Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月23日
This 55-year-old single mom makes less than $100k per year and is reverse aging without spending millions. Here’s her daily routine
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文章讲述了55岁的单亲妈妈Julie Gibson Clark通过坚持健康的生活方式,例如蔬菜为主的饮食、力量和有氧运动以及桑拿和冷水浴,在“返老还童奥运会”中排名第二,其生物年龄甚至低于花费巨资逆转衰老的科技富豪。她证明了健康长寿并非遥不可及,通过一些简单的日常习惯,普通人也能显著改善健康状况,延缓衰老。文章也强调了保持健康动力的重要性,Clark希望能够陪伴儿子更长时间,这激励着她坚持健康的生活方式。

🤔Julie Gibson Clark通过健康生活方式,在“返老还童奥运会”中排名第二,其生物年龄远低于科技富豪,证明了普通大众也能逆转衰老。

🥦她坚持蔬菜为主的饮食,限制精制糖和谷物的摄入,并通过力量和有氧运动、桑拿和冷水浴等方式改善身体机能,增强免疫力和心血管健康。

🏋️‍♀️她每周进行力量训练和有氧运动,周末进行徒步、皮划艇等户外活动,强调找到自己喜欢的运动方式才能坚持下去。

🥶桑拿和冷水浴可以激活长寿通路,增强免疫系统和心血管健康,冷水浴还能释放肾上腺素,增强身体抵抗力。

👪她坚持健康生活方式的动力来源于对儿子的爱,希望能够陪伴儿子更长时间,这体现了亲情和责任感的重要性。

Julie Gibson Clark is aging at 0.665 of a year for every chronological year she lives. So while the Phoenix-based single mother is 55 years old, her “biological” age, which may determine health span and life span more accurately, is decreasing—that is, according to her latest epigenetic DNA test, evaluating how her lifestyle influences her genes. Amid the craze to live forever—a $26 billion business predicted to nearly double in the next decade—Clark’s results are more than impressive. In a global online longevity game called the Rejuvenation Olympics, ranking 4,000 people’s pace-of-aging averages across six months, Clark is in second place. She ranks higher than No. 6 Bryan Johnson, the wealthy tech founder who spends $2 million per year on reverse aging, and No. 19 Peter Diamandis, whose venture fund has put $500 million into growing technologies, many of which are aimed at research and development for healthy aging and extending life span, according to his website. Unlike the tech millionaires using extreme anti-aging protocols like spending up to $1,000 an hour to see a rejuvenation doctor, Clark’s secret is somewhat ordinary. After all, she makes less than six figures a year and cannot afford to spend her savings trying to live forever since she will need enough to sustain her into extreme old age. She spends $27 a month on a gym membership and $79 a month on a supplement subscription from NOVOS, the company whose trial she entered and worked with to submit her results to the longevity leaderboard. “Eventually the wheels will fall off the bus, and I’m like, well, mine aren’t falling off anytime soon,” Clark previously told Fortune. “So I’m going to do everything I can to keep the bus in good order.”So what’s her daily routine? Turns out, you can do it, too. “This stuff has to just kind of be like brushing your teeth,” Clark says. A vegetable-rich dietClark typically consumes about 16 ounces of vegetables daily, snacking on carrots, radishes, and peppers during the workday. The majority, though, she gets through salads and soups. Eating a diverse array of whole foods, such as a range of vegetables, is associated with a strong gut, which can boost the immune system and keep the body healthy. Clark also limits the amount of refined sugars and grains she eats, which contain fewer nutrients than complex carbohydrates. Julie Gibson Clark sticks to a vegetable-rich diet, exercises, and meditates.Courtesy of Julie Gibson ClarkStrength and cardio When Clark heads to the gym, she does a mix of cardio and strength workouts each week: two days of upper body workouts with weights, two days of lower body with weights, and one day of strength-training targeting her midsection. She also does about 20 to 30 minutes of cardio four times a week. On the weekends, Clark hikes, kayaks, plays pickleball, or takes a long walk.  Especially as people age, incorporating strength training into the week can help combat age-related muscle loss. Finding an exercise you enjoy can help you stick with it. A sauna and a cold shower At least three times a week, Clark uses the sauna for 20 minutes before taking a cold shower. Longevity experts swear by cold and hot immersion to stress the body. As longevity expert Dr. Mark Hyman previously told Fortune, “A stress that doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.”Heat immersion like a sauna can activate longevity pathways, he says. “You’ll end up increasing heat shock proteins, which clean up all damaged proteins and boost your immune system and increase your cardiovascular health,” Hyman says. A cold shower, similar to the cold plunge, can do more than improve alertness. It can release adrenaline and keep the body resilient—a biological process known as hormesis, which can reduce inflammation. Wolf PrandelliAn incentive to keep goingClark doesn’t see her health journey as intense, nor does she prescribe to the term “biohacker.” She has found easy ways to prioritize her health through diet, exercise, and healthy bouts of stress. She also credits her motivating factor to keeping up her routine to live a long, healthy life: her son. As a single mother, she hopes to stay around for her 17-year-old son. “I want to be there for him as long as possible,” she told Fortune. “I want to minimize any negative repercussions of aging.”

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健康长寿 逆转衰老 生物年龄 健康生活方式 返老还童
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