© Peter Lang
People have attributed their long lives to all sorts of lifestyle factors. For example, before her death in 2012,
Besse Cooper, 116, said the secret to long life is "minding your own business and staying away from junk food."
But for
Emery Lang of Miami, who will celebrate his 93rd birthday in May, the secret to a long and healthy life is, quite simply, rowing.
"This is the best exercise for anybody because your whole body is in motion... your legs and arms and shoulders," Lang told the Huffington Post. "If you do this exercise every day, your shoulders will be very powerful and straight up. You won't be bent over when you are in your 90s."
A champion, with many amateur rowing titles under his belt, one would think Lang's been rowing all his life. But, incredibly,
he didn't take up rowing until age 65."I had never done rowing on the water in my life. I am originally from Hungary and I had done a lot of other sports but not rowing," Lang said. "But then I visited Florence, Italy and I saw people rowing on the Arno [river]. It was the most beautiful sport I'd ever seen."
As recently as a few months ago Lang was still rowing on the water up to three hours a day. Over the winter, though, he moved indoors, rowing on an ergometer 30 minutes every day while also swimming 45 minutes a few times a week, Lang said.
Lang's experience with rowing has been so positive he inspired his cousin, Debra Strougo, and her husband Eric Von Frohlich, to open
Row House in New York City on March 3. The Row House is a studio dedicated to rowing-based group fitness classes. Like Lang, the couple believes rowing promotes better posture and health through a full-body, non-impact workout.
"
This is the best exercise for people of any age and it can be done even by older people," Lang said.
Many studies have shown a link between exercise and long life. For example, Danish researchers recently discovered that
jogging can increase life expectancy in men by over six years and in women by over five years when they jogged just one to two and a half hours total per week.
Comment: Jogging for long periods of time is simply bad for your health. It stresses your adrenals into fight-or-flight mode, and besides burning you out, it also creates lots of joint problems. People who run marathons typically have CPK (creatine phosphokinase) blood levels that are high, a marker of muscle damage that is used to detect heart attacks. Excess aerobics cause over-training and muscle-wasting, which later leads to reduction in fat burning. Many aerobic workouts are long and their overall effect on your body is inflammatory. Quite a few people who have had a heart attack were jogging supposedly 'for better health'.
Rowing provides
resistance training which in turn builds lean mass, minimizes and even reverses mitochondrial dysfunction - our powerhouse energy factories. By exercising our muscles, we have the potential to not only reverse aging and brain-related diseases such as dementia which are characterized by mitochondrial dysfunction, but as it happens, mitochondrial dysfunction is the final step in ALL diseases. For more information, see:
Resistance Training: Why You Should Lift and Lower Heavy Things
Thanks for the info!