Walking Just 10 Minutes a Day May Lead to a Longer Life

I was just about to sit down to do some work when this article in the New York Times caught my eye. Guess what I decided to do? I am so happy that we decided to buy a treadmill just before Covid-19 started. Eliot and I are on it a few times a week. Now I have to aim for every day. Then I have to stop noshing. Here I go with two new disciplines.

Ten minutes of moderate exercise daily would prevent more than 111,000 premature deaths a year, a new analysis found.

By Gretchen Reynolds

If almost all of us started walking for an extra 10 minutes a day, we could, collectively, prevent more than 111,000 deaths every year, according to an enlightening new study of movement and mortality. Published this week in JAMA Internal Medicine, the study used data about physical activity and death rates for thousands of American adults to estimate how many deaths every year might be averted if everyone exercised more. The results indicate that even a little extra physical activity by each of us could potentially stave off hundreds of thousands of premature deaths over the coming years.

Already, science offers plenty of evidence that how much we exercise influences how long we live. In a telling 2019 studypublished by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 8 percent of all deaths in the United States were attributed to “inadequate levels of activity.” A British study from 2015 likewise found that men and women who exercised for at least 150 minutes per week — the standard recommendation in Britain, Europe and the United States — reduced their risk of premature death by at least 25 percent compared to people who exercised less. More dramatically, a 2020 examination of the lifestyles and death risks of about 44,000 adults in the United States and Europe concluded that the most sedentary men and women in the study, who sat almost all day, were as much as 260 percent more likely to die prematurely as the most highly active people studied, who exercised for at least 30 minutes most days.

But much of this past research relied on people’s often unreliable memories of their exercise and sitting habits. In addition, many of the studies that delved into the broader, population-level impacts of exercise on longevity tended to use formal exercise guidelines as their goal. In those studies, researchers modeled what would happen if everyone started working out for at least 150 minutes a week, an ambitious and perhaps unachievable goal for the many people who previously have exercised rarely, if at all.

In the new study, researchers at the National Cancer Institute and the C.D.C. decided instead to explore what might happen to death rates if people started moving around more, even if they did not necessarily meet the formal exercise guidelines. But, first, the researchers needed to establish a baseline of how many deaths might be related to too-little movement. So, they began gathering data from the ongoing National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, or NHANES, which periodically asks a representative sample of the population about their lives and health. It also provides some of them with activity trackers, to objectively measure how much they move.

The researchers now pulled information from 4,840 participants of different ethnicities, male and female, who ranged in age from 40 to 85. All had joined the survey between 2003 and 2006 and worn an activity monitor for a week. Based on that data, the researchers grouped people according to how many minutes they walked or otherwise moved most days. They also checked people’s names against a national death registry to establish mortality risks for the various activity levels.

Using those results, they began creating a series of statistical what-if’s. Suppose, the researchers asked, everyone who was capable of exercising began exercising moderately, such as by walking briskly, for an extra 10 minutes per day, on top of how much or little they currently worked out? How many deaths might not happen?

The researchers made adjustments to account statistically for those people who were too frail or otherwise unable to walk or easily move around. They also considered age, education, smoking status, diet, body mass index and other health factors in their calculations.

Then, the researchers ran the same statistical scenario with everyone working out for an extra 20 minutes a day and, finally, for an extra 30 minutes a day and checked the mortality outcomes.

Quite a few people would live longer in any of those scenarios, they found. According to the modeling, if every capable adult walked briskly or otherwise exercised for an additional 10 minutes a day, 111,174 deaths annually across the country — or about 7 percent of all deaths in a typical year — might be avoided.

When they doubled the imagined exercise time to an extra 20 minutes a day, the number of potentially averted deaths rose to 209,459. Tripling the exercise to 30 extra minutes a day averted 272,297 deaths, or almost 17 percent of typical annual totals. (The data was gathered before the pandemic, which has skewed mortality numbers.)

Those figures might seem abstract, but, in practice, those hundreds of thousands of deaths forestalled could turn out to be deeply personal. They could mean avoiding the early death of a spouse, parent, friend, grown child, co-worker or, of course, us, said Pedro Saint-Maurice, an epidemiologist at the National Cancer Institute, who led the new study. “There is a message in this data for public health entities” about the importance of promoting physical activity to reduce premature deaths, he said. And the message applies equally to each of us.

