The Longevity Strategy
How to Live to 100
The
scene was a black-tie dinner at the Swedish Embassy
in Washington, D.C. The host was Rolf Ekeus, who had led the U.N. commission
searching for Saddam Hussein's biological warfare sites and was the new Swedish
ambassador. The guests of honor were five American scientists who won Nobel
prizes in 1997.
I posed this
question to the Nobel laureates: If Albert Einstein were a young man just
starting his career today, what field would he choose to work in?
"Einstein was
not only a genius, he was a smart guy," replied one of the scientists.
"I think he would choose a field of science with the greatest potential for
dramatic advances in his lifetime, as he did at the start of the twentieth
century by choosing physics." "Which field would that be today?"
"Molecular
biology."
"Ah,"
said a voice from one of the tables, "neuroscience. The brain." Even
the physicists and chemists and doctors in the room-pioneers in their chosen
disciplines of some of the most exciting advances of our time--had to agree.
Let's assume these
guys are right. It may well be that discoveries in brain science--propelled by
techniques of imaging that let us see thinking in action, and by feats of
genetic engineering and chemical therapy--will lead to breakthroughs that will
unleash the power of the brain to better control the workings of the body.
What does this
assumption mean to thee and me? First, it means that new hope and purpose are
given to the growing likelihood of longevity. We already know that the lives of
human beings are stretching out, and the speed of the stretching and of the
typical life span is likely to accelerate. Thanks to antibiotics and other
advances in medical science, you are expected to live about ten years longer
than your great-grandfather. And thanks to organ transplants and gene therapy,
as well as the strong likelihood of cures for cancer and protections against
heart disease and stroke, your grandchildren are expected to live more than a
decade longer than you. Since life expectancy has risen from forty-seven to
seventy-five in the twentieth century, isn't it likely to rise to 100 in the twenty-first?
Too
many people in politics and medicine think of this as a terrible problem. They
wonder--what are we going to do with all those old people? How will we manage
the burden of an aging population?
Others are thinking more positively. These
more upbeat futurists wonder--what can brain science do to keep the mind active,
alert, and productive into the years that used to be reserved for rocking chairs
and nursing homes? What can people do for themselves, right now, to prepare
themselves for indeed to take advantage of--the longer life that the scientists
of brain and body are making possible?
That's what this book by David Mahoney
and Richard Restak is about. I wasn't born yesterday (actually, I was born
sixty-eight years ago) and I'm not kidding myself; even with all the cures in
the pipeline, and even if I buckle my seat belt all the time, the odds are
against my living to 100. But I'm planning to live to 100. How can this
be? Are not those two statements inconsistent?
Not a bit. According to Mahoney
and Restak, the way to take advantage of the growing opportunity most of us have
to live longer, and then to pack enjoyment and fulfillment into that extended
life, is to adopt a strategy of longevity.
"Strategy"
can be one of those con-job words. In this case, however--as I get it from
reading this book and from a lifetime of working with David---the longevity
strategy is to act along the range of our personal fronts, over a period of the
rest of our lives, in a way that will make our fourth quarter the lively
culmination of the first three. This takes specific planning for physical
health, for mental acuity, for financial security, for family and friendships,
and for the systematic shifts in emphasis of career and avocation that keep the
mind alert and spirit alive.
The bonus to their longevity strategy, say the
authors, is this: in our first three generations of life, we benefit from the
security and perspective that comes with knowing roughly what we're preparing
for our fourth--"the last of life, for which the first was made."
Precisely because we are determined not to vegetate as grumpy codgers, and
because we take full advantage of what's being learned about brain-body
interaction, we are more likely to be happily productive pre-geezers.
The
authors have the credentials to be longevity strategists. They know they're not
likely to get a "Happy Hundredth Birthday!" waved at them from a
wrinkled Willard Scott on some far-off day, but they combine the experience
needed to put together their wide-ranging plan. One is a marketing genius turned
activist-philanthropist, the other a medical doctor who also practices
understandable writing in best-seller form.
Let me tell you about David; how
he involved me in the publicizing of brain science; what makes him so important
to so many neuroscientists; and why I egged him on when he came up with the idea
for writing this book.
The Nobel laureate James Watson, co-discoverer of DNA a
generation ago and today the father of the international Human Genome Project,
will be remembered as one of the half dozen scientists
who--like Einstein--most moved human knowledge forward in the twentieth century.
With all his prestige, and with his reputation for being an outspoken coot who
doesn't stand on ceremony, he was able to assemble some of the leading lights in
his field at his laboratory in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, to listen to a
challenge from a non-scientist.
David had started his career working in
the mail room of an ad agency while taking night classes at the University of
Pennsylvania. He rode his marketing genius to the top of one of America's
largest consumer companies and then started a second career as a philanthropist,
ultimately becoming CEO of the Charles A. Dana Foundation. But he didn't see his
primary mission as the giving-away of money; rather, he became an active
advocate of a big idea.
