CHECK IT OUT
“Owning an old brain is rather like owning an old car,” writes George
Vaillant in “Aging Well: Surprising Guideposts to a Happier Life from the
Landmark Harvard Study of Adult Development.” “Careful driving and
maintenance are everything.”
The author of one of the newest guides to staying satisfied and
interested well into chronological maturity discounts the importance of
such predictable life-prolonging factors as low cholesterol and good
genes. Basing his conclusions on three longevity studies that followed
824 people from their teens into their 80s, he highlights the importance
of things over which we have some control: a stable marriage, adaptive
coping style, regular exercise and years of education
Another landmark study about successful aging will be published in
paperback next month. Written by epidemiologist David Snowdon, who
tracked the lives of 678 elderly nuns from age 75 to 104, “Aging With Grace” has much to say about avoiding Alzheimer’s and other age-related
afflictions. Among its findings: concentrating on building linguistic
ability, staying optimistic and strengthening relationship bonds can go a
long way toward offsetting dementia.
A local columnist presents more personal views about such midlife
issues as dealing with difficult adult children, sex in the second half
and caring for aging parents in “Time of Your Life: Why Almost Everything
Gets Better After Fifty.” Read about having a face-lift at 60, marital
challenges of retirement and the emotions a letter from the American
Assn. of Retired Persons might unleash in this collection of essays by
Jane Glenn Haas.
Equally personal are the stories in “If Not Now, When?” aimed at women
between the ages of 40 and 55 interested in exploring the spiritual,
emotional and psychological dimensions of midlife transition. Culling
from more than 100 interviews with women at various stages of midlife,
Stephanie Marston offers tips for reclaiming neglected passions and
dreams in her guide to fulfillment in middle age.
If you’re bored with introspection and have had enough of books
warning about antioxidants and sedentary lifestyles, turn to Roger
Rosenblatt’s new “Rules for Aging: A Wry and Witty Guide to Life.” In
just 140 pages, the acclaimed essayist serves up 56 guidelines for
navigating through your golden years, including such gems as: “Nobody is
thinking about you. They are thinking about themselves -- just like you.”
Finally, if you’ve gotten over the half-century hill and feel you
can’t scale a peak of the same size, find inspiration in “On Being 100.”
With recollections of 31 seniors who can look back on a century, Liane
Enkelis provides a prescription for hope showing that old age need not be
a sentence to illness and disability, but rather a time of promise and
opportunity.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at o7
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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