic lottery.
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The second myth is,
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there are treatments that can help slow,
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reverse, or even stop aging.
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False.
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When you think of it, there is 99 things that can age us.
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Deprive your brain of oxygen for just a few minutes,
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those brain cells die, they never come back.
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Play tennis too hard, on your knees, ruin your cartilage,
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the cartilage never comes back.
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Our arteries can clog. Our brains can gunk up with plaque,
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and we can get Alzheimer's.
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There is just too many things to go wrong.
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Our bodies have 35 trillion cells,
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trillion with a "T." We're talking national debt numbers here.
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(Laughter)
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Those cells turn themselves over once every eight years.
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And every time they turn themselves over
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there is some damage. And that damage builds up.
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And it builds up exponentially.
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It's a little bit like the days when we all had
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Beatles albums or Eagles albums
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and we'd make a copy of that on a cassette tape,
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and let our friends copy that cassette tape,
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and pretty soon, with successive generations
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that tape sounds like garbage.
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Well, the same things happen to our cells.
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That's why a 65-year-old person
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is aging at a rate of about
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125 times faster
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than a 12-year-old person.
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So, if there is nothing you can do
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to slow your aging or stop your aging,
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what am I doing here?
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Well, the fact of the matter is
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the best science tells us that the capacity of the human body,
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my body, your body,
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is about 90 years,
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a little bit more for women.
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But life expectancy in this country
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is only 78.
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So somewhere along the line,
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we're leaving about 12 good years on the table.
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These are years that we could get.
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And research shows that they would be years largely free of chronic disease,
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heart disease, cancer and diabetes.
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We think the best way to get these missing years
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is to look at the cultures around the world
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that are actually experiencing them,
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areas where people are living to age 100
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at rates up to 10 times greater than we are,
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areas where the life expectancy
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is an extra dozen years,
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the rate of middle age mortality is a fraction
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of what it is in this country.
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We found our first Blue Zone about 125 miles
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off the coast of Italy, on the island of Sardinia.
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And not the entire island, the island is about 1.4 million people,
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but only up in the highlands, an area called the Nuoro province.
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And here we have this area where men live the longest,
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about 10 times more centenarians than we have here in America.
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And this is a place where people not only reach age 100,
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they do so with extraordinary vigor.
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Places where 102 year olds still ride their bike to work,
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chop wood, and can beat a guy 60 years younger than them.
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(Laughter)
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Their history actually goes back to about the time of Christ.
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It's actually a Bronze Age culture that's been isolated.
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Because the land is so infertile,
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they largely are shepherds,
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which occasions regular, low-intensity physical activity.
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Their diet is mostly plant-based,
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accentuated with foods that they can carry into the fields.
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They came up with an unleavened whole wheat bread
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called carta musica made out of durum wheat,
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a type of cheese made from grass-fed animals
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so the cheese is high in Omega-3 fatty acids
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instead of Omega-6 fatty acids from corn-fed animals,
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and a type of wine that has three times the level
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of polyphenols than any known wine in the world.
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It's called Cannonau.
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But the real secret I think lies more
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in the way that they organize their society.
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And one of the most salient elements of the Sardinian society
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is how they treat older people.
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You ever notice here in America, social equity
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seems to peak at about age 24?
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Just look at the advertisements.
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Here in Sardinia, the older you get
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the more equity you have,
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the more wisdom you're celebrated for.
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You go into the bars in Sardinia,
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instead of seeing the Sports Illustrated swimsuit calendar,
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you see the centenarian of the month calendar.
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This, as it turns out, is not only good for your aging parents
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to keep them close to the family --
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it imparts about four to six years of extra life expectancy --
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research shows it's also good for the children of those families,
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who have lower rates of mortality and lower rates of disease.
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That's called the grandmother effect.
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We found our second Blue Zone
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on the other side of the planet,
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about 800 miles south of Tokyo,
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on the archipelago of Okinawa.
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Okinawa is actually 161 small islands.
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And in the northern part of the main island,
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this is ground zero for world longevity.
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This is a place where the oldest living female population is found.
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It's a place where people have the longest disability-free
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life expectancy in the world.
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They have what we want.
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They live a long time, and tend to die in their sleep,
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very quickly,
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and often, I can tell you, after sex.
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They live about seven good years longer than the average American.
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Five times as many centenarians as we have in America.
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One fifth the rate of colon and breast cancer,
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big killers here in America.
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And one sixth the rate of cardiovascular disease.
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And the fact that this culture has yielded these numbers
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suggests strongly they have something to teach us.
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What do they do?
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Once again, a plant-based diet,
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full of vegetables with lots of color in them.
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And they eat about eight times as much tofu
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as Americans do.
