One of my all-time favorite comedians, Billy Crystal, is perhaps best known for his performance ending quip that went like this: “It’s more important to look good than feel good, and right now darling, you look marvelous.” Could Crystal have been correct? Is it more important to look good than feel good? After all, everyone wants to feel good and most of us want to look great, too. Well, guess what? Emerging medical science now reveals that Billy may have been correct. How young you look, scientists now say, may actually be more important than your age in years. To put it in a slightly different way, are your looks killing you? Perhaps this story will help illustrate the idea: A Case In Point: My first patient of the day, Paula, a 51-year-old executive, looked at me with tears in her eyes and said, “I think I’m dying. I look so old!” Although I didn’t say so, I was struck by how aged she did look. Yes, she was only 51 years old, but her appearance told a different story. At first glance, you might think she was 70. It wasn’t just that her skin sagged and that she had deep lines and wrinkles around her mouth and engraved smile lines around her eyes. No, it was much more than that. Her skin just didn’t look healthy. There was no glow, no color and no vibrancy left to her countenance. I guess one might say she had lost “the blush of youth.” “Well, Dr. Dharma,” you might say. “After all, she ain’t no spring chicken.” “Sorry,” I say. “I don’t necessarily agree with you.” Why? Because 51 clearly isn’t all that old, especially these days when people are saying that 60 is the new 40. Regardless of her age, she doesn’t have to look all worn out, tired and stressed to the max. She shouldn’t look older than she is — and neither should you. In fact, according to emerging medical research, if you look younger than someone of equal age, you may live longer than they will. And, if you look older than your age, medical science now tells us, you have a greater chance of dying younger. Recently I attended perhaps the most advanced medical conference in recent history. It was called Telomere Biology in Health and Disease and was held in Stockholm, Sweden. To say the conference was top notch would be a rather large understatement. Indeed, the keynote address was given by Dr. Elizabeth Blackburn, the Nobel Laureate in 2009. Dr. Blackburn was awarded the prize for her groundbreaking discovery of the importance of the telomere. She was joined on the faculty by many other leading scientists from around the world, who discussed the critical connection between telomere length, longevity and optimal health. I was honored to present a paper there on my own meditation research, which I’ll share a bit later in this blog. Telomeres are one of the most recent medical discoveries. A telomere is the cap of your DNA, and as you age or develop an illness it shortens. Short telomeres are consistent with accelerated aging, inflammation, stress, memory loss, diabetes, cancer, heart disease and prematurely aging skin (as was seen with my patient Paula). It’s no wonder then that she also had memory issues, as well as other signs of accelerated aging. On the third day of the conference, an intriguing presentation about skin aging occurred that held me spellbound. The speaker revealed an intriguing study from The Danish Aging Research Center and The Danish Institute of Public Health. In this work, called the Longitudinal Study of Aging Danish Twins (LSADT), they found that for 1,826 twins, the perceived age from a facial photograph — as determined by three groups of raters including doctors, nurses and lay-people — was a “robust predictor of mortality” during the next seven years. All of the raters agreed on each photo as to which twin looked older than the other, and the one who looked older died sooner during the succeeding years. Looking younger was correlated with less depression, better health habits such as nutrition and exercise and being married. Beyond that, looking older was associated with shorter telomeres, memory loss and poor physical condition. Conversely, longer telomeres mean you’re aging well. Interestingly, it will soon be possible to follow your progress on a lifestyle modification program by measuring your telomeres on a regular basis, not unlike how you have your blood pressure or cholesterol checked periodically today. How old or young you look, therefore, is a clear determinant of your overall health, your memory function and how long you may live. So how can you look younger? How can you stop the passage of time from ravaging your skin? First of all, looking younger starts from the inside out, not the outside in, so let’s start by excluding procedures such as botox injections, fillers and plastic surgery. Rather, let’s begin with proven techniques that can lengthen your telomeres. The first thing you must do is pay attention to your stress levels. Chronic stress has a very detrimental effect on your general health and that of your skin because it shortens your telomeres, and leads to inflammation, depression and cognitive decline, all shown to be associated with looking older and dying sooner. Chronic stress decreases your overall well being, which leads back to more stress, anxiety, depression and poor health. In this way it’s a vicious cycle. Research has shown that meditation as part of a life style modification program (that includes a 10 percent fat vegetarian diet, taking certain supplements such as fish oil, selenium, Vitamin C, Vitamin E and being social) will help break the stress cycle and lengthen your telomeres. As I’ve shared on my other blogs, all meditation is great for stress reduction. The fastest, scientifically-proven