Okinawans know how to live

Longevity: The rest of the world is coming to recognize the lifestyle 
that enables so many on the island to reach a hale 100.

Sun Journal

December 22, 2001

OOGIMI, Japan - Almost every morning, Ushi Okushima rises from her futon
and heads across the street for a vigorous sunrise walk on a sandy
Okinawan beach.

Later, some friends join her for morning tea before she heads to her
fields. There, swinging a 4-pound hoe, a barefoot Okushima will chop the
weeds around her radish and carrot plants for hours, thinking about her
menu for the coming New Year's festivities.

Okushima turned 100 in August.

"I never get sick, and my blood pressure is very stable," Okushima says.
"I only feel like I'm in my 80s. I hope to live to be 120."

Here on Japan's southernmost prefecture of Okinawa, blessed with a
tropical climate and a tranquil pace of life, Okushima is far from 
unique.

The World Health Organization reports that Okinawa's people are the
healthiest and longest-living in the world. About 427 of the 1.27 
million inhabitants are over 100, meaning that 34 out of every 100,000 have 
lived a full century. In the United States, the comparable figure is 10 per
100,000.

In this hamlet, you'll also find youngsters like Kana Yamakawa, 88. She
rides a three-wheel bike to her patch of farmland.

What's her secret to such active longevity?

"Being barefoot on the farm," she says. "Also, five of my grandchildren
visit me for lunch every day. ... I have never gone to the hospital in 
my life."

On rainy days, Yamakawa likes to entertain friends and drink awamori, 
the potent local sake or rice wine.

"People get sick because they don't have fun in their lives," she says.

Okinawa's elderly have prospered despite the violent history of this
steamy tropical island, site of one of the bloodiest battles of World 
War II. The U.S. military continues to occupy a quarter of the island for
bases and training grounds.

Doctors say Okinawa should be famous for its healthy lifestyle as well 
as its military legacy. Recently, Dr. Bradley J. Willcox, an expert on 
aging from Harvard Medical School, helped organize the first International
Conference on Longevity in Nago, Okinawa.

"There is no one most important factor for longevity," Willcox says. "It
is a balance between factors, like four legs of a chair."

That includes diet, exercise, spiritual wellness and psychosocial 
factors, such as friendships and social support systems - "if you don't have 
these four legs in balance, the chair will topple over."

"Aging is not a disease," said Dr. Andrew Weil, professor at the
University of Arizona and author of best-selling books on wellness, in a
keynote address at the longevity conference. "It is the natural process.
Successful aging is about awareness of the mystery of aging and the
acceptance of mortality."

Weil suggested that because Okinawa's oldest citizens had endured such
terrible wartime deprivation, their elder years had become especially
joyful and pleasant.

The first to recognize that Okinawan people lived longer was Dr. Makoto
Suzuki, who heads the Okinawa Research Center for Longevity Science, a
branch of Okinawa International University.

Suzuki already knew that Japanese tend to live longer than other people.
But when he checked the data on residents with the government, he
calculated that life expectancy on Okinawa and the prevalence of
centenarians were significantly higher than elsewhere in Japan.

"Longevity is not desirable solely for the duration of one's life but 
also must be accompanied by excellent health to be truly celebrated," says
Suzuki. With Willcox and his twin brother Craig Willcox, a medical
anthropologist, Suzuki recently published The Okinawa Program: How the
World's Longest-Lived People Achieve Everlasting Health - and How You 
Can Too.

While hereditary factors are important for long life, Suzuki says,
"environmental factors are more important." He found that the life span
for Okinawans who moved to Brazil is, on average, 17 years shorter than
for those who remained on the island.

In some cultures, youth is celebrated and the elderly are shunted aside.
But in Okinawa, Suzuki says, "aging is a celebration" that helps keep the elderly 
energetic.

When local residents turn 97, a "Kajimayaa" celebration is held. 
Kajimayaa in the Okinawan dialect means "pinwheel," and Okinawans believe they
return to their childhood once they turn 97. The birthday recipient is
showered with pinwheels by family and friends, receives a certificate of
merit and a monetary prize from the government, and is treated to a 
party with 500 to 1,000 people attending.

Okinawan diets are rich in fish, pork and vegetables. Residents often
prepare dishes using fennel, good for combating flu. They also use the
hirami lemon, touted as a cancer preventative; a bitter spinach known as
nigana, easy on the stomach; and goya, a bitter Okinawan cucumber that
contains 50 times more vitamin C than regular cucumber.

As the secret of Okinawa's longevity has spread, sales of these Okinawan
products have rapidly increased in cities such as Tokyo and Osaka.

Weil says the way people eat also helps determine longevity. Whereas 
many of Okinawa's elderly insist on eating with family and friends, "in the
U.S., people are not even eating one meal together," he says.

"Fast food is everywhere, and some people are even reluctant to heat up 
a meal on a microwave."

Weil says that a "sense of humor and sense of purpose" are helpful to 
long life, and that "two factors are common: maintenance of physical activity
and maintenance of social and intellectual connectedness."

At 100, craggy-faced Okushima remains upbeat and productive. She has six
children, 13 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren. She doesn't wear
glasses or use a hearing aid.

Every day, she prepares tea for the local high school principal, who 
stops to see Okushima before heading off to school. "He's like my son," she
says.

As the population of the world's developed countries ages and adequate
resources for health care become harder to find, the key to successful
aging will take on greater importance.

With the highest level of life expectancy, low birth rates and an
unwillingness to accept immigrants into its cloistered and distinctive
social fabric, Japan faces especially severe problems. Its health and
pension systems could soon be on the verge of bankruptcy.

For Japan and so many countries in the world, "sick people will absorb
huge amounts of health costs," Weil says. "So we are trying to teach
people to maintain a good lifestyle."

Copyright (c) 2001, The Baltimore Sun
************************************************************************
Jim Guinee, Ph.D.
  
Director of Training & Adjunct Professor
President, Arkansas College Counselor Association
University of Central Arkansas Counseling Center
313 Bernard Hall    Conway, AR  72035    USA                               
(501) 450-3138 (office)  (501) 450-3248 (fax)

"Character is how you behave when no one is looking"
-Unknown
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