6 Steps to Longevity

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Call off the search for a fountain of youth. "Making simple tweaks to your everyday lifestyle can tack eight to 10 years onto your life," says Dan Buettner in his National Geographic bestseller, The Blue Zones.

With a team of demographers and doctors, the explorer traveled to four corners of the globe—Sardinia, Italy; Okinawa, Japan; Loma Linda, California; and, Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica—where high percentages of the population are laughing, living and loving well into their 100s. Here are six of their secrets to their supercharged health and longevity.

Laugh out loud. "One thing stood out in every group of centenarians I met—there wasn't a grump in the bunch," says Buettner. Laughter doesn't just reduce worry. It also relaxes blood vessels, lowering the risk of heart attack, says Buettner citing University of Maryland research.

Make exercise a no-brainer. None of the centenarians Buettner and his team encountered ran marathons or pumped iron. The people making it into their 100s had low-intensity exercise—walking long distances, gardening
and playing with kids—woven into their everyday routines. As a result, they exercised regularly without ever thinking about it. To seamlessly work exercise into your schedule: hide the TV remote, opt for stairs over the elevator, park farther away from the mall entrance and look for occasions to bike or walk instead of guzzling gas.

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Thank you for the checklist for living a long, happy and healthy life. Although you only highlight 6 while hundreds of other could probably be listed, what I like most is how you give the reader choices. And thinking about them as moments in our life, moments during the day, moments running, moments driving, moments eating and so rather than secrets can be helpful. Obviously we all wish we could do more for ourselves, others and the planet but there are others and other things that also need taking care of like children, parents, siblings, animals, jobs and service. But your article is refreshing in that it is framed as having options - and we certainly do for living a richer life. Some of these may work better for me than someone else, but finding what those are matter most given each of our own unique circumstances and the reminder that each of us are unique human beings responding and reacting differently...

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