meditation for reducing stress and enhancing well-being, is an easy mental exercise called Kirtan Kriya (KK), which takes only 12 minutes a day. KK is proven to strengthen brain function, reverse memory loss, decrease inflammation, boost mood and increase telomere length by a whopping 43 percent. So I urge you to make sure you’re doing everything possible to look young by creating beautiful skin from the inside out. Eat well, take supplements if necessary, and definitely reduce your inner stress with meditation. Your telomeres will thank you, and you may up the likelihood that you’ll live a long time with a clear mind and lovely looking skin. To discover more about the work of Dharma Singh Khalsa, M.D. and receive 2 free e-books please go to www.drdharma.com. To learn more about his research and download a copy of Kirtan Kriya, please go to www.alzheimersprevention.org
Continue reading …James Taranto of the Wall Street Journal's opinion section calls Washington Post columnist E. J. Dionne “Baghdad Bob” for fun. On September 9 , as Taranto mocked Dionne's Strobe-Talbott-on-the-Cold-War routine on the War on Terror (after all that U.S. vigilance, there was never a threat). Then he turned to the special election to replace Congressman Anthony Weiner in New York's Ninth District, where Democrat David Weprin scandalized the locals with a “terrorist-y” ad of a jet menacing the New York skyline. Taranto joked: “But don't worry. If Weprin loses next week, we're sure Baghdad Bob will be ready to explain why it's really a triumph for liberalism.” Incredibly, Dionne did exactly that, writing that the NY-9 victory would lead to overconfidence, no confrontation with the ruinous Tea Party, and a Rick Perry candidacy that never collides with the reasonable middle:
Continue reading …We recently stumbled upon the latest smartphone that LG’s preparing for its home country, and wow, this plus-sized beauty is sure to turn some heads in South Korea. The device is known only as the LU6200, but it packs a 4.5-inch AH-IPS display at 720p resolution, a dual-core 1.5GHz Scorpion CPU, an Adreno 220 GPU, along with an 8 megapixel AF camera and connectivity to the U+ LTE network (which supports a maximum theoretical download speed of 75Mbps). Further, users will find a 1.3MP front-facing cam, 1GB of RAM, 4GB built-in storage, an 1,830mAh battery, 801.11b/g/n and Bluetooth 3.0, along with support for DLNA, MHL, WiFi Direct and NFC. Specifically for the Korean market, the handset can also receive digital radio and TV broadcasts through terrestrial DMB . LG has launched a teaser page for this Gingerbread-powered smartphone, for which pre-orders are said to begin on September 26th — although, there’s yet no word on the pricing. It’s certainly intriguing, though we’ll gladly wait for a stateside version before raiding our piggy bank… again. [Thanks, Anonymous] LG teases LU6200 with 1.5GHz dual-core CPU, 720p HD display, Gingerbread and 75Mbps LTE originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 16:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Witnesses may be praising the Reno pilot killed in yesterday’s air show crash, but aviation blogger Clive Irving has one key question: “What was a 74-year-old pilot doing in a souped-up World War II fighter flying in an air race?” he asks at the Daily Beast . The deadly accident is…
Continue reading …FineJessica says: The most – dangerous celebs on the Web , What’s the matter with _Jessica Biel_? McAfee, the anti-virus software maker,… http://t.co/q7LdIoPi
Continue reading …An air race turned deadly in Reno, Nev. Friday when a plane nosedived into the stands, killing spectators and the pilot. The Reno Air Races is one of nation’s few remaining air shows. Thousands of spectators flock to the Nevada desert each year to watch the races where planes can fly in excess of 500
Continue reading …Years of combing tropical mountain forests have paid off for a team of Indian scientists that has discovered 12 new frog species, plus three others thought to have been extinct. The new species include the meowing night frog, whose croak sounds more like a cat’s call; the jog night frog,…
Continue reading …Nick Clegg signals combative approach to coalition describing PM’s party as political enemies who must be taken on Nick Clegg’s Liberal Democrats have vowed to face down “ruthless” and “extreme” forces in the Tory party to protect the British people from right-wing policies that would widen inequality and benefit the rich. At a rally on Saturday night to open his party’s annual conference in Birmingham, Clegg underlined the Lib Dems’ newly combative approach to the coalition, describing David Cameron’s party as “political enemies” who must be taken on when necessary in the national interest. After a traumatic year during which the Lib Dems’ popularity has plummeted and their leader has been accused of abandoning his party’s principles, Clegg struck a markedly more assertive note. While trumpeting his party’s successes so far in influencing health and tax policies, he said it was more prepared than ever to “fight tooth and nail” for what was right. “We are prepared to be awkward,” he said. “We are not here to make things easy. We’re here to put things right.” In an interview with the Observer , his deputy Simon Hughes goes further, telling the Conservatives they have no mandate to drive through a rightwing agenda. Hughes says the Tories have shown themselves to be “ruthless” operators in the first 16 months of the coalition over the referendum on electoral reform and boundary changes and says the resurgent right of the party is “extreme” on issues such as Europe and tax. He says Tories must come to their senses and realise