I have some idea about the sort of lifestyle which keeps ME feeling young at 60yrs (you do you).
EATING
1 Cut out seed oils
2 Cut out refined carbs and sugars
3 Reduce cereals/grains - pasta, bread,etc
4 Eat meat, seafood, eggs, some non-starchy fruit and veg
5 Don't drink calories (apart from animal blood) - just coffee, tea, water, red wine
6 Take megadose Vit C, (maybe Vit A & D3) as soon as an infection strikes
7 Cycle creatine (optional)
8 Calorie restriction – slight
9 No more than two meals a day
10 Time restricted feeding (18/6)
11 Intermittent Fasting - 24hrs once every 2/3 weeks
12 Intermittent ‘overeating’ - one or twice a week
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
1 Resistance training – weights, circuits, and calisthenics
2 Intervals - short to long (anaerobic/lactic/aerobic)
3 Daily low-level activity
4 Occasional 'mega' challenges (once/twice a year)
5 Necessary aerobic base (ability to run 3-4 miles comfortably)
6 (V.important) Retain the ability to generate/tolerate 'extremes' and high HR
7 Retain dynamic ability and fast movement capability 8 Retain muscle mass - combat dynapenia/sarcopenia i.e. keep strong esp. in lower limbs
9 SLEEP WELL
1 Get out in Nature
2 Get out of the City as much as possible
3 Get the Sun and fresh air
4 Keep in touch with good friends and family
5 Eliminate the sh*t from your life (things which harm you)
• • •
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Shortest day. Yule. 1st day of (astronomical) Winter.
My family always remind each other of longest/shortest days, the turning of the earth & the cycles of nature.
The winter solstice occurs when either of Earth's poles reaches its maximum tilt away from the Sun. This happens twice yearly, once in each hemisphere. For that hemisphere, the winter solstice is the day with the shortest period of daylight and longest night of the year.
Winter Solstice was celebrated in Britain long before the arrival of Christianity. The Druids would cut the mistletoe that grew on the oak tree & give it as a blessing. Oaks were seen as sacred and the winter fruit of the mistletoe was a symbol of life in the dark winter months.
- Attractor Landscape
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- Harm is Supply
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The Holly has been associated with Christmas (& other pagan/religious festivals) since the middle-ages. It used to be planted near homesteads to ward off lightening and keep away witches.
I love it.
The berries ripen red in autumn through to spring unless taken by birds - but are poisonous to humans.
The wood is used for turnery and marquetry, printing blocks and chessmen, and a substitute for boxwood (and ebony when dyed black)
The Holly Blue butterfly's larvae feed predominantly on the flower buds, berries and terminal leaves of Holly (in the spring generation (Ivy in the summer generation).