alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Milky Way over WA Coast)
alfreda89 ([personal profile] alfreda89) wrote2014-10-24 12:52 pm

What if Age Really is Nothing But Mindset?

What if the health of the mind and the health of the body are entwined--so much so that they must be addressed together? This is actually very old thinking--shamans have treated the body and the spirit together for centuries.

When you ask me how I keep getting younger...this is part of it. New York Times, so look fast.

One day in the fall of 1981, eight men in their 70s stepped out of a van in front of a converted monastery in New Hampshire. They shuffled forward, a few of them arthritically stooped, a couple with canes. Then they passed through the door and entered a time warp. Perry Como crooned on a vintage radio. Ed Sullivan welcomed guests on a black-and-white TV. Everything inside — including the books on the shelves and the magazines lying around — were designed to conjure 1959. This was to be the men’s home for five days as they participated in a radical experiment, cooked up by a young psychologist named Ellen Langer.

The subjects were in good health, but aging had left its mark. “This was before 75 was the new 55,” says Langer, who is 67 and the longest-serving professor of psychology at Harvard. Before arriving, the men were assessed on such measures as dexterity, grip strength, flexibility, hearing and vision, memory and cognition — probably the closest things the gerontologists of the time could come to the testable biomarkers of age. Langer predicted the numbers would be quite different after five days, when the subjects emerged from what was to be a fairly intense psychological intervention......

At the end of their stay, the men were tested again. On several measures, they outperformed a control group that came earlier to the monastery but didn’t imagine themselves back into the skin of their younger selves, though they were encouraged to reminisce. They were suppler, showed greater manual dexterity and sat taller — just as Langer had guessed. Perhaps most improbable, their sight improved. Independent judges said they looked younger. The experimental subjects, Langer told me, had “put their mind in an earlier time,” and their bodies went along for the ride.

[identity profile] starcat-jewel.livejournal.com 2014-10-24 08:33 pm (UTC)(link)
This is the basic plot of Time and Again, in which psychological immersion in a past historical era was used as a time-travel mechanism. The protagonist was put into an apartment furnished as if it was the 1890s, completely surrounded by artifacts of the period, with nothing to read except period literature (including specially-printed newspapers that arrived in his living space each day). After several weeks, he was able to step out into the New York City of the 1890s.

[identity profile] alfreda89.livejournal.com 2014-10-24 09:02 pm (UTC)(link)
You are quite correct about the book. I think that might take psyching out a step too far. That would be choosing to enter a time that was not your own.

I can attest as someone who eats organic at home all the time that eating out is a very bizarre experience...

Very, very interesting.

[identity profile] barb caffrey (from livejournal.com) 2014-10-24 10:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Kat, I found this both educational and interesting at a very deep level. As a musician, I've known for a long time that hearing music brings me back to the times I've either played the pieces myself or heard them being played, and because of that I recall details I'd thought I'd long forgotten.

A great deal of what we know about ourselves is the belief in who and what we are -- and we, ourselves, hold that belief. So if we tell ourselves we're still young, or we're at least still middle-aged, that's what our body is going to believe. ;-) (At least, so I believe, and thus far, people still think I'm at least ten years younger than my chronological age despite walking with a cane.)

Re: Very, very interesting.

[identity profile] alfreda89.livejournal.com 2014-10-25 03:17 am (UTC)(link)
Keep thinking young!

[identity profile] sheilagh.livejournal.com 2014-10-24 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
If you can really get your head out of the past, you can do anything....

[identity profile] alfreda89.livejournal.com 2014-10-25 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
Can I "like" this?

;)