that they did not win the last election – and that they rely on the Lib Dems for power. “Not only did they not win but they got a third of those who voted,” he said. “The Tory party is not the dominant party in British politics that it used to be. It is absolutely not the dominant force in Scotland and Wales that it used to be. The Tory right have forgotten that.” In a rebuff to Conservative hardliners he adds: “There is absolutely no majority in parliament for your views. If there is a coalition government in the national interest then extreme remedies and answers are not appropriate.” The comments are bound to infuriate Cnservatives as the conference season opens. Many Tories are beginning to resent profoundly the way the Lib Dems are already watering down Tory changes on health and education and blocking Cameron from developing a more hardline approach on Europe. Clegg and his ministers are now convinced they can claw back some of their pre-election popularity if they can demonstrate that they are reining in the Conservatives and stamping their own mark on government. Deep division between the coalition partners will surface in Birmingham over tax, welfare, health, pensions and last month’s riots. The party leadership will announce it will veto the abolition of the 50p tax rate for people earning over £150,000 – a key demand of the Tory right – unless and until other measures, such as a mansion tax, are imposed. It will also unveil plans to exempt the first £12,500 of earnings from tax, raising the target from its current level of £10,000. Hughes says the party has to make the fight against wage inequality in the private sector a key theme. He said he is pushing hard for measures to limit the gap between the highest and lowest paid staff in the private sector. “The differentials are obscene and you really cannot just stand by,” he said. “Liberal Democrats have to be clear. If Labour is really relaxed about the stinking rich, some of us are not relaxed about it.” Hughes also insisted that reform of party funding was essential to stop the Conservatives running ruthless campaigns – as they had against electoral reform. “The Tories can be nastier – with a result – if they are allowed to collect more and more money legitimately,” he
Continue reading …As NewsBusters has been reporting, Barack Obama's sycophants in the press are really starting to lose that loving feeling. Driving this point home was the “American Conservative's” Jim Pinkerton Saturday who said on “Fox News Watch,” “There’s a strange thing happening in the media which is, I think, liberalism has sort of concluded that Obama is kind of a turkey, and they're sort of trying to distance themselves from him” (video follows with transcript and commentary): JIM PINKERTON: There’s a strange thing happening in the media which is, I think, liberalism has sort of concluded that Obama is kind of a turkey, and they're sort of trying to distance themselves from him. Carville is a great example of this. It's not that they’re Republicans, it’s not that they like Republicans any better. We'll get to that later. It’s that when you see, for example, Ron Suskind, who’s a well-known author, no conservative as far as I can tell, talking about what a feckless and ineffective economic policy President Obama has enacted. He can't even keep track of his own treasury secretary. Something is breaking loose in terms of the liberal lockstep. Pinkerton was referring to a CNN.com op-ed written by former Clinton adviser James Carville in which the “Ragin Cajun” surprising said: People often ask me what advice I would give the White House about various things. Today I was mulling over election results from New York and Nevada while thinking about that very question. What should the White House do now? One word came to mind: Panic. The Suskind reference was to an upcoming book by the author excerpted by the Washington Post Friday chronicling serious problems within Obama's economic team. But I digress: JON SCOTT, HOST: You're getting nods from Judy here. You agree? JUDITH MILLER: Yeah, I didn't expect to agree with Jim on this one, but I have to say that when you hear Ron Brownstein and other people say, “You know? This really raises questions about how effective a leader Obama.” Or the other thing I heard on Friday on “Morning Joe” quoting Chuck Todd as saying, asking, “Gosh – is he even serious about this American jobs bill? I mean, is this, is this not just a kind of political talking point?” There's something going on at the base. National Journal's Ron Brownstein wrote Monday about the nation's “deepening doubts about President Obama’s economic agenda.” That's a lot of former Obama fans in one week concluding he's “kind of a turkey.”
Continue reading …Remember when we took over Times Square last month? Contrary to comments-based speculation, we didn’t drop several years’ salary to see our names and faces (and pets) up in lights. We were actually shooting a segment for the Engadget Show about a new service from Times Square2 (TS2). The NASDAQ / Thompson Reuters alliance is working to increase engagement on the giant electronic billboards it controls in one of the most heavily trafficked spots in the US. The organization has designed a free API for developers, making it possible to create applications for its giant ad spaces on the side of the Thompson Reuters and NASDAQ buildings, and it showed us some of the fruits of its labor in the video clip that you’ll find after the break. Gallery: Engadget in Times Square Continue reading Engadget takes over Times Square, courtesy of TS2 (video) Engadget takes over Times Square, courtesy of TS2 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …