ale potem wchodza do schronów, a tam nie ma internetu.
Wszyscy informatycy wyjeżdżają do Arabii Saudyjskiej, bo tam Microsoft buduje Dolinę Krzemową i zatrudni
80.000 informatyków z całego świata.
Ale tam klimat pustynny i upały +50 st. C i serwery się zagotują
Założyłem Instytut Długowieczności, bo Arabia Saudyjska chce żyć dlugo i nie chorować, bo to obciąża budżet.
Ich terminologia #Healthspan nie sprzedaje się dobrze i jest depresyjnie ociężała,
“I think I’ll live forever,
How to live a long and healthy life:
“Heredity and family history of longevity is a healthy start. However, it must be supported by moderation of nutrition, alcohol, and happiness,” Tucker explained in his Guinness World Records entry.
The good genes are clearly in place: His mother lived to 84 and his father to 96. Tucker has managed to avoid heart disease, cancer, dementia and other major health problems many people must deal with as they age: “I recognize how I’ve been blessed with that,” he said.
Aug. 10, 2022, 7:57 PM GMT+2 / Updated April 12, 2023, 6:13 PM GMT+2 / Source: TODAY
By A. Pawlowski
Ask Dr. Howard Tucker about people who want to retire early and he’s incredulous. At 100, the neurologist has been working in medicine for 75 years.
Guinness World Records has named him the world’s oldest practicing doctor. Tucker just recently stopped seeing patients, but he’s still teaching medical residents at St. Vincent Charity Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio, heading to work twice a week.
“I look upon retirement as the enemy of longevity,” Tucker told TODAY during a recent video call. He has a computer and smartphone, and is determined to keep up with technology.
“I think that to retire, one can face potential shriveling up and ending in a nursing home. It’s fun staying alive and working… It’s delightful work. Every day I learn something new.”
Tucker was born on July 10, 1922, in Cleveland. As his family gathered to celebrate his 100th birthday last month, he received the “gift of COVID” from one of his relatives who was a hugger and a kisser, he said, but recovered quickly and felt fine.
Besides surviving the pandemic, he’s also lived through the Great Depression, World War II and a century worth of historical crises. Tucker hasn’t had to deal with major diseases, but he broke his neck skiing in his late 80s and “came out of it totally intact,” he reassured his interviewer.
https://www.today.com/health/aging/worlds-oldest-practicing-doctor-turns-100-rcna42375The doctor is very much as optimist. “I think I’ll live forever, knowing that it’s not real. But I feel that way. I never think of death,” he said. “You die once, but you live daily… focus on the living.”