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How to lead a Retired life without Dementia

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I found this in the web. I am sharing it.

Most of us start worrying about dementia after retirement - and that may be too little, too late. Experts say that if you really want to ward off dementia, you need to start taking care of your brain in your 30s and 40s - or even earlier.

"More and more research is suggesting that lifestyle is very important to your brain's health," says Dr. Paul Nussbaum, a neuropsychologist and an adjunct associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. "If you want to live a long, healthy life, then many of us need to start as early as we can."

So what can you do to beef up your brain - and possibly ward off dementia? Nussbaum, who recently gave a speech on the topic for the Winter Park (Fla.) Health Foundation, offers 20 tips that may help.

1. Join clubs or organizations that need volunteers. If you start volunteering now, you won't feel lost and unneeded after you retire.

2. Develop a hobby or two. Hobbies help you develop a robust brain because you're trying something new and complex.

3. Practise writing with your non-dominant hand several minutes everyday. This will exercise the opposite side of your brain and fire up those neurons.

4. Take dance lessons. In a study of nearly 500 people, dancing was the only regular physical activity associated with a significant decrease in the incidence of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease. The people who danced three or four times a week showed 76 percent less incidence of dementia than those who danced only once a week or not at all.

5. Need a hobby? Start gardening. Researchers in New Zealand found that, of 1,000 people, those who gardened regularly were less likely to suffer from dementia! Not only does gardening reduce stress, but gardeners use their brains to plan gardens; they use visual and spatial reasoning to lay out a garden.

6 Walking daily can reduce the risk of dementia because cardiovascular health is important to maintain blood flow to the brain. or...Buy a pedometer and walk 10,000 steps a day.

7 Read and write daily. Reading stimulates a wide variety of brain areas that process and store information. Likewise, writing (not copying) stimulates many areas of the brain as well.

8. Start knitting. Using both hands works both sides of your brain. And it's a stress reducer.

9. Learn a new language. Whether it's a foreign language or sign language,you are working your brain by making it go back and forth between one language and the other. A researcher in England found that being bilingual seemed to delay symptoms of Alzheimer's disease for four years. And some research suggests that the earlier a child learns sign language, the higher his IQ - and people with high IQs are less likely to have dementia. So start them early.

10. Play board games such as Scrabble and Monopoly. Not only are you taxing your brain, you're socializing too. Playing solo games, such as solitaire or online computer brain games can be helpful, but Nussbaum prefers games that encourage you to socialize too.

11. Take classes throughout your lifetime. Learning produces structural and chemical changes in the brain, and education appears to help people live longer. Brain researchers have found that people with advanced degrees live longer - and if they do have Alzheimer's, it often becomes apparent only in the very later stages of the disease.

12. Listen to classical music. A growing volume of research suggests that music may hard wire the brain, building links between the two hemispheres. Any kind of music may work, but there's some research that shows positive effects for classical music, though researchers don't understand why.

13. Learn a musical instrument. It may be harder than it was when you were a kid, but you'll be developing a dormant part of your brain.

14. Travel. When you travel (whether it's to a distant vacation spot or on a different route across town), you're forcing your brain to navigate a new and complex environment. A study of London taxi drivers found experienced drivers had larger brains because they have to store lots of information about locations and how to navigate there.

15. Pray. Daily prayer appears to help your immune system. And people who attend a formal worship service regularly live longer and report happier, healthier lives.

16 Learn to meditate. It's important for your brain that you learn to shut out the stresses of everyday life.

17. Get enough sleep. Studies have shown a link between interrupted sleep and dementia.

18. Eat more foods containing Omega-3 fatty acids: Walnuts (which are higher in omega 3s than salmon) and flaxseed. Flaxseed oil and walnut oil are good sources too


19. Eat more fruits and vegetables. Antioxidants in fruits and vegetables mop up some of the damage caused by free radicals, one of the leading killers of brain cells.

20. Eat at least one meal a day with family and friends. You'll slow down, socialize, and research shows you'll eat healthier food than if you ate alone or on the go.
 
This post remind me of a training I underwent before my retirement from the bank.

I have had a one week training in the residential Staff college of my Bank in which I worked.

They gave me a comprehensive training on how to lead a peaceful & healthy retired life.

The training module includes management plans of all types.... time management,

health management,financial management,balanced investment plans, hobbies,

techniques of getting along well with others in old age etc. ................. inter actions with

experts in the relative field besides nice food.
 
