RETHINKING THE AGING PROCESS: 5 STEPS TO CONSCIOUS AGING – Smilecast 107

RETHINKING THE AGING PROCESS: 5 STEPS TO CONSCIOUS AGING

As part of my Caregiver Smile Summit, I have had the pleasure of interviewing more than 50 experts in the health, aging and caregiving fields. Dr. Maria Zayas, a practicing psychologist and a faculty member of the Psychology Department at Brenau University, is one of those experts. Together we explored the topic of conscious aging.

Caregivers Are People Too – Respect Them

It’s Deeper Than Having Purpose – We’re the Stewards of Our Society

Rethinking the Aging Process Starts with Awareness, Slowing Down, Taking Inventory

Pass It Down and Pay It Forward Consciously

Manage Your Stress So You Have Energy for the Journey

Three Keys to Having a Healthy Body and Mind

healthy body and mindInvesting in Your Health as You Grow Older

As we age, we expect to feel less well, have less energy and experience more aches and pains. It seems inevitable; after all your body has constantly been working for sixty or seventy years, and like anything, it is bound to suffer a degree of wear and tear. Add to that any effects from a misspent youth, and the stresses and strains you have experienced in your life, and you shouldn’t be too surprised that you don’t feel like running a marathon. Here are some keys in keeping a healthy body and mind.

Make Sure You’re Not Unwell

If you’ve been putting the way you feel down to being older, don’t assume there isn’t anything else going on. Getting a medical check-up is a very wise investment – your doctor may well agree that you’re just slowing down due to your age, but if anything is underlying the way you feel, it’s essential to find out as soon as possible. The sooner an illness can be diagnosed, the better your prognosis. A blood test can show up any deficiencies in your diet that need addressing, and if you get a clean bill of health, you can look at other ways to boost your energy levels.

The Basics of Good Health

If your routine check-up identified any deficiencies in your diet, you need to increase your consumption of foods containing the nutrients you are lacking. For example, if you are short of Vitamin K, start eating more leafy green vegetables. You can also add supplements to your diet, and there’s no shortage of possible choices. Use a reputable supplier and start with a simple broad-spectrum multivitamin and mineral supplement designed for older people. You can monitor how you feel and see if you notice any improvement before trying something else. You could also consider alternative therapies, perhaps a visit to a famous Ayurvedic doctor who specializes in using your inner energies to promote good health. There are numerous practitioners offering therapies that could help you feel better, but be sure to check their credentials and find out about what they are offering before handing over your cash.

Aging may be inevitable, but submitting to the effects is not. You have the power to help yourself live as healthy a life as possible, and if you take some simple steps to look after your wellbeing, you will feel better and thus be able to enjoy your time far more.

Home Sharing – Is it for you? Charlotte Today

Home Sharing Catching On!

Many baby boomers have a real desire to age in their own home, provided they are capable and it is safe. But sometimes the economic realities, the need for companionship and socialization, and even help around the house makes you want to consider a more formal senior community. Home sharing provides an alternative.

More than 13 million people older 65 live alone, elder orphans. The number of older Americans who are homeless is growing too. In 2007, homeless people 62 and older who sought shelter accounted for 2.9 percent of the country’s homeless population. By 2016, the percentage had risen to 4.7

Sometimes it takes the form of simply renting a bedroom to someone in your home. But the ideal situation is when the home sharer helps with specified tasks, which could include shopping, preparing meals, walking the dog, gardening. Mutual support and companionship lie at the heart of home sharing. It could be in exchange for a smaller rent or no rent at all. It is by no means meant to replace formal home health caregivers.

According to AARP, four million women 50 and older were living in U.S. households with at least two women in the same age group. The real estate listings site Trulia estimates that there are 3.6 million unoccupied rooms that can be rented out in the country’s largest housing markets.

 

Healthy Heart When Young = Healthy Brain When Older-Video

Healthy Heart in 20s = Healthy Brain in 40s

People who take simple steps to keep a healthy heart in young adulthood, such as exercising, eating a healthy diet and controlling blood pressure and cholesterol, may keep their brain from shrinking decades later. People who take care of their heart health in young adulthood may have larger brains in middle-age, compared to people who do not take care of their heart health, according to a study published in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

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