DiscoverPower EnglishHi, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called “Healthy Heart" and l'm going to talk about, again, a section from Healthy at 100 -- the book Healthy at 100 -- by John Robbins. I've alr
Hi, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called “Healthy Heart" and l'm going to talk about, again, a section from Healthy at 100 -- the book Healthy at 100 -- by John Robbins. I've alr

Hi, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called “Healthy Heart" and l'm going to talk about, again, a section from Healthy at 100 -- the book Healthy at 100 -- by John Robbins. I've alr

Update: 2021-10-16
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Hi, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called “Healthy Heart" and l'm


going to talk about, again, a section from Healthy at 100 -- the book Healthy at 100 --


by John Robbins. I've already talked about it a little bit and I'm going to talk about a


different section this time.


And in this section John Robbins talks about another factor that contributes to a long


and healthy life. Now before we talked about diet and what you eat and how that can


really affect your healthy, your longevity, meaning how long you live, how strong you


are, everything.


Well there's another very important factor other than diet. Diet is very important, but


another important factor that John Robbins found when he studied all these people


who were 100 years old or more and they were still strong, still healthy, well he found


something else.


So a kind of vegan diet, that was number one, but the next thing he found was these


people have strong social ties. They have rich social lives. It means they're not alone.


They have friends, they have family. They have communities. They're connected to


other people in many, many ways. And so what he found was that emotion and love


and caring and connection were equally important to diet and exercise. They're both


very important.


So let me read a section from his book -- the same book -- Healthy at 100 and then ll


talk more about it. Here we go.


"We cannot live for ourselves alone,' wrote Herman Melville. 'A thousand fibers


connect us with our fellow men. Perhaps this explains why we are often moved by


people caring deeply for one another.' 'There are also medical implications to whether


we think of others or only of ourselves,' as Larry Scherwitz found when he conducted a


most unusual study. He is now the Director of Research at California Pacific Medical


Center's Institute for Health and Healing in San Francisco.


"Dr. Scherwitz taped the conversations of nearly 600 men. About one-third of these


men were suffering from heart disease, the rest were healthy. Listening to the tapes,


he counted how often each man used the words I, me and mine. Comparing his


results with the frequency of heart disease, he found that the men who used the first


person pronouns the most often had the highest risk of heart trouble.



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Hi, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called “Healthy Heart" and l'm going to talk about, again, a section from Healthy at 100 -- the book Healthy at 100 -- by John Robbins. I've alr

Hi, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called “Healthy Heart" and l'm going to talk about, again, a section from Healthy at 100 -- the book Healthy at 100 -- by John Robbins. I've alr

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