What Jack taught us about aging

Bold emphasis is mine.

What Jack LaLanne taught us about aging

    By Mark Lachs, CNN January 25, 2011

    Editor’s note: Dr Mark Lachs is professor of medicine at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University and director of geriatrics for the New York Presbyterian Health Care System

    (CNN) — It was the 1950s, and we were getting fatter, lazier and puffing away on cigarettes (often as the coda to a meal filled with saturated fats). Then along comes this lone, indefatigable voice telling us — with great kindness — to cut it out.

    I’m not exactly sure why Jack LaLanne’s message resonated so well way back then. Maybe it was because he looked like your gym teacher but was way nicer. Maybe it was his “American” sensibility — the can-do attitude, the upbeat affability, even his fun sense of entrepreneurism. Whatever the recipe, I would argue that every modern-day advance in exercise and nutrition is somehow derivative of this pioneer’s work and vision.

    But as an internist who specializes in geriatric medicine, I believe that one of the great values of LaLanne’s later life and message is that he embodied many important attributes of healthy aging. LaLanne was a force of nature till his death on Sunday at 96.

    Back when LaLanne began his TV exercise show, older adults with and without disabilities (which in that epoch, started around 50) were told by their doctors to slow down and stop exercising. Of course, he would have none of it.

    Five decades later, hundreds of studies demonstrate the positive benefits of exercise and mobility on everything from depression to fall prevention. He was the original “use it or lose it” guy, correctly preaching to us that things in motion tend to stay in motion, and things (and people) that don’t will stop, or worse. (the Law of Motion applies both to human bodies and business)

    LaLanne was essentially telling us to maintain what gerontologists call “physiologic reserve,” making sure that the extra capacity we’re given at birth is available to support our unprecedented longevity, which is a very recent development.

    What else did LaLanne demonstrate? A sense of purpose and adaptive social integration.

    The arc of the Jack LaLanne story was consistent over his lifetime; for him it was getting us fit. It gave his life meaning and purpose.

    I see this repeatedly in my older patients — one or two interests that continues to “turn their gears” as one of my 98-year-olds likes to say. It really doesn’t matter what that “it” is as long as there’s something.

    And the adaptive social integration? While social networks shrink with aging for many, his seemed to grow as he transformed his message for a changing world. (How many 96 YO do you know that have a Facebook page?)

    Sure, his TV show in the 1950s was revolutionary, but so were his juicing infomercials and many of his other ventures that continued to connect us to him and vice versa.

    He was the lifelong friend who, quite literally, “walked the walk” for nearly a century. An American original. –Mark Lachs

    What’s your legacy going to be? Is your life story a warning or an example?

    Live With Intention,
    Dr Bill

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Seth Godin said it better than I could

Eight Lessons from the life and work of Jack LaLanne

1. He bootstrapped himself. A scrawny little kid at 15, he decided to change who he was and how he was perceived, and then he did. The deciding was as important as the doing.
2. He went to the edges. He didn’t merely open a small gym, a more pleasant version of a boxing gym, for instance. Instead, he created the entire idea of a health club, including the juice bar. He did this 70 years ago.
3. He started small. No venture money, no big media partners.
4. He understood the power of the media. If it weren’t for TV, we never would have heard of Jack. Jack used access to the media to
earn trust and to teach. And most of what Jack had to offer he offered for free. He understood the value of attention.
5. He was willing to avoid prime time. Jack never had a variety show on CBS. He was able to change the culture from the fringes of TV.
6. He owned the rights. 3,000 shows worth.
7. He stuck with the brand. He didn’t worry about it getting stale or having to reinvent it into something fresh. Jack stood for something, which is rare, and he was smart enough to keep standing for it.
8. Jack lived the story. He followed his own regimen, even when no one was watching. In his words, “I can’t die, it would ruin my image.”

He died last week at 96. I don’t think he has to worry about ruining his image, though.

What’s your legacy going to be?

Live With Intention,
Dr Bill

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Do you know Jack? Inspiration, Coach, Mentor

Dr Bill Toth & Jack LaLanne

Dr Bill Toth & Jack LaLanne

I owe this man a lot. He was partly responsible for my journey into the Health and Wellness field 30+ years ago. This pic was taken at a NuSkin Convention he and his wife spoke at, he had just celebrated his 90th birthday. In so many ways he was/is an incredible example.

How we live our lives is critically important. I want to challenge you to take a look at how you live—challenge you to think deeply about the major areas of your life where you can and should leave a lasting legacy. –Jim Rohn

How are you going to live your life today?

Live with Intention,
Bill

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Living Space

As a fish lives in water so we live in a sea of abundance.

Live With Intention,
Bill

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Knowing vs Doing

You don’t know what you don’t know and you won’t know until you DO

Live With Intention,
Dr Bill

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