It's the senescence that makes the fall, more or less, inevitable. Warren Buffet wrote about it in his final letter to shareholders [1] : "When balance, sight, hearing and memory are all on a persistently downward slope, you know Father Time is in the neighborhood."
Yeah. My Grandmother lived a pretty long time but she had a boarder named Lillian who at 95 was still walking 2 or 3 miles to the store every day. One day her daughter gave her a lift and managed to get into a fairly minor accident. (My Dad claimed that the daughter was herself too old to be driving.)
Anyhow Lillian broke an ankle. Went to hospital. And there was some complication. And then another. And 2 weeks later she's passed away, never having gotten out of the hospital.
I think people - especially when you're old - are more like sharks then not. If you don't keep moving nothing good happens.
somenameforme|1 month ago
[1] - https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/news/nov1025.pdf
avadodin|1 month ago
Aeolun|1 month ago
hackeraccount|1 month ago
Anyhow Lillian broke an ankle. Went to hospital. And there was some complication. And then another. And 2 weeks later she's passed away, never having gotten out of the hospital.
I think people - especially when you're old - are more like sharks then not. If you don't keep moving nothing good happens.
bell-cot|1 month ago
interloxia|1 month ago
The lack of movement rather than rich stimulation might remain the issuem I look forward to a study if there hasn't been one yet.