"SIXTY is not the new 40. Fifty isn’t either. Your lung capacity in late-middle age is in steady decline, as are the fast-twitch muscle fibers that provide power and speed. Your heart capacity has been ebbing for decades. Your sight has been getting worse, your other senses, too, and this, along with a gradually receding ability to integrate information you are absorbing and to then issue motor commands, means your balance is not what it used to be. (Your flattening arches aren’t helping.) Your prefrontal cortex — where the concentrating and deciding gets done — has been shrinking for some time, perhaps since you graduated from college. More of your career (more of your life) is behind you than in front of you. Do not kid yourself about this. You are milling in the anteroom of the aged.
You can have something done with those sags and creases deepening on the face that greets you in the mirror each morning, but I’m not sure whom you are fooling. You can do the crossword and mind puzzles, stretch, take long walks: There is evidence that these activities correlate with keeping memory loss and, you know, death at bay, for a while longer: two, four, six years. Maybe."
How kind. How very, very kind! I can't remember asking the author of this article for his opinion, and, besides, I'm not sure that I altogether catch his drift. Is he saying he doesn't believe in Father Christmas?
My advice is not to take the article too seriously. Writing from the vantage point of the early 'seventies, I can assure you that most of the problems listed above have sorted themselves out by then, in one way or another.
You can have something done with those sags and creases deepening on the face that greets you in the mirror each morning, but I’m not sure whom you are fooling. You can do the crossword and mind puzzles, stretch, take long walks: There is evidence that these activities correlate with keeping memory loss and, you know, death at bay, for a while longer: two, four, six years. Maybe."
How kind. How very, very kind! I can't remember asking the author of this article for his opinion, and, besides, I'm not sure that I altogether catch his drift. Is he saying he doesn't believe in Father Christmas?
My advice is not to take the article too seriously. Writing from the vantage point of the early 'seventies, I can assure you that most of the problems listed above have sorted themselves out by then, in one way or another.
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