+++
title = "Adding years to your life, or life to your years?"
author = ["George M Jones"]
publishDate = 2022-02-04T00:00:00-05:00
lastmod = 2023-12-06T05:46:07-05:00
tags = ["life", "100DaysToOffload"]
categories = ["blog"]
draft = false
+++
My great aunt took her first motorcycle ride at 100.
{{< figure src="/ox-hugo/aunt-bess-on-motorcycle.jpg" caption="Figure 1: \"Aunt Bess Takes Her First Motorcycle Ride at 100\" by George Jones is licensed under cc by 2.0" width="400px" >}}
Some thoughts on living in a small town, neuroscience and life.
What are you doing on your 100th birthday?
My great aunt Bess was one of 11 children, who lived her whole life in the small
community around Frankfort, Ohio. She had scores of cousins and
nephews and nieces. In her younger years, she worked as a cook in the
local high school cafeteria and so knew an entire generation of kids
in the community (and their kids) as they grew up. The last 50 years
or so of her life, she lived in her own house on the edge of town.
She lived on her own until the year she died (at 102). When we went to visit
the routine was "Well, I don't know what I'll feed you all", and an
hour later a full thanksgiving dinner-style meal was on the table no
matter what time of year from corn she had canned, etc.
We had a big birthday party for her at a local church when she turned 100.
There where 100 or more people there. And that was the day she
strapped on the leather and took her first motorcycle ride with a
nephew.
She added both years to her life AND life to her years.
I recently listened to a book called "[Successful Aging](https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/598506/succe%20ssful-aging-by-daniel-j-levitin/%20)" by
professional musician-turned-neuroscientist Daniel Levitin. One of
the key ideas he points out is that people thrive on interaction with
other people, from the earliest stages of childhood development to
centegenarians like my aunt. For the book he [interviewed a number of
successful older people](https://www.parkerlife.org/blog/january-2020/neuroscientist-daniel-levitin-shares-his-keys-to-aging-well) from former Mexican president Vicente Fox, to
the Dali Lama, to former US Secretary of State George Shultz and
professional jazz musician Sonny Rollins, all of whom were active and
engaged well into their 80s or 90s.
And it's not just old people. Levitin goes into the literature of
childhood development. Kids need social interaction to develop
properly. Kids thrive, literally, on social interaction. Social
interaction is important to the early development of the brain,
language learning and learning the self control needed to function in
society. Without social interaction, some of these developments are
physically retarded or absent, often permanently and irreversibly.
As Stacey Lance recently pointed out with some of what's been going on
for the past few years, "I’m a Public School Teacher. The Kids Aren’t
Alright."
.
Kids need social interaction. My own reflections on the article are
here
I'm told similar things about the correlation between aging and thriving
by a friend who is a financial councilor (he works with lots of
older people) and our former pastor, in his 70s, who himself is
working a third or fourth career at a construction company and
maintaining the very active walking regime he and his wife have
maintained for years.
In the past two years:
- I've seen a big family wedding celebration scaled down and held
almost secretly for fear of police showing up.
- We canceled our annual new-years gathering of friends and family.
- I skipped visiting a relative who's husband had just died as I was
driving right past her house 100s of miles from home.
- Churches stopped meeting.
- The Catholic church stopped serving Communion in person, for the
first time in 2000 years. Diocletian didn't even get that far
with his persecution (I'm not Catholic).
- Photography clubs stopped meeting.
- Kids stopped going to school (well, not home-schoolers...).
- People stopped going to restaurants and socializing.
- Appalachian Trail maintenance training and work trips have been canceled.
- Events people have planned their lives around like spending 6
months hiking, meeting 100s of people from, literally, all "walks"
of life have been canceled.
- I (and millions others) have canceled plans to travel, meet people
and enjoy interaction with our fellow human beings.
Are we adding years to our life, or life to our years?
{{< figure src="/ox-hugo/aunt-bess-and-bryan.jpg" caption="Figure 2: \"Aunt Bess holding a young Bryan\" by George Jones is licensed under cc by 2.0" width="400px" >}}
\#3 of #100DaysToOffload take 2, .