Most of us start worrying about dementia after retirement - and that may be too little, too late. Experts say that if you really want to ward off dementia, you need to start taking care of your brain in your 30s and 40s - or even earlier.

That's the key . All the above points mentioned must be followed by a person right from his 30s onwards to lead a balanced physically , mentally and emotionally healthy life .
 
I am 71+. I do not feel anything different from what I was in the 30s or 40s except that I lost my wife 7 years ago. Thank God I acquired some web and designing skill on the computer during my 50s. Now I am active in Face Book and Twitter. I am getting more and more friends. I am interested in film songs prior to 1980s. There are some Face Book groups that have members interested in old songs. I spend some time in doing some 'research' on songs that I like.
If you have a lively interest in something, your retired life will be pleasant and enjoyable.
 
Keeping oneself busy mentally, and physically is the key for retired life.
If one has saved enough for retirement or has pension plans, then financial worries will not be there.
A loving family or friendly neighbors also support a senior person.
Above all, GOD's blessings is also needed.

Thanks
Subra ganesan
 
Very good suggestions indeed. I am an octogenarian. I have been gathering information on managing old age from many sources. Ultimately I follow my own regimen of spending time in old age. First and foremost , I spend as much time as possible in activities that keep my brain occupied. Internet and reading books keep me engaged. Other is to spend time with my grand children, when they are around. Nothing gives the real pleasure than the warmth of our near and dear.

Well, These are a few conclusions that I accepted. Body starts shedding the strength of faculties as we grow old, but mind is always active with thoughts. (mostly of old time). I understood that life will not be the same always. For that matter nothing is same in nature."Kala" (great time) is the fourth dimension in life. Fighting against nature is futile. Accept the reality and swim along the current. During my younger age I have been frugal and selfish due to compelling economic circumstances. But hearing the lectures of eminent seers and sages, my attitude changed. These people put the seeds of compassion and humility in me. Where ever I worked I started or associated with welfare activities (Credit society, Welfare fund or Housing Society) to help the needy. We need not go in search of needy, they are there all around us.

Above all we should take care of our health, rest leave it to God.

Brahmanyan,
Bangalore.
 
A loving family or friendly neighbors also support a senior person.
Above all, GOD's blessings is also needed.

Very True!
Thank God I got children who look after me very well. Though I have no pension and am living alone separately, they care for me. I also have friendly and helpful neighbours. It makes all the difference in life.
 
I am 71+. I do not feel anything different from what I was in the 30s or 40s except that I lost my wife 7 years ago. ..........
I am rather surprised to read this line!!

This is what I felt on 'maNi vizha day'!

''
மாடிப் படிகளைத் தாண்டித் தாண்டி ஏறாமல்,
ஆடியாடி, கைப்பிடியைப் பிடித்தபடி ஏறுவது!

தரை மீது நொடிப் பொழுதிலே அமர்ந்திடாது,
தரையிலே கை ஊன்றியும், அமரத் தவிப்பது!

சீருந்தில் லாவகமாக இருக்கையில் அமராது,
சிரமத்தோடு வளைந்து, அதன் பின் அமர்வது!

பேருந்தைப் பிடிக்க, அதைத் துரத்தி ஓடாமல்,
பேருந்து நின்றிடும் வரை பொறுமை காப்பது!

பயணப் பெட்டியை எளிதில் தூக்க முடியாமல்,
பயணத்திற்கு Pull-man suitcase ஸை நாடுவது!

காலையில் காபி போட ஆவலுடன் செல்லாது,
காலைக் காபி கையில் வராதா என ஏங்குவது!

ஓஹோ.......

எனக்கு மணிவிழா முடிந்துவிட்டது!!
''
 
Dementia is the weakening of brain cells due to aging and other causes. Dementia may, and does affect people even during younger ages and not necessarily only after retirement. The root cause is genetics and nobody can do anything if one's genes cause dementia to set in. Making your life simpler - not complicated (rather than strenuously leading a simplified life) is the only partial solution to dementia.
 
I am rather surprised to read this line!!

This is what I felt on 'maNi vizha day'!


