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Introduction

When you finish reading The Longevity Strategy you will have everything you will need to know to increase your chances of becoming a vigorous centenarian--living to be 100 years old and liking it.

Over the next 221 pages we will tell you how to employ scientifically sound tactics for achieving mental vigor, security, and health - to succeed in living long and happily. Thanks to the enormous recent gains in neuroscience, medicine, psychology, economics, nutrition, and health, such a goal is now possible. Scientists are becoming convinced that longevity depends on a dynamic interplay involving three factors: the health of our brain, our attitudes and thinking patterns, and our general health - in other words, the brain-body connection.

Especially important are research insights from all over the world that pinpoint the importance of the brain in keeping us healthy, recovering from illness, and improving both longevity and its quality. Indeed, new knowledge about the brain is the cornerstone of the longevity strategy.

We're not talking here about mind over matter. Rather, we suggest that by learning about your brain and applying that knowledge in your everyday life, you will increase your power to have and enjoy longevity. Over many years, both of us have thought a lot about longevity. During those years we have enjoyed the privilege of a special access and exposure to world-class scientists and their research. By incorporating their knowledge with our own thoughts and insights, we have come up with a longevity strategy based on the brain and body's interaction.

The strategy comprises a life plan based on three objectives leading to a happy, healthy longevity:
  • an optimally functioning brain in a sound body
  • favorable social support systems
  • financial security
The idea is to help you act as a potential centenarian--whatever your age at this moment--because the dedicated centenarian has a lot to do. This involves not only health matters but also decisions about how to proceed in key areas of life, ranging from the familial to the financial.

We can't stress enough: Science and medicine are far ahead of the usual views of aging. As you read this book, you'll realize that you have the power to redefine aging as joyfully spending--not being ravaged by--the gift of more time to do all that's important to you.

Here, set out in a series of short chapters, are the rules to follow to have the best chance of achieving what all of us place at the pinnacle of our wish list: how to live long and healthily and securely.

Before giving you those rules, just a few words about how this book came about and why, from time to time, we will refer to one of ourselves by name, as we do below, as if speaking about someone else.

On May 16, 1996, David Mahoney delivered the commencement address at Rutgers University. The speech, which he called "The Centenarian Strategy," was one of the first public occasions to focus on what, within a year, would start turning into a major topic of public discussion: the idea that science and medicine were making the 100-year life span possible, especially for those who are in their twenties and thirties today. David told the graduates that they should anticipate being hale and hearty to age 100 and beyond. Their minds will remain sound and sharp largely thanks to brain research and an increased awareness of brain health. David promised the graduates that if they follow a conscious centenarian strategy they will enjoy a lifetime of meaning, contribution, and satisfaction: "a lifetime of alertness that lasts a whole century."

After reading the speech, Richard Restak was intrigued with David's centenarian strategy. Later, in late 1996, David and Richard met for the first time, and after only a few moments they discovered they shared the conviction that medical research, especially brain research, is transforming "exceptional" longevity into the future norm.

Already there are indications that a prolonged longevity is upon us. Approximately one fifth of all of the people in the recorded history of the world who have ever lived to sixty-five years of age or older are alive right now. In short, "exceptional" longevity is no longer exceptional. The question is becoming, "What should I do to take advantage of this opportunity to live longer and healthier than any generation in history?"

At the time of the Mahoney-Restak meeting, David Mahoney was completing his nineteenth year as chairman and CEO of the Charles A. Dana Foundation, the most influential independent advocate of brain research in the world.

David is known to brain researchers internationally for the bold and provocative challenge he issued in 1992 at an international conference held at Cold Spring Harbor on Long Island, NY. In his address to James Watson, the famed geneticist and the meeting's organizer, and a veritable "college of cardinals" of the neuroscience community, David galvanized his distinguished audience.

Mahoney dared the eminent neuroscientists in the audience to "put their hands in the fire" and come up with objectives that could reasonably be achieved in brain research before the arrival of the third millennium.

At first the scientists didn't take to David's suggestion. They were resistant to the notion that they should actively seek public support. Shouldn't the public leave science to the scientists? David responded by telling them that if they were too proud to make a case for public support, they didn't deserve that support. The turning point in the meeting came when James Watson said, in so many words, that Mahoney was on to something here.

David then told them to speak clearly, say what they were doing, not to muffle their voices, and get it done now. He told his audience to come up with the scientific initiatives that they thought would make enormous progress over the next decade so he could bring them to the public. In a heartfelt expression of confidence, the neuroscientists at Cold Spring Harbor took up the Mahoney challenge. They affixed their names to a declaration that, within the neuroscience community, would soon be compared, in terms of its importance to brain research, to a declaration of interdependence. These eminent brain scientists wrote:

We the undersigned, in order to commemorate the objectives of the Decade of the Brain; celebrate the achievements and bright future of neuroscience research; better understand treat, and ultimately prevent brain disease; galvanize support for and stimulate public awareness of brain research; and enrich human life, do ordain and establish the Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives.

"The bottom line is this: nothing that is going on in the world is as important as research into the diseases of--and into the positive potential of--the human brain," says David Mahoney. "We must always keep in mind what our efforts are about. They're about conquering disease and creating hope for patients and their families. They're about discovering how to end suffering and help us take care of each other."

Richard Restak's career up to the time of his meeting with

David Mahoney was also deeply involved with the brain. A neurologist and neuropsychiatrist, Richard became convinced early in his career that the general public would be fascinated with the brain if they only knew more about it.

In his writing Richard has sought to inform a wide range of readers about the brain. His contributions have ranged from best-selling books to publications on how brain damage affects everyday behavior to vignettes on how we can deepen our understanding of modern life by learning as much as we can about the brain. In his book The Brain Has a Mind of its Own, Richard wrote of the brain processes underlying experiences as varied as philosophical speculation and why, once you learn, you never forget how to ride a bicycle.

On the basis of their shared interest in the human brain and their shared conviction that the advent of centenarian longevity will be the gift of the twentieth century to the twenty-first, David and Richard decided to work together on a unique project. Over many conversations they elaborated, extended, and refined David's "Centenarian Strategy" speech to a clear set of rules to help people live to 100 years of age or older. Based on their different backgrounds and experiences, they aimed at reconciling for the general reader their different insights drawn from the world of neuroscience and the world of business. The fruit of their collaboration is this book.

Their very different personal backgrounds are why David and Richard decided that, when they draw upon those backgrounds, they should tell you whose experience is being used. Obviously, "I" wouldn't be very helpful with two authors, and "we" wouldn't do when mentioning an experience that just one of them had. Thus they settled on the third-person device of "David" and "Richard"--which they hope helps keep things clear.

With this as general background, let's get down to the rules that form the foundation for the Longevity Strategy.
BOOKS BY RICHARD RESTAK
Older and Wiser
The Secret Life of The Brain
The New Brain
Mysteries of the Mind
The Self Seekers
Premeditated Man
Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber
Receptors
The Longevity Strategy
The Naked Brain
Mozart's Brain and The Fighter Pilot
The Modular Brain
The Mind
THE BRAIN: The Last Frontier
The Brain Has a Mind of Its Own
The Infant Mind
BrainScapes
 
© 2009 RICHARD RESTAK MD