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More significant than what they eat is how they eat it.
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They have all kinds of little strategies
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to keep from overeating,
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which, as you know, is a big problem here in America.
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A few of the strategies we observed:
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they eat off of smaller plates, so they tend to eat fewer calories at every sitting.
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Instead of serving family style,
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where you can sort of mindlessly eat as you're talking,
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they serve at the counter, put the food away,
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and then bring it to the table.
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They also have a 3,000-year-old adage,
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which I think is the greatest sort of diet suggestion ever invented.
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It was invented by Confucius.
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And that diet is known as the Hara, Hatchi, Bu diet.
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It's simply a little saying these people say before their meal
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to remind them to stop eating when their stomach is [80] percent full.
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It takes about a half hour for that full feeling
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to travel from your belly to your brain.
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And by remembering to stop at 80 percent
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it helps keep you from doing that very thing.
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But, like Sardinia, Okinawa has a few social constructs
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that we can associate with longevity.
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We know that isolation kills.
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Fifteen years ago, the average American had three good friends.
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We're down to one and half right now.
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If you were lucky enough to be born in Okinawa,
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you were born into a system where you
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automatically have a half a dozen friends
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with whom you travel through life.
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They call it a Moai. And if you're in a Moai
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you're expected to share the bounty if you encounter luck,
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and if things go bad,
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child gets sick, parent dies,
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you always have somebody who has your back.
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This particular Moai, these five ladies
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have been together for 97 years.
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Their average age is 102.
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Typically in America
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we've divided our adult life up into two sections.
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There is our work life,
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where we're productive.
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And then one day, boom, we retire.
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And typically that has meant
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retiring to the easy chair,
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or going down to Arizona to play golf.
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In the Okinawan language there is not even
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a word for retirement.
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Instead there is one word
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that imbues your entire life,
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and that word is "ikigai."
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And, roughly translated, it means
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"the reason for which you wake up in the morning."
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For this 102-year-old karate master,
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his ikigai was carrying forth this martial art.
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For this hundred-year-old fisherman
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it was continuing to catch fish for his family three times a week.
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And this is a question. The National Institute on Aging
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actually gave us a questionnaire to give these centenarians.
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And one of the questions, they were very culturally astute,
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the people who put the questionnaire.
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One of the questions was, "What is your ikigai?"
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They instantly knew why they woke up in the morning.
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For this 102 year old woman, her ikigai
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was simply her great-great-great-granddaughter.
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Two girls separated in age by 101 and a half years.
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And I asked her what it felt like
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to hold a great-great-great-granddaughter.
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And she put her head back and she said,
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"It feels like leaping into heaven."
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I thought that was a wonderful thought.
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My editor at Geographic
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wanted me to find America's Blue Zone.
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And for a while we looked on the prairies of Minnesota,
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where actually there is a very high proportion of centenarians.
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But that's because all the young people left.
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(Laughter)
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So, we turned to the data again.
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And we found America's longest-lived population
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among the Seventh-Day Adventists
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concentrated in and around Loma Linda, California.
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Adventists are conservative Methodists.
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They celebrate their Sabbath
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from sunset on Friday till sunset on Saturday.
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A "24-hour sanctuary in time," they call it.
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And they follow five little habits
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that conveys to them extraordinary longevity,
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comparatively speaking.
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In America here, life expectancy
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for the average woman is 80.
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But for an Adventist woman,
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their life expectancy is 89.
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And the difference is even more pronounced among men,
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who are expected to live about 11 years
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longer than their American counterparts.
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Now, this is a study that followed
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about 70,000 people for 30 years.
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Sterling study. And I think it supremely illustrates
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the premise of this Blue Zone project.
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This is a heterogeneous community.
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It's white, black, Hispanic, Asian.
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The only thing that they have in common are a set of
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very small lifestyle habits
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that they follow ritualistically
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for most of their lives.
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They take their diet directly from the Bible.
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Genesis: Chapter one, Verse [29],
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where God talks about legumes and seeds,
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and on one more stanza about green plants,
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ostensibly missing is meat.
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They take this sanctuary in time very serious.
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For 24 hours every week,
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no matter how busy they are, how stressed out they are at work,
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where the kids need to be driven,
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they stop everything and they focus on their God,
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their social network, and then, hardwired right in the religion,
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are nature walks.
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And the power of this is not that it's done occasionally,
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the power is it's done every week for a lifetime.
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None of it's hard. None of it costs money.
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Adventists also tend to hang out with other Adventists.
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So, if you go to an Adventist's party
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you don't see people swilling Jim Beam or rolling a joint.
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Instead they're talking about their next nature walk,
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exchanging recipes, and yes, they pray.
