According to legend, Mr. Li Qing Yun (1677–1933) was a
Chinese medicine physician, herbal expert, qigong master, and tactical
consultant. He was said to have lived through nine emperors in the Qing Dynasty
to be 256 years old. He
had 24 wives, and lived through nine emperors in the Qing Dynasty.
His May 1933 obituary in Time Magazine, titled
“Tortoise-Pigeon-Dog,” revealed Li’s secrets of longevity: “Keep a quiet heart,
sit like a tortoise, walk sprightly like a pigeon and sleep like a dog.”
Mr. Li is said to have had quite unusual habits in his daily
living. He did not drink hard liquor or smoke and ate his meals at regular
times. He was a vegetarian and frequently drank wolfberry (also known as goji
berry) tea.
He slept early and got up early. When he had time, he sat up
straight with his eyes closed and hands in his lap, at times not moving at all
for a few hours.
In his spare time, Li played cards, managing to lose enough
money every time for his opponent’s meals for that day. Because of his
generosity and level headed demeanor, everyone liked to be with him.
Mr. Li spent his whole life studying Chinese herbs and discovering
the secrets of longevity, traveling through provinces of China and as far as
Thailand to gather herbs and treat illnesses.
While it is unclear whether Li actually lived as long as is
believed, what little we know of his habits fit with modern science’s findings
about longevity.
Research
Dan Buettner, author of “The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living
Longer From the People Who’ve Lived the Longest,” researches the science of
longevity. In his book and in a 2009 TED talk, he examined the lifestyle habits
of four geographically distinct populations around the world.
All of these groups—Californian Adventists, Okinawans,
Sardinians, and Costa Ricans—live to be over 100 years of age at a far greater
rate than most people, or they live a dozen years longer than average. He calls
the places where these groups live “blue zones.”
According to Buettner’s research, all blue-zone groups eat a
vegetable-based diet. The group of Adventists in Loma Linda, California, eat
plenty of legumes and greens as mentioned in the Bible. Herders living the in
the highlands of Sardinia eat an unleavened whole grain bread, cheese from
grass-fed animals, and a special wine.
Buettner found that low-calorie diets help in extending
life, as demonstrated by a group of healthy elderly Okinawans who practice a
Confucian rule of stopping eating when one is 80 percent full.
Perhaps Li’s wolfberry tea played a crucial part in his
health. After hearing Li’s story, medical researchers from Britain and France
conducted an in-depth study of wolfberry and found that it contains an unknown
vitamin called “Vitamin X,” also known as the “beauty vitamin.” Their
experiments confirmed that wolfberry inhibits the accumulation of fat and
promotes new liver cells, lowers blood glucose and cholesterol, and so on.
Wolfberry performs a role of rejuvenation: It activates the
brain cells and endocrine glands; enhances the secretion of hormones; and
removes toxins accumulated in the blood, which can help maintain a normal
function of body tissues and organs.
Meditation
Researchers have found numerous benefits to regular
meditation. Neuroscientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School
asked two groups of stressed-out high-tech employees to either meditate over
eight weeks or live as they normally do.
They found that the meditators “showed a pronounced shift in
activity to the left frontal lobe,” reads a 2003 Psychology Today article.
“This mental shift decreases the negative effects of stress, mild depression,
and anxiety. There is also less activity in the amygdala, where the brain
processes fear.”
Meditation also reduces brain shrinkage due to aging and
enhances mood.
Aside from meditation, Buettner found that regularly
scheduled downtime undoes inflammation, which is a reaction to stress. The
Adventists in California strictly adhere to their 24-hour Sabbath and spend the
time reflecting, praying, and enjoying their social circles.
Community
Buettner also found that community is a huge factor in the
longevity of blue-zone groups. Typical Okinawans have many close friends, with
whom they share everything. Sardinian highlanders have a reverence for the
elderly not found in modern Western societies. The Adventists put family first.
A sense of belonging and having healthy friends and family
encourage the individual to live healthily as well.
In “Outliers,” Malcolm Gladwell examined a group of Italians
called the Rosetans, who migrated to an area west of Bangor, Pennsylvania.
Across the board, they had lower incidents of heart disease and generally lived
long, healthy lives. After experiments, it was determined that their secret was
not genetics or even diet (41 percent of their diet came from fat).
“The Rosetans had created a powerful, protective social
structure capable of insulating them from the pressures of the modern world,”
Gladwell wrote. “The Rosetans were healthy because of where they were from,
because of the world they had created for themselves in their tiny little town
in the hills.”
Purposeful Living
In his travels, Buettner came across a common theme among
blue-zone groups: None of them had the concept of retirement. As it turns out,
to keep going makes it easier to keep going.
Purposeful living into the sunset years is a mantra to the
Okinawans and Sardinians. In those groups, Buettner met centenarian men and
women who continued to climb hills, build fences, fish, and care for
great-great-great-great grandchildren.
Interestingly, none of these centenarians exercise purposely
as we Westerners who go to the gym do. “They simply live active lives that
warrant physical activity,” Buettner said. They all walk, cook, and do chores
manually, and many of them garden.
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