Mahoney's idea was to awaken Americans to the potential
of brain science and to focus public attention on its support. As recounted in
this book, his message to the scientists assembled in the lab at Cold Spring
Harbor was troubling and challenging: they were losing valuable years, and
falling behind in funding, because they were failing to reach outside their
scientific world. To enlist public support in a time of declining budgets and
competing interests, he told them they would have to communicate in
understandable terms the excitement in their field. "Nobody buys
research," he told them, "but everybody buys hope." In marketing
terms, they had to offer people not just intermittent reports of research, but
hope--specific hope about how and when their work on the brain would cure
diseases and improve people's lives. "These hopeful people want to know, in
concrete terms, how you are going to help them; only then will they help
you." This was met at first with narrowed eyes. Scientists resist
hyperbole; they rightly look askance at promoters who prematurely announce
"breakthroughs."
Then some of the
scientists began to examine their own realistic expectations-advances they were
confident could be accomplished in the foreseeable, short-term future. They
identified the diseases of the brain, afflicting millions, that most people did
not realize could be treated or conquered soon. At the marketing man's
urging, they listed ten specific goals--realistic projections of breakthroughs
to come, with concentrated effort--and set their signatures on a declaration
that laid their own hopes and judgments on the line.
That started the Dana
Alliance for Brain Initiatives, now an association of nearly 250 of the field's
leaders, including an active sister organization just begun in Europe.
Scientists once leery of public appearances are now more comfortable with
seminars and interviews, and are also more familiar with one another's work.
Journalists are finding these researchers and doctors far more accessible and
ready to explain their work understandably.
Philanthropies and political bodies
are being exposed to the potential for saving lives and saving billions in
years ahead. And the general public is beginning to get the idea that the array
of brain diseases---from Alzheimer's to stroke to brain cancer to depression to
hundreds of others--need not be part of every person's future as we grow older.
"Hope moves
people to invest in wider and more intensified research," says David now,
still selling hard, "which in turn can justify their hope. We're seeing the
results already." Several of the goals set at Cold Spring Harbor have been
achieved; none of the scientists needed further urging from a marketing man to
set fresh goals. That's why Jim Watson said recently that "David Mahoney is
the Mary Lasker of this generation." What made Mrs. Lasker the preeminent
philanthropist: of her day in the field of medical science and public health? It
was not the amount of money she
gave or raised.
What made her count was the influence she brought to bear, by
virtue of good judgment; a feel for the future of medicine; and the ability to
transmit her enthusiasm to more cautious givers. Her husband, Albert Lasker,
made his fortune as head of the Lord and Thomas advertising agency before
turning to public service and philanthropy; a half century later, David Mahoney
is using that same strategic marketing background to energize private and public
support of brain science. (I can attest to that from personal experience: he
roped me into serving as a Dana Foundation director years ago, and now I'm
touting neuroscience research every chance I get, including this one.)
With
every solution comes a problem. Suppose our hopes are realized. Suppose the
physicians of the body, as we expect, lengthen our lives by curing the diseases
that kill so many in our middle years. Suppose, too, that the neuroscientists
come up with ways to extend memory and regenerate brain cells, not only keeping
us alert but showing us how to use our minds to exert a positive influence on
the health of our bodies. What then? What do we do in that extra generation of
active life? Go fishing? Go to pot? Go broke? Go batty with boredom? Or go into
a losing battle with a younger generation ready and eager to take power?
We need
to have a strategy. All the amazing imaging techniques that let us begin to see
the way we think must be fitted into a bigger picture. As David Mahoney and
Dr. Richard Restak worked in many of these fields, they began to see the need
for a comprehensive approach that each individual can take to gain the benefits
that come from grasping the potential of becoming a centenarian. They took the
separate strands that lead to the newly achievable longevity--good mental health
habits, stress management, physical exercise and nutrition, dual-career
development, and long-range financial planning--and wove them into "the
Longevity Strategy."
That does not mean this book is
more-holistic-than-thou . The authors take their subject seriously, but I'm glad
they make a point about the mental and physical benefits of good humor (Mahoney
was once the top Good Humor Man) and they know the need to lighten up now and
then. "I don't want to achieve immortality through my work," said the
philosopher Woody Alien. "I want to achieve immortality by not dying."
That's not part of the strategy, but this is: organize your life and your work
around the possibility that you could live to 100. Granted, it's now a long
shot, but the odds are coming down every day. The authors say: Your sensible
preparations for a fourth quarter, and your positive attitude toward the real
possibility of longer life, will enliven and enrich your every day. You don't
have to be a brain scientist to figure out why that makes sense. Use your head.
--William Safire