Anonymous wrote:The last two presidents were both elected at 78. Most of the population voted for one or the other of those two - so most people must think that one is still very capable in their late 70s. That age was seen by their party voters as capable of running a nation.
Anonymous wrote:So many people die in their 50s and 60's, so if you make it into your 70's you probably pretty healthy. All the smokers, alcoholics, diabetics are going down early.
Anonymous wrote:My parents are not very mobile at all in their mid seventies. Dad has degenerative disc disorder and is not a candidate for surgery. Mom broke her leg about 9 months ago, and is mobile again now but no stamina.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, we are the parents in our 70s. We use the gym. Avoid takeout food. Live in a city and walk 10,000 steps a day.
Do we tire more? Sure. Three ours in a museum can do us in and we need business class on long flights. Also my husband prefers uber to metro and I’d use metro more.
Now we have a close relative in her late 70s who is overweight, refuses needed knee surgery, takes no stairs, cannot walk more than a block, cannot roll her own suitcase, and drives across the street literally. This is ideally what I’d like to avoid.
I was really struck by what a difference this made for my mom. She lived with my dad in a house that had a flight of stairs to get into the house and a couple stairs to navigate throughout the main level and then up to her bedroom. Her mobility was OK, at least the stairs never seemed to be an issue. Then dad died and she moved in with my sister with a main-level bedroom. Never needed to take a step up. Her mobility seemed to deteriorate very quickly. A bout of pneumonia that put her into the hospital didn't help and she never seemed to get back to the earlier baseline since she could go through her day never doing more than walking from bedroom to sofa.
Chicken-egg. At some point, steps are a bad bad idea for a senior. I’m not convinced keeping steps is a net positive, and neither are most physicians to patients in that age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On vacation with my parents and they tire easily and aren’t the most fit. They weren’t really ever active (no regular exercise, etc.) and I’m thinking a lot about the future when I’m in my 70s.
If your parents are fit, what sorts of things have they done to get that way or stay that way? Did they eat certain things, exercise a certain way, etc.
Thanks!
My parents are 83 and 84. In general they are fit and active but my father has congestive heart failure (can be managed, but not cured). They both tire more easily, but my mother is still very energetic.
Truthfully, a good deal of it is luck and/or genetics. Neither one of my parents has ever had weight issues and have never had to really, actively work to stay slim. They eat fairly healthy, but have never had to watch/track what they eat to keep weight off.
They have always been pretty active, but neither participated in a lot of sports or anything. They walked a lot. I think both tried some strength training as they aged but didn't stick with it.
"Fit" and CHF don't go together.
Anonymous wrote:The last two presidents were both elected at 78. Most of the population voted for one or the other of those two - so most people must think that one is still very capable in their late 70s. That age was seen by their party voters as capable of running a nation.