zerostao Posted Wednesday at 09:22 PM (edited) For a long long time. So yeah, a little bird chirped to me there is talk about TDB having a core of an older crowd. I chirped back to that little bird, stick around, you ain't seen nothing yet. Daoist Longevity Practices is definitely a thing. I'm sure talk will get around to Li Ching-Yuen. Let's start the thread by looking at DVD That's right Dick van Dyke looks at his 100 years, and he provides so many examples, lessons, thoughts, on longevity. If we imagine someone to have a positive outlook, ability to brighten up other's day, Relaxed physicality, ( if you need to see what song/sung looks like, look no further) Staying active, still goes to gym three times a week, to avoid stiffening up. And a sense of humor and a warm caring heart. This is how one gets Longevity. Yes, he is rich and that helps I'm sure. But being rich is not what defines him. Edited Wednesday at 09:33 PM by zerostao 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted yesterday at 02:34 AM 恒 (Héng) : Perseverance, Persistence, Enduring Constancy. One of the "virtues" deeply embedded in taoism. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
zerostao Posted yesterday at 01:03 PM Thank You Taomeow for sharing that. Endeavor to persevere. Resilient rhymes with resistant. Spoiler Spoiler No one is accusing me of "sanity" & I ain't everyone's cup of tea either. And a former mod team/admin once labeled me a 'cowboy' Well, the similarities I have in common with Clint likely end somewhere around there Spoiler Me and Taomeow are still enduring here on TDB, and also other great members here, keep on keeping on. That mod team, admin I mentioned, I miss them. M sure they are faring well, elsewhere This thread is about keeping on keeping on. And doing it well. So dear bums, many of you in your youth, or arriving at some number, that may be messing a little with your mind,, Compare and contrast Dick and Clint. Both are still kicking. This thread gonna run like the Energizer bunny. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
liminal_luke Posted 20 hours ago Next month I will be sixty. That´s not an age that gives me bragging rights among my friendship group of "old gays" in Palm Springs, but I´m proud anyways. I´ve continued. I´m here so I belong here -- who can say otherwise? Maybe someday I´ll belong somewhere else, but that will be a different story. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted 19 hours ago 1 hour ago, liminal_luke said: Next month I will be sixty. That´s not an age that gives me bragging rights among my friendship group of "old gays" in Palm Springs, but I´m proud anyways. I´ve continued. I´m here so I belong here -- who can say otherwise? Maybe someday I´ll belong somewhere else, but that will be a different story. I didn’t realize you were so young! 2 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted 16 hours ago (edited) Edit: removed in response to the removal of what it was about Edited 11 hours ago by Taomeow 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
liminal_luke Posted 10 hours ago (edited) 5 hours ago, Taomeow said: Edit: removed in response to the removal of what it was about Speaking of longevity, I´m reminded of the many profiles I´ve read featuring happy centenarians who drink, smoke, cuss, and just generally live life on their own terms. They´re not afraid to get their claws out on occasion, when situations warrant. More than kombucha and bubble baths, this may be the key to a long life. Edited 10 hours ago by liminal_luke 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lairg Posted 10 hours ago Loving oneself is the key to a fully functional human format Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sanity Check Posted 10 hours ago 104 year old woman: "Dr Pepper is good it has sugar in it." 104 year old woman: "Two doctors have told me if I drink it I'll die." 104 year old woman: "But they died first." 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, liminal_luke said: Speaking of longevity, I´m reminded of the many profiles I´ve read featuring happy centenarians who drink, smoke, cuss, and just generally live life on their own terms. They´re not afraid to get their claws out on occasion, when situations warrant. More than kombucha and bubble baths, this may be the key to a long life. Kombucha is good, but bubble baths are quite harmful (toxic chemicals). Getting one's claws out when the situation warrants it is IMO healthier than being addicted to the drug peddled heavier than any other -- Repressitol. All things in moderation... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted 5 hours ago 4 hours ago, liminal_luke said: generally live life on their own terms. This is a very important key. I asked AI (Grok) about smokers and drinkers among the verified longest lived individuals. Here's a partial list (there's a bunch of others too who have birth documents but "are not fully verified" so I skipped their names) Name Country Age at death Smoked? Drank? Notes Jeanne Calment France 122 y 164 d Yes – ~2 cigarettes/day for 96 years, quit at 117 Port wine daily The absolute record holder (verified) Antonio Todde Italy (Sardinia) 112 y 346 d Yes – cigars and cigarettes most of his life Wine daily Oldest verified man in Europe when he died in 2002 Christian Mortensen USA (Danish-born) 115 y 252 d Yes – cigars and cigarettes until late 80s Occasional alcohol Oldest verified man ever until 2012 Maggie Barnes USA 115 y 319 d (disputed) Yes – smoked unfiltered cigarettes for decades Moonshine occasionally Age debated but widely accepted at the time Susie Gibson USA 115 y 108 d Yes – smoked cigarettes until 106 Occasional whiskey Quit only when she couldn’t light them anymore Richard Overton USA 112 y 230 d Yes – 12–18 cigars a day until 109 Whiskey in his coffee daily America’s oldest WWII veteran when he died in 2018 That Richard Overton guy surprises me. Not so much the 18 cigars a day but whiskey in his coffee. Coffee pairs perfectly with cognac. Whiskey?.. Assuming he started when he was legal to drink, that's almost a century of misguided daily use of a rather uncouth beverage. But I guess couth/uncouth is not a factor in longevity. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted 3 hours ago @Taomeow this is very good news. I have given up smoking except the occasional one bummed off a friend. But I was intending to start cigars from my 80th and of course I drink red wine almost daily. I may bring the smoking forward on this news. After all one needs an occupation - to misquote Oscar Wilde. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bradley Posted 2 hours ago 16 minutes ago, Apech said: I may bring the smoking forward on this news. are there health benefits of nicotine? i.e. not the smoke itself? I heard (maybe on this site, actually) that is preventative against alzheimers? They have nicotine lozenges that one can take, for example. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Lairg Posted 2 hours ago (edited) 47 minutes ago, bradley said: are there health benefits of nicotine? A woman I knew said that she had become possessed during sex with a possessed man. She complained that the possessing spirit made her steal money and then deleted the memory five minutes later. She used the money to buy cigarettes for those of her friends that were targeted by the possessing spirit. I had a look and the nicotine damaged the surface of the smoker's light-body (aura) so that the possessing spirit could have easy access. From a biological perspective it seems that nicotine is more addictive than heroin. Edited 2 hours ago by Lairg Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Apech Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, bradley said: are there health benefits of nicotine? i.e. not the smoke itself? I heard (maybe on this site, actually) that is preventative against alzheimers? They have nicotine lozenges that one can take, for example. Could be but I can’t remember lol Share this post Link to post Share on other sites