''மாடிப் படிகளைத் தாண்டித் தாண்டி ஏறாமல்,
ஆடியாடி, கைப்பிடியைப் பிடித்தபடி ஏறுவது!
மாடிப்படிகளைத் தாண்டித் தாண்டி ஏறுவதில்லை
ஆனால் கைப்பிடியைப் பிடிக்காமல் ஏற முடிகிறது


தரை மீது நொடிப் பொழுதிலே அமர்ந்திடாது,
தரையிலே கை ஊன்றியும், அமரத் தவிப்பது!
இக்காலத்தில் தரை மீது அமரும் வேளைகள் அரிது
உறவினர் வீட்டு விசேஷங்களின் போது தரையில் அமர்ந்து உணவருந்துவதில் சிரமமில்லை


சீருந்தில் லாவகமாக இருக்கையில் அமராது,
சிரமத்தோடு வளைந்து, அதன் பின் அமர்வது!
சீருந்திலும் சரி, தொடர்வண்டியிலும் சரி வழமைபோல அமர முடிகிறது

பேருந்தைப் பிடிக்க, அதைத் துரத்தி ஓடாமல்,
பேருந்து நின்றிடும் வரை பொறுமை காப்பது!
உள்ளூர் பேருந்தில் பயணம் செய்து ரொம்ப காலமாச்சு
வெளியூர் போகும் பேருந்தில் ஓடி ஏற அவசியம் இல்லை


பயணப் பெட்டியை எளிதில் தூக்க முடியாமல்,
பயணத்திற்கு Pull-man suitcase ஸை நாடுவது!
பயணத்தில் பெட்டி கொண்டு போவதில்லை
என் தேவைகள் குறைவு. தோளில் மாட்டும் பையே போதுமானது.


காலையில் காபி போட ஆவலுடன் செல்லாது,
காலைக் காபி கையில் வராதா என ஏங்குவது!
காலையில் எழுந்தவுடன் பாலை சூடாக்க வைத்துவிட்டு
பல்துலக்கி, மீண்டும் ஒரு நாளைத்தந்த இறைவனுக்கு வணக்கம் செலுத்திவிட்டு
காபியைக் கலந்து சாப்பிடுவது என் அன்றாட வழக்கம்.

தினமும் முக்கால் மணி நேரம் நடைப் பயிற்சி செய்கிறேன். வீட்டைச் சுத்தம் செய்வது, துணிகளை துவைக்கும் இயந்திரத்தில் துவைத்து உலரவைப்பது, காலை, இரவு உணவு தயாரிப்பது மற்றும் பகலுக்கு சாதம் வடிப்பது நானே செய்கிறேன். சாம்பார் முதலியவை மருமகள் கொடுத்துவிடுவாள். அவளுக்கு முடியாத நாட்களில் நானே செய்து கொள்வேன்.
கொஞ்ச நேரம் தொ(ல்)லைக் காட்சி பார்ப்பது, வானொலியில் மாலை 5 மணிக்கு இசையரங்கு கேட்பது, 6 மணியிலிருந்து மகன் வீட்டிற்குப் போய் பேரன் பேத்தியுடன் கொஞ்ச நேரம் செலவிடுவது, புத்தகங்கள் படிப்பது, அவ்வப்போது இங்கு மடிக்கணினியைத் திறந்து உலாவுவது, முகநூல் குழுமங்களில் பாடல் பதிவு செய்வது
இப்படி வாழ்க்கை போய்க்கொண்டே இருப்பதால் வயது போவதே தெரிவதில்லை. அதைப் பற்றி நினைக்க நேரமும் இல்லை.
இன்னும் சிலவற்றைச் சாதிக்க வேண்டும் என்ற எண்ணம் இருக்கிறது. இறைவன் அருளால் நடக்கும் என்றே நினைக்கிறேன். இல்லை, அதற்கு முன்பாக அழைப்பு வந்தால் சென்று விடவும் தயாராகவே இருக்கிறேன்.

If one is active in life, age is no bar for anything.
Best Wishes for an active long life!
 
Hi Everyone
i want to tel something about dementia...2 main causes of weakening of brain cells is lifestyle changes and other is genetics(APP)..short term memory HIPPOCAMPUS la normalla store aaganum but hippocampus la poga koodiya neurons will atrophy(die)...idha early stagela found panna we can restore the dead brain cells through a process called NEUROPLASTICITY---healthy neighboring neurons will help the dead neuron...meditation is the first and foremost for Neuroplasticity...all these things was found and there is ongoing research for this...By rudolph tanzi..dementia vaala first varakoodia oru problem ALZHEIMER'S...If one part of the brain is getting affect na the brain always gets adapted and this take some time..so within that we can train the brain's cognition,skill etc parts...so this will wake up new networks in the brain(neuroplasticity)...For example:If u can remember this word (APP) that u read somewhere above na then its coz of ur hippocampus...so its functioning normally...:)
 
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