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Realage: Are You As Young As You Can Be?

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Aging is the rate at which your cardiovascular & immune systems decline. Your biological age may be years older or younger than your chronological age, depending on a combination of factors. This book offers a revolutionary program that calculates the aging effect of more than 100 different health behaviors -- from diet & medication to stress control & chronic smoking -- & enables you to assess your own biological age. It shows you how to design a specific path to improving or reversing your own aging trajectory. Each chapter covers a health topic & calculates the RealAge advantage you will gain by adopting a specific behavior. Charts, fact sheets, & tests give you specific choices to make & describe benefits to be gained. Illustrated.

335 pages, Hardcover

First published May 1, 1999

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About the author

Mary Jo Putney

169 books2,268 followers
She writes young adult fiction as M.J. Putney.

Mary Jo Putney was born on 1946 in Upstate New York with a reading addiction, a condition for which there is no known cure. After earning degrees in English Literature and Industrial Design at Syracuse University, she did various forms of design work in California and England before inertia took over in Baltimore, Maryland, where she has lived very comfortably ever since.

While becoming a novelist was her ultimate fantasy, it never occurred to her that writing was an achievable goal until she acquired a computer for other purposes. When the realization hit that a computer was the ultimate writing tool, she charged merrily into her first book with an ignorance that illustrates the adage that fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

Fortune sometimes favors the foolish and her first book sold quickly, thereby changing her life forever, in most ways for the better. (“But why didn't anyone tell me that writing would change the way one reads?”) Like a lemming over a cliff, she gave up her freelance graphic design business to become a full-time writer as soon as possible.

Since 1987, Ms. Putney has published twenty-nine books and counting. Her stories are noted for psychological depth and unusual subject matter such as alcoholism, death and dying, and domestic abuse. She has made all of the national bestseller lists including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USAToday, and Publishers Weekly. Five of her books have been named among the year’s top five romances by The Library Journal. The Spiral Path and Stolen Magic were chosen as one of Top Ten romances of their years by Booklist, published by the American Library Association.

A nine-time finalist for the Romance Writers of America RITA, she has won RITAs for Dancing on the Wind and The Rake and the Reformer and is on the RWA Honor Roll for bestselling authors. She has been awarded two Romantic Times Career Achievement Awards, four NJRW Golden Leaf awards, plus the NJRW career achievement award for historical romance. Though most of her books have been historical, she has also published three contemporary romances. The Marriage Spell will be out in June 2006 in hardcover, and Stolen Magic (written as M. J. Putney) will be released in July 2006.

Ms. Putney says that not least among the blessings of a full-time writing career is that one almost never has to wear pantyhose.

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
82 reviews3 followers
May 27, 2018
Sometimes I wonder about all the things I do for myself, whether I’m doing them for myself or to myself. I am often overwhelmed by the thought that exercise is a lifetime commitment when I have problems exercising on a day-to-day basis. Is it really better to eat healthy now when I’m relatively young? People talk about enjoying their old age, their golden years, but I, frankly, just don’t want to get old at all.

What I really needed was a tangible way of measuring all those things that are “good for me” to do, health-wise. In his book, RealAge: Are You as Young as You Can Be? , Dr. Michael Roizen provides a tangible means for measuring all these things. I confess that I first heard about the book (and the website, https://www.sharecare.com/static/realage) on Oprah’s talk show, many years ago, and was intrigued enough to order the book especially since at the time I was exercising a lot but had not seen any improvement.

The Premise

Dr. Roizen took all of the information about living a healthy, active life from a myriad of sources and compiled it into a single tool that could help people analyze their health and their lifestyles. He developed this tool to measure a person’s physiologic age, as opposed to one’s calendar age: people who have abused their bodies may have an older physiologic age than their calendar age; people who have taken care of their bodies may have a younger physiologic age than their calendar age. The lower one’s physiologic age, the longer one can expect to live.

Dr. Roizen’s goal isn’t just to extend people’s calendar lives. He points out early in the book not only can people live longer on the RealAge program, they can also add more life to their years by remaining healthy and active: more years to play with the grandchildren, more years to take that trip around the world, more years of golf with friends, more years without feeling old and infirm.

The Tool: The RealAge Test

Let me first preface this section of my review by pointing out that I didn’t take the test in the book. I went to the website and took the test instead: the website test is interactive with each user and gives instant gratification by calculating the results. Trying to figure out the test in the book seems terribly time-consuming and leaves much more room for error. Also, while the website is updated periodically with new medical findings and research, the book is not, so it’s entirely possible that one’s score, according to the book, could become skewed.

