Achieving Unlimited Health: The baby boomers survival guide in the new millennium?
Book Details
PublisherDr James Peter Cima
ISBN / ASINB00S6PSNEG
ISBN-13978B00S6PSNE4
Sales Rank1,931,568
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
The Elusive Fountain of Youth
Is it possible to achieve unlimited health and double the present human life span? I believe so! I also believe that there are people alive today who will live for at least 150 years. I also believe that the quality of our years will improve along with the quantity. It is interesting to note that our present life span of approximately seventy-eight years has almost doubled what it was during the nineteenth century. At that time, the average life span was only forty-seven years. Life expectancy rose close to our present-day level back in the 1960s at approximately seventy years of age. Over the past fifty-four years, the average life span has increased very little despite great advances in modern-day medicine. Although we have made great strides since the beginning of the twentieth century, it appears that we have hit the proverbial brick wall. By the time most people reach their midfifties and sixties, their bodies have started to undergo life-threatening degenerative processes, such as cancer or heart disease. Even if we are fortunate to live past this mark, the quality of life sometimes leaves much to be desired. Our physical and mental capabilities diminish rapidly, accompanied by pain and a myriad of symptoms. To some, death may seem like the easy way out. To be honest, I do not think God intended for us to suffer like this during our so-called golden years. I say it is time for a change. At the beginning of the new millennium, why not think about doubling the average life span, just like we did one hundred years ago, and live to be 150.
Listen, we doubled the average life span in the nineteenth century. Why not double it again in the next century? This time, let us not only double our life span but improve the quality of our lives as well. Let us focus on our well-being so that our physical and mental capabilities mature like a fine wine, just hitting our stride at the hundred-year mark. Let us also focus on enjoying life as well—living every day like it is our last and planning for the future as though we were going to live forever. This should be our new motto. I am sure all of us, if we had the choice, would choose this type of lifestyle. The purpose of this book is not just to give you hope; I also want to demonstrate that your body and mind possess the capabilities of unlimited health.
Is it possible to achieve unlimited health and double the present human life span? I believe so! I also believe that there are people alive today who will live for at least 150 years. I also believe that the quality of our years will improve along with the quantity. It is interesting to note that our present life span of approximately seventy-eight years has almost doubled what it was during the nineteenth century. At that time, the average life span was only forty-seven years. Life expectancy rose close to our present-day level back in the 1960s at approximately seventy years of age. Over the past fifty-four years, the average life span has increased very little despite great advances in modern-day medicine. Although we have made great strides since the beginning of the twentieth century, it appears that we have hit the proverbial brick wall. By the time most people reach their midfifties and sixties, their bodies have started to undergo life-threatening degenerative processes, such as cancer or heart disease. Even if we are fortunate to live past this mark, the quality of life sometimes leaves much to be desired. Our physical and mental capabilities diminish rapidly, accompanied by pain and a myriad of symptoms. To some, death may seem like the easy way out. To be honest, I do not think God intended for us to suffer like this during our so-called golden years. I say it is time for a change. At the beginning of the new millennium, why not think about doubling the average life span, just like we did one hundred years ago, and live to be 150.
Listen, we doubled the average life span in the nineteenth century. Why not double it again in the next century? This time, let us not only double our life span but improve the quality of our lives as well. Let us focus on our well-being so that our physical and mental capabilities mature like a fine wine, just hitting our stride at the hundred-year mark. Let us also focus on enjoying life as well—living every day like it is our last and planning for the future as though we were going to live forever. This should be our new motto. I am sure all of us, if we had the choice, would choose this type of lifestyle. The purpose of this book is not just to give you hope; I also want to demonstrate that your body and mind possess the capabilities of unlimited health.