So get up and walk or engage in some kind of moderate physical activity for an extra 10 minutes today. Invite your friends, colleagues and aging parents to do the same. “In this context, a little additional physical activity can have a huge impact,” Dr. Saint-Maurice said

Saturday Night Birthday Party In Boca Raton

Pauline and Alex Shender, formerly of Riverside Drive in Manhattan, went all out to celebrate their duo birthdays last Saturday night in Boca. Their party was held at the couple’s country club which they lit up with all kinds of electric decorations, You could feel the party energy the minute you left your car in the parking area. Pauline is a member of Fountainhead Arts. From left to right: Dan Mikesell, co-founder of Fountainhead Arts, Alex Shender, me, Pauline, Eliot, and Kathryn Mikesell, co-founder of Fountainhead Arts.

Post Covid Malaise

Many of us don’t realize that we are suffering from some sort of a mild depression due to the trauma of the Covid virus. A few of us have it real bad. If you think to yourself, “I just don’t feel like my old self,” or if family and friends tell you “You seem different,”’ you should listen to this podcast.

Post Covid Malaise? It’s A Real Thing

I teamed up my long time girlfriend, Debbie Nigro, a radio personality, with my client, Dr.Arthur Bregman, to discuss this topic after I heard family, friends, and business associates tell me they feel that they lost some of their enthusiasm and spirit during the last two years.

Maybe this podcast will help,

https://debbienigro.com/post-covid-malaise-its-a-real-thing/

Dr. Arthur Bregman, MD, a Psychiatry Specialist in Coral Gables, FL, with over 47 years of expertise treating illnesses including ADHD, depression, anxiety, PTSD, and various other problems reports…

“Nine out of ten Covid patients who see me on a telemedicine call report a lingering sense of what I like to call ‘Covid dysphoria’ “.

He went on to explain, “After a bout with coronavirus a lot of my patients are not just suffering mild depressive symptoms – they have a more complete personality change. They don’t lose memories and become completely different people, but they say things like ‘My friends tell me I’m not like myself’ or ‘I’m usually such a cheerful person! What happened?’

Whatever happened won’t last forever thank goodness! Luckily for sufferers of ‘Covid dysphoria’, there are a few pointers that Dr. Bregman can share to help folks feel less hopeless and more confident that they’ll overcome this bump in the psychological road. It does tend to go away on its own and with relaxation techniques and a bit of talk therapy people can usually get on the other side of it quicker.

Meet The Man Who Drove Howard Stern Crazy

Franklin Karp
Howard Stern

Franklin Karp, the very well known audio executive at Harvey’s and Audio Video Systems, was the guy Howard Stern wanted to be for many years. If you know Franklin, you know how modest he is about all of his accomplishments. He doesn’t boast about anything. I have been friendly with Franklin for decades. I only learned about the Howard situation recently. After you listen to the 8 minute recording that took place in 1994, you’ll understand why I want to challenge Robin to a do over.

https://hwhpr.com/karp-on-stern/

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Even Dumbbells Are Getting Smarter

By John R. Quain –   February 1, 2022

Bowflex SelectTech 552 Smart Dumbbells

Whether it’s due to a genuine fitness craze or primarily a gym-avoidance craze, sales of home fitness products continue their upward trend. And carried along with that trend are intelligent apps and gear aimed at the home gym. Even dumbbells are getting smarter. Bowflex’s established SelectTech system is emblematic of the trend. Improved health notwithstanding, the Bowflex SelectTech 552 Dumbbells, for example, offer several benefits over traditional free weights.


A pair of the Bowflex SelectTech 552 hand weights costs $399 and can be adjusted from just five pounds each to 52.5 pounds each. That’s plenty of range for most of us. The lower weights are ideal for repairing a muscle tear or doing some rotator cuff strengthening, while the higher weights can be used by more experienced lifters to do bench presses and preacher curls
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To select different weights, each dumbbell has a dial on each end. This, in turn, determines how many discs get locked onto the hand weight. And with all the selections, it’s the equivalent of getting a set of 30 individual free weights in just two dumbbells. In testing, we found them also safer to use. A home vertical rack of traditional dumbbells can be awkward to manage, and it’s easy to drop or misalign a heavy weight in the rack (watch your fingers!). The Bowflex weights, by comparison, are simple and easy to store without needing a rack or cramped positioning
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Most of our shoulder and arm strength routines were easily accommodated by the SelectTech weights. It takes just a second or two to spin dials and change the weights for rapid supersets, for example. And you can’t mismatch or dangerously imbalance them by, say, selecting 25 pounds on one end and 40 pounds on the other end of a hand weight; they won’t let you lift them out of the stands if you do that. Nice safety feature.


However, some people may find the size of the weights a little tricky to manage. The SelectTech 552 Dumbbells are about 7.5 inches in diameter and 17 inches wide, side to side. Compare that to our old-fashioned fixed 40-pound dumbbell at home, which is 6 inches in diameter and about 12.5 inches wide
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But the real smarts of the SelectTech system — like so many other fitness devices today — are really in its supporting custom apps. Designed to be used in conjunction with its weights, stationary bikes, and treadmills, Bowflex’s JRNY app for phones and tablets is $19.99 a month or $149 for the year for the software with video training sessions. Each is geared toward your level of fitness and particular goals (weight loss, improved strength, etc.) with tailored workouts to help keep you motivated and progressing. The video includes weight training sessions, as well as cardio classes for those with the very popular Bowflex C6 Bike ($999) or Bowflex Treadmill 10 ($1,999). And if you get bored with trim trainers urging you on, you can switch to streaming Netflix, Hulu, or Amazon Prime Video while your individualized progress data continues along the bottom of the screen
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Nonetheless, we still found the best feature of the Bowflex SelectTech 552 was the overall compactness of the free weight set compared to a large rack of traditional weights. It makes the SelectTech 552 perfect for cliff-dwellers, or those in smaller homes who don’t have the space for a dedicated workout room. If you do have a bit of extra space, there’s also a $179 SelectTech Dumbbell Stand with Media Rack, where you can also set a tablet for some of those streaming training sessions. All in all, for the equivalent of a few months’ gym membership, it’s a permanent solution on how to avoid going to the gym.

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Three New Additions To Our Foyer. Art Work And Wallpaper By The Great Jayda Knight

The New Additions
The First In Our Collection.

The Historic Hampton House

A Miami Treasure

https://historichamptonhouse.org/

The Historic Hampton House is one of Miami’s greatest gems even though many residents and tourists never heard of it. Perhaps this story in The Three Tomatoes will change all that. The hotel became famous in the 1960s because that was the place were big name Black entertainers opted to stay. The hotels on the beach would not accept them. Guests included Sammy Davis Jr., Jackie Robinson, Aretha Franklin, and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., plus so many others who went there to get a peaceful night’s sleep. What a horrific time.

Ray Elman

In fact, the movie “One Night In Miami, the 2020 American drama film directed by Regina King (in her feature film directorial debut) all took place in the Hampton House. The film is a fictionalized account of a February 1964 meeting of Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Sam Cooke in a room at the Hampton House, celebrating Ali’s surprise title win over Sonny Liston.

In 1961, Harry and Florence Markowitz, a white Jewish couple, opened the remodeled Hampton House as an upscale motel with a jazz club, swimming pool and late-night restaurant in the all-Black Brownsville neighborhood. Architect Robert Karl Frese designed the 50-room motel in the Miami Modern style, similar to that of Eden Roc and The Deauville on Miami Beach. After the $6 million restoration in 2015, thanks to the work of preservationist Dr. Enid Pinkney, the real-life Historic Hampton House became a nonprofit organization and cultural center. Today, guests can tour both Dr. King’s and Muhammad Ali’s suites, and rent public areas for private events.

The Historic Hampton House

A group of us, Gail Williams, Jayda Knight, Alex Nuñez, Eliot Hess, and yours truly, went to the Hampton House this week to help celebrate Ray Elman’s exhibition of 40 x 60 inch, mixed-media portraits of people who were patrons or performers at this amazing establishment. Ray, a good friend, is an extraordinary artist who is also the founding manager/editor of Inspicio, an arts publication platform sponsored by Florida International University’s College of Communication Architecture + The Arts.

Elman has made over 200 paintings in portrait series of notable talents such as Norman Mailer, Robert Motherwell, Douglas Huebler, Justin Kaplan, Joel Meyerowitz, Annie Dillard, Mark Strand, Sebastian Junger, Alec Wilkinson, E.J. Kahn, Jr., Varujan Boghosian, Al Jaffee, Lee Falk, Elise Asher, Anne Bernays, and Ruth Reichl. His work is in several public and corporate collections around the world including the embassies of Madrid, Berlin, Tel Aviv, Brazilia, Brussels, and the Museum of African American HIstory, Proctor & Gamble, Fidelity Mutual Fund Group, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Alexander Grant.

preservationist Dr. Enid Pinkney

Ray maintains a strong relationship with the Hampton House because of its rich culture. You can’t stop an accomplished artist from getting emotional about the soul of a place like this. The Hampton House has a loyal and best friend in Ray. It’s very heart warming.

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Alex Nuñez Is A Real Life Piece Of Art

The minute I met Alex I was enthralled. She just happened to be tagging along in one of our tour groups at the PAMM Museum in Miami. I know very little about art and the group tour leader was putting me to sleep. The leader had the good sense to ask Alex to take over. I can’t remember now what we were looking at but I still remember the sensation I got when Alex described what the artist was trying to achieve on the canvas. I felt like the piece of art suddenly became a movie script. The entire story was right in front of me. I was overwhelmed and Alex opened my eyes to a brand new world.

Not only is Alex one heck of a talented artist herself, but she has the rare quality of being able to talk about art like no other. Most artists can’t do that, or they just don’t want to. Alex’s sister Danielle, a lawyer, reminded me the other day that Alex has a Master of Fine Arts degree from Hunter College. “She knows what she is talking about,” she added. I know that but the way she says it is totally captivating. I have the pleasure now of promoting Alex to the world. Her canvasses are just the beginning, Wait till you see what is next.

Alex Nuñez is a Cuban-American mixed media painter from Miami, FL. She received her Bachelor of Arts from Loyola University New Orleans in 2006. She completed international workshops at Firenze Arti Visive, Florence and Metafora, Barcelona. In 2009, she received her Post Baccalaureate Diploma from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She received her MFA from Hunter College, City University of New York in 2012; upon completion, she was awarded the C12 Emerging Artist Fellowship. Nuñez is the host and producer of the Sunday Painter podcast on Jolt Radio, now in the show’s fifth year of production and a recipient of The Warhol Foundation and Locust Project’s Wavemaker Grant. In 2019 she completed a year of residency at the Deering Estate. She is currently a resident artist at the Fountainhead Studios in Little Haiti.

Alex explains, “Resembling a hazy, unruly overgrowth, my abstract paintings obscure hidden messages with boldly colored splashes and creeping abstract figures. Each work is a spontaneous exploration of materiality, composed of meticulous mark-making and gestural explosions of vibrant color. Translucent forms contort and highlight a diaristic scrawl of hidden references drawn from pop culture and a personal narrative. These paintings use a stream of consciousness process that investigate memory, with an emotive range of color, comprised of anthropomorphic shapes, pointed fingers, jagged teeth, man-eating insects, alien foliage and polyps suspended within an imagined realm, tipping the perception of gravity. Each work forms universal associations that reveal subconscious connections which ultimately shape our sense of time, identity and depict the uncertainty of impermanence.

Alex Nuñez is a real life piece of art
I have lost control of the day, 2020, 84” x 100”, mixed media on canvas
Snake in the grass, 2021, 84” x 116”, mixed media on canvas
Never forget where you come from, always forget where you’re going, 2012, 78” x 96”, mixed media on canvas
Don’t set yourself on fire to keep others warm, 2018, 123” x 70”, mixed media on canvas
Búscame en casa, 2022, 90” x 67”, mixed media on canvas
The good rain knows when to fall, 2022, 94” x 81”, mixed media on canvas

FOR THOSE WHO ARE 60 yrs OLD AND ABOVE PLEASE READ THIS

This is for you. Marilyn Peters, a friend I met on a Smartours trip a number of year ago, shared this with me.

Between 60 and death. It’s time to use the money you saved up. Use it and enjoy it. Don’t just keep it for those who may have no notion of the sacrifices you made to get it.

Remember there is nothing more dangerous than a son or daughter-in-law with big ideas for your hard-earned capital.

🚩Warning: This is also a bad time for investments, even if it seems wonderful or fool-proof. They only bring problems and worries. This is a time for you to enjoy some peace and quiet.

🚩Stop worrying about the financial situation of your children and grandchildren, and don’t feel bad spending your money on yourself. You’ve taken care of them for many years, and you’ve taught them what you could. You gave them an education, food, shelter, and support. The responsibility is now theirs to earn their own money.

🚩Keep a healthy life, without great physical effort. Do moderate exercise (like walking every day), eat well, and get your sleep. It’s easy to become sick, and it gets harder to remain healthy. That is why you need to keep yourself in good shape and be aware of your medical and physical needs. Keep in touch with your doctor, do tests even when you’re feeling well. Stay informed.

🚩Always buy the best, most beautiful items for your significant other. The key goal is to enjoy your money with your partner. One day one of you will miss the other, and the money will not provide any comfort then, enjoy it together.

🚩Don’t stress over the little things. You’ve already overcome so much in your life. You have good memories and bad ones, but the important thing is the present. Don’t let the past drag you down and don’t let the future frighten you. Feel good in the now. Small issues will soon be forgotten.

🚩Regardless of age, always keep love alive. Love your partner, love life, love your family, love your neighbor and remember: “A person is not old as long as he/she has intelligence and affection.”

🚩Be proud, both inside and out. Don’t stop going to your hair salon or barber, do your nails, go to the dermatologist and the dentist, keep your perfumes and creams well stocked. When you are well-maintained on the outside, it seeps in, making you feel proud and strong.

🚩Don’t lose sight of fashion trends for your age, but keep your own sense of style. You’ve developed your own sense of what looks good on you – keep it and be proud of it. It’s part of who you are.

🚩ALWAYS stay up-to-date. Read newspapers, watch the news. Go online and read what people are saying. Make sure you have an active email account and try to use some of those social networks. You’ll be surprised at what old friends you’ll meet.

🚩Respect the younger generation and their opinions. They may not have the same ideas as you, but they are the future and will take the world in their direction. Give advice, not criticism, and try to remind them that yesterday’s wisdom still applies today.Never use the phrase: “In my time.” Your time is now. As long as you’re alive, you are part of this time.

🚩Some people embrace their golden years, while others become bitter and surly. Life is too short to waste your days on the latter. Spend your time with positive, cheerful people, it’ll rub off on you and your days will seem that much better. Spending your time with bitter people will make you feel older and harder to be around.

🚩Do not surrender to the temptation of living with your children or grandchildren (if you have a financial choice, that is). Sure, being surrounded by family sounds great, but we all need our privacy. They need theirs and you need yours. Even then, do so only if you feel you really need the help or do not want to live by yourself

🚩Don’t abandon your hobbies. If you don’t have any, make new ones. You can travel, hike, cook, read, dance. You can adopt a cat or a dog, grow a kitchen garden, play cards, checkers, chess, dominoes, golf.

🚩Try to go. Get out of the house, meet people you haven’t seen in a while, experience something new (or something old). The important thing is to leave the house from time to time. Go to museums, go walk through a park. Get out there.

🚩Speak in courteous tones and try not to complain or criticize too much unless you really need to. Try to accept situations as they are.

🚩Pains and discomfort go hand in hand with getting older. Try not to dwell on them but accept them as a part of life.

🚩If you’ve been offended by someone – forgive them. If you’ve offended someone-apologize. Don’t drag around resentment with you. It only serves to make you sad and bitter. It doesn’t matter who was right. Someone once said: “Holding a grudge is like taking poison and expecting the other person to die.” Don’t take that poison. Forgive, forget, and move on with your life.

🚩Laugh. Laugh away your worries Remember, you are one of the lucky ones. You managed to have a life, a long one. Many never get to this age, never get to experience a full life.My valued friends, enjoy peace at this point in your life …Don’t worry… be happy.

Thank you Marilyn!