The RealAge test asks questions about one’s lifestyle, eating habits, exercise, family health history, and other factors like stress. Before taking the test (in the book or on the website), you need to know the following items: cholesterol values (LDL and HDL), blood pressure, amounts of vitamins you take, heart rate, weight, and height. If you don’t know and are taking the test online, the computer will assign average values for someone your calendar age.

Here are a few examples of the questions on the test:

Do you smoke?
How often do you eat breakfast?
How fast do your drive?
Are there smoke detectors in your home?
Are your parents divorced?
How often do you socialize with friends?
Do you own a dog?

Developing a Plan

After ascertaining one’s results from the test, the book takes the reader through developing an age reduction plan. At the beginning of the chapter, Dr. Roizen lists 44 strategies that will help the reader reduce their physiologic age. The following chapters provide more detail as to how to implement a change in one’s life, and why the change has an effect on one’s body. The topics covered range from taking vitamin supplements to exercise and diet plans and reducing stress in one’s life.

Flossing and brushing your teeth every day can make you 6.4 years younger.
Drinking alcohol in moderation can make you 1.9 years younger.
Not managing your finances can make you 8 years older.
Having orgasms (in a monogamous, safe sex environment) can make you 1.6 years younger. (See, being healthy isn’t always a chore!)

The plan also divides courses of action into various levels including quick fixes, moderate changes, and difficult changes.

Elements of Style

While I found the book very informative, Dr. Roizen’s writing style is somewhat dry. I really didn’t need that much detail about my arteries or prescription drugs. The most interesting parts of the book were the case studies that Dr. Roizen used as examples and anecdotes to prove his points. Some of the studies were very touching and I liked the personal element they lent to the book.

Dr. Roizen is obviously a very well-educated person and he does well with explaining things in lay terms. However, outside of the anecdotes, all the scientific jargon and lengthy expositions did not hold my interest. I only finished this book out of sheer discipline. I shouldn’t have bothered: all the information is on the website, with a much more user-friendly presentation.

Overall

I’m going to assume that everyone who reads this review has access to the internet. Since that’s the case, I do not recommend buying the book. The website has all the same information, the test is interactive for each user, and the website is updated frequently. What’s more, the book costs $25, the website is free.

I wholeheartedly recommend visiting the website. Taking the RealAge test changed a lot of things in my life because now I know exactly what I’m doing for myself and how these actions will improve the quality of my life. My RealAge is consistently 5 years younger than my calendar age.
Profile Image for Bakari.
Author 3 books57 followers
November 5, 2017
Much needed information and perspectives

I've been meaning to read this book for a long time, and I'm glad finally did. RealAge is packed with lots of information and recommendations for staying younger and being healthy. Though the book doesn't prescribe a clear cut program for what you should do to take care of your health, the author does a good job explaining why exercising, taking vitamins (which I don't do), eating fruits and vegetable, getting regular medical checkups, and much more, are essential to staying healthy. This book will be guide for me as I with work to form better habits that decrease my age and maybe help me live a longer, productive life.
Profile Image for Maria Kemplin.
162 reviews
May 10, 2018
Something of a "miss" for me, as I was looking forward to reading this book and really appreciated the premise - which I believed would be a comprehensive self-inventory of lifestyle and health habits for a rating on Real Age. Instead, I found the book to be something more along the lines of Prevention magazine wisdom. I was already familiar with the basics and unfortunately this book did not take me any further.
Profile Image for Diane.
50 reviews
June 1, 2008
It is fascinating to take the Real Age quiz, and discover that you might be younger than your chronological age!
Dr. Rozen shows us how to live a Younger, longer life. He shares 44 scientifically proven steps that delay aging!
Profile Image for Rob Tesselaar.
154 reviews1 follower
November 13, 2016
Some interesting data, I like that the author provided reference to the studies he based his information on. I did have a sense that some information was out dated (no surprise, the book is almost 20 years old), and wasn't particularly relevant for me as I have no medical issue of note.
4 reviews
January 17, 2009
Interesting information about one's body for the novice. His more recent books contain much more up to date research.
Profile Image for Linda.
136 reviews14 followers
February 10, 2010
Interesting analysis of your real age. Answer several questions and see if you are "younger" or "older than your actual age. Some surprises here, other things are pretty much common sense.
178 reviews
April 14, 2011
I like everything Michael Roizen writes. Recently had a physical and decided to see about a few changes...cholesterol!
109 reviews4 followers
February 7, 2017
The author writes, that you can reverse your aging process, and even slow it down. Very informative book. This book is found on Audible.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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