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But they influence each other in profound and measurable ways.
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This is a culture that has yielded Ellsworth Whareham.
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Ellsworth Whareham is 97 years old.
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He's a multimillionaire,
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yet when a contractor wanted 6,000 dollars
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to build a privacy fence,
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he said, "For that kind of money I'll do it myself."
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So for the next three days he was out shoveling cement,
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and hauling poles around.
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And predictably, perhaps, on the fourth day
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he ended up in the operating room.
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But not as the guy on the table;
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the guy doing open-heart surgery.
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At 97 he still does 20 open-heart surgeries every month.
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Ed Rawlings, 103 years old now,
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an active cowboy, starts his morning with a swim.
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And on weekends he likes to put on the boards,
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throw up rooster tails.
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And then Marge Deton.
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Marge is 104.
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Her grandson actually lives in the Twin Cities here.
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She starts her day with lifting weights.
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She rides her bicycle.
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And then she gets in her root-beer colored
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1994 Cadillac Seville,
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and tears down the San Bernardino freeway,
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where she still volunteers for seven different organizations.
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I've been on 19 hardcore expeditions.
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I'm probably the only person you'll ever meet
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who rode his bicycle across
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the Sahara desert without sunscreen.
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But I'll tell you, there is no adventure more harrowing
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than riding shotgun with Marge Deton.
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"A stranger is a friend I haven't met yet!" she'd say to me.
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So, what are the common denominators
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in these three cultures?
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What are the things that they all do?
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And we managed to boil it down to nine.
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In fact we've done two more Blue Zone expeditions since this
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and these common denominators hold true.
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And the first one,
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and I'm about to utter a heresy here,
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none of them exercise,
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at least the way we think of exercise.
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Instead, they set up their lives
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so that they are constantly nudged into physical activity.
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These 100-year-old Okinawan women
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are getting up and down off the ground, they sit on the floor,
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30 or 40 times a day.
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Sardinians live in vertical houses, up and down the stairs.
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Every trip to the store, or to church
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or to a friend's house occasions a walk.
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They don't have any conveniences.
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There is not a button to push to do yard work or house work.
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If they want to mix up a cake, they're doing it by hand.
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That's physical activity.
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That burns calories just as much as going on the treadmill does.
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When they do do intentional physical activity,
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it's the things they enjoy. They tend to walk,
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the only proven way to stave off cognitive decline,
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and they all tend to have a garden.
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They know how to set up their life in the right way
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so they have the right outlook.
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Each of these cultures take time to downshift.
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The Sardinians pray. The Seventh-Day Adventists pray.
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The Okinawans have this ancestor veneration.
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But when you're in a hurry or stressed out,
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that triggers something called the inflammatory response,
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which is associated with everything from Alzheimer's
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disease to cardiovascular disease.
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When you slow down for 15 minutes a day
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you turn that inflammatory state
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into a more anti-inflammatory state.
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They have vocabulary for sense of purpose,
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ikigai, like the Okinawans.
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You know the two most dangerous years in your life
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are the year you're born, because of infant mortality,
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and the year you retire.
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These people know their sense of purpose,
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and they activate in their life, that's worth about seven years
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of extra life expectancy.
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There's no longevity diet.
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Instead, these people drink a little bit every day,
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not a hard sell to the American population.
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(Laughter)
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They tend to eat a plant-based diet.
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Doesn't mean they don't eat meat, but lots of beans and nuts.
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And they have strategies to keep from overeating,
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little things that nudge them away from the table at the right time.
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And then the foundation of all this is how they connect.
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They put their families first,
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take care of their children and their aging parents.
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They all tend to belong to a faith-based community,
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which is worth between four and 14
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extra years of life expectancy
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if you do it four times a month.
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And the biggest thing here
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is they also belong to the right tribe.
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They were either born into
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or they proactively surrounded themselves with the right people.
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We know from the Framingham studies,
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that if your three best friends are obese
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there is a 50 percent better chance that you'll be overweight.
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So, if you hang out with unhealthy people,
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that's going to have a measurable impact over time.
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18:40
Instead, if your friend's idea of recreation
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is physical activity, bowling, or playing hockey,
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biking or gardening,
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if your friends drink a little, but not too much,
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and they eat right, and they're engaged, and they're trusting and trustworthy,
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that is going to have the biggest impact over time.
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Diets don't work. No diet in the history of the world
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has ever worked for more than two percent of the population.
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Exercise programs usually start in January;
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they're usually done by October.
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When it comes to longevity
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there is no short term fix
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in a pill or anything else.
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But when you think about it,
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your friends are long-term adventures,
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and therefore, perhaps the most significant thing you can do
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to add more years to your life,
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and life to your years. Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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