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Roma-girl
Tue, Feb-28-06, 05:43
Good for a chuckle! I hope! ;)

By Burt Prelutsky

Feb 28, 2006

For some time now, I have been privy to a fact of enormous importance. It is a secret I have shared with nobody, although the burden of carrying it around has nearly crushed me. Personally, I gained nothing from keeping this astonishing piece of information under wraps. My chief motive was -- dare I say it?--patriotic. Frankly, on the heels of the tech stocks crashing, I feared I might be delivering the coup de grace to our economy if I let this gigantic cat out of the bag.

Why, then, have I decided at this time to share the secret with an unsuspecting world? Only because I'm afraid I may have been supporting our economy at the cost of the mental health of my countrymen.

What is this secret I've harbored? It is simply this: We Americans all live to be the same age!

On the face of it, I admit, the statement seems ludicrous. We all know people, after all, who died in their teens and those who reached a hundred. But those are exceptions to the rule -- the rule that any American alive today will live to be 85, no matter what. And it's that "no matter what" that could destroy our economy today the way the Black Plague destroyed tea dancing during the Dark Ages.

When you stop to realize how many different commercial aspects of our society rely on the widespread belief that diet, exercise, meditation, vitamins, herbs, surgery, pharmaceuticals and a gaggle of therapies pledging to rejuvenate one's various organs, will keep you going long beyond the prescribed three score and ten, or my updated four score and five, you can see where a contrary belief could play higgledy piggledy with our fiscal future.

The truth is, there would have to be a separate line at Unemployment just for all the out-of-work gurus.

It is my contention that in our prosperous nation, even poor people live to be octogenarians with a regularity that boggles the mind. America is so blessed that I suspect that even people who abhor fruits and vegetables get their daily minimum dose of all the vitamins and minerals they need through the simple act of breathing.

In spite of the fact that rational people don't really want to live on and on, thus surviving all their friends and relatives -- merely to wind up on a first-name basis with a dozen assorted doctors and nursemaids -- we are all asked to buy into the big lie that a very long life is the measure of a very good life.

Caffeine, nicotine, sugar and fat, are the modern day bogeymen for adults. They strike the same terror in our hearts that a child experiences every time he hears a creak in his closet or a squeak under his bed. Therewas a time when it took an invasion of Visigoths or a rumor that the Huns were in the neighborhood to make a person's blood run cold; now it only requires that a drop of hydrogenated vegetable oil accidentally touch his lips to make a strong man quake.

The truth is, if you exercise every day, watch your diet, never smoke or drink, you may outlive the fat couch potato next door. Or, depending on your respective genes, you may not.

My point is that the way people carry on, you’d think the difference between living to be 30 and living to be a robust 600 is an hour-a-day on the treadmill. Folks have been brainwashed into ignoring the evidence, into believing that immortality is just a matter of jogging, cutting out dairy products, and guzzling several gallons of water-a-day.

And as a result, are you all living longer lives? No, not really. They only seem longer because you are living lives of quiet deprivation.

As I see it, you can live a stressful life, filled with calorie counting and worrying about all the silent killers just lurking about waiting for the chance to knock you off, or you can take my advice and stop acting like a bunch of big babies.

It is my suggestion that you learn to live comfortably with the idea that, all things being equal, the health nut will outlive you by 4.7 years, but he'll have wasted 16.3 years going nowhere on his exercycle and his rowing machine.

To me, it is a choice between living free or living shackled by the tyrannies of fear and vanity. The answer, I suggest, is a piece of cake.

Or maybe two.




http://www.townhall.com/print/print_story.php?sid=188017&loc=/opinion/columns/BurtPrelutsky/2006/02/28/188017.html

Duparc
Tue, Feb-28-06, 06:28
A nice facetious viewpoint from someone who seems to think he is a cut above the average perception-wise. What the writer chooses to ignore is the masses of evidence arising indicating that if most of us (but probably not all of us) don't heed what is in our diet then we are more likely to suffer from a life of ill-health than if we do take heed. It has nothing to do with longevity, which is simply a by-product of a better diet, it is connected to the quality of life we create through being sensible about what we eat.

Carmen51
Tue, Feb-28-06, 07:20
My grandmother ate poorly (she nearly lived on candy and ice cream) and never exercised. She lived to age 86. But, the last 17 of her life consisted of sitting in her recliner watching television. She was so overweight and her joints were so worn out from years of carrying the extra weight that she could barely walk from the recliner to the bathroom and back again. She was so ashamed of her appearance that she would not leave the house, except to go to the doctor to get more pills for her poor health caused by her unhealthy lifestyle. Her life is one of the things that keeps me motivated to eat right and exercise. Even if I don't live to 100 because of eating better and exercising, at least maybe I won't live out the last years of my life as she did.

Nancy LC
Tue, Feb-28-06, 09:24
I think the fact that people are living longer despite their horrible health is a little ghoulish. It's like Night of the Living Dead. 85 years is great, but wouldn't it be better to spend the last 20 years being independent, lively and happy than disintegrating slowly? Losing your intelligence, losing your independence, losing your vision?

ProfGumby
Tue, Feb-28-06, 09:56
I think the authors attempt at humor is admirable, but his logic is.....well there was no logic. Well, other than his condescending, holier than thou outlook on anyone foolish enough to give a rip about their health.

Though, there were some intersting points made. We all know a person or two, that ate all the wrong things, smoked, drank and still lived into the 80's or 90's with no apparent ill effects.

However, to go off and follow that plan, on purpose, and expect to do the same is fools logic! That would be the same as saying there have been a few skydivers who have lived after falling to the earth, with a faulty or inoperable chute. So next time you skydive, don't open your chute! Live a little! (Actually you'd live a little to be sure, like about 10,000 feet and 2 minutes of free fall!)

I did giggle about the going nowhere on a stationary bike, I prefer my real bike to those myself, but then one on a stationary bike generally cannot be hit by the car of the drunken 90 year old who was trying to light his cigarette....

Roma-girl
Wed, Mar-01-06, 04:47
"I did giggle about the going nowhere on a stationary bike, I prefer my real bike to those myself, but then one on a stationary bike generally cannot be hit by the car of the drunken 90 year old who was trying to light his cigarette...."

So, I did reach my goal with you, Prof Gumby!

A bit of a laugh doesn't hurt your health, now does it!

Also, there's pros and cons to everything!

Duparc
Wed, Mar-01-06, 06:41
Liked you humour ProfGumby! It wouldn't be the fall that killed the skydiver, it would be the sudden stop!

ProfGumby
Wed, Mar-01-06, 09:10
"A little nonsense now and then, is relished by the wisest men." {Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka}
:lol:

Raquel
Wed, Mar-01-06, 11:31
It had its funny points but I'm another one that agrees that quality of life is even more important than the number of years lived. Personally, I feel it's very irresponsible to treat our bodies every which way just because one day "we're going to die anyway"; I believe self-respect is not only a "mental thing", it's also spiritual and physical.