Advice From a 101 Year
Old Doctor..!
Dr. Shigeaki Hinohara ,
Japan, turns 101 on 4th October 2012
As
a 97 year old Doctor, he was interviewed, and gave his advice for a long and
healthy life.
Shigeaki
Hinohara is one of the world's longest-serving physicians and educators.
Hinohara's magic touch is legendary: Since 1941 he has been healing patients at
St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo and teaching at St. Luke's College
of Nursing.
He
has published around 15 books since his 75th birthday, including one
"Living Long, Living Good" that has sold more than 1.2 million
copies. As the founder of the New Elderly Movement, Hinohara encourages others
to live a long and happy life, a quest in which no role model is better than
the doctor himself.
Doctor
Shigeaki Hinohara's main points for a long and happy life:
·
Energy
comes from feeling good, not from eating well or sleeping a lot. We all
remember how as children, when we were having fun, we often forgot to eat or
sleep. I believe that we can keep that attitude as adults, too. It's best not
to tire the body with too many rules such as lunchtime and bedtime.
·
All
people who live long regardless of nationality, race or gender share one thing
in common: None are overweight. For
breakfast I drink coffee, a glass of milk and some orange juice with a
tablespoon of olive oil in it. Olive oil is great for the arteries and keeps my
skin healthy. Lunch is milk and a few cookies, or nothing when I am too busy to
eat. I never get hungry because I focus on my work. Dinner is veggies, a bit of
fish and rice, and, twice a week, 100 grams of lean meat.
·
Always
plan ahead. My schedule book is already
full until 2014, with lectures and my usual hospital work. In 2016 I'll have
some fun, though: I plan to attend the Tokyo Olympics!
·
There
is no need to ever retire, but if one must, it should be a lot later than
65. The current retirement age was set
at 65 half a century ago, when the average life-expectancy in Japan was 68
years and only 125 Japanese were over 100 years old. Today, Japanese women live
to be around 86 and men 80, and we have 36,000 centenarians in our country. In
20 years we will have about 50,000 people over the age of 100...
·
Share
what you know. I give 150 lectures a
year, some for 100 elementary-school children, others for 4,500 business
people. I usually speak for 60 to 90 minutes, standing, to stay strong.
·
When
a doctor recommends you take a test or have some surgery, ask whether the
doctor would suggest that his or her spouse or children go through such a
procedure. Contrary to popular belief,
doctors can't cure everyone. So why cause unnecessary pain with surgery I think
music and animal therapy can help more than most doctors imagine.
·
To
stay healthy, always take the stairs and carry your own stuff. I take two stairs at a time, to get my
muscles moving.
·
My
inspiration is Robert Browning's poem "Abt Vogler." My father used to
read it to me. It encourages us to make big art, not small scribbles. It says
to try to draw a circle so huge that there is no way we can finish it while we
are alive. All we see is an arch; the rest is beyond our vision but it is there
in the distance.
·
Pain
is mysterious, and having fun is the best way to forget it. If a child has a toothache, and you start
playing a game together, he or she immediately forgets the pain. Hospitals must
cater to the basic need of patients: We all want to have fun. At St. Luke's we
have music and animal therapies, and art classes.
·
Don't
be crazy about amassing material things.
Remember: You don't know when your number is up, and you can't take it
with you to the next place.
·
Hospitals
must be designed and prepared for major disasters, and they must accept every
patient who appears at their doors. We designed St. Luke's so we can operate
anywhere: in the basement, in the corridors, in the chapel. Most people thought
I was crazy to prepare for a catastrophe, but on March 20, 1995, I was
unfortunately proven right when members of the Aum Shinrikyu religious cult
launched a terrorist attack in the Tokyo subway. We accepted 740 victims and in
two hours figured out that it was sarin gas that had hit them. Sadly we lost
one person, but we saved 739 lives.
·
Science
alone can't cure or help people. Science
lumps us all together, but illness is individual. Each person is unique, and
diseases are connected to their hearts. To know the illness and help people, we
need liberal and visual arts, not just medical ones.
·
Life
is filled with incidents. On March 31, 1970, when I was 59 years old, I boarded
the Yodogo, a flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka. It was a beautiful sunny morning,
and as Mount Fuji came into sight, the plane was hijacked by the Japanese
Communist League-Red Army Faction. I spent the next four days handcuffed to my
seat in 40-degree heat. As a doctor, I looked at it all as an experiment and
was amazed at how the body slowed down in a crisis.
·
Find
a role model and aim to achieve even more than they could ever do. My father went to the United States in 1900
to study at Duke University in North Carolina. He was a pioneer and one of my
heroes. Later I found a few more life guides, and when I am stuck, I ask myself
how they would deal with the problem.
·
It's
wonderful to live long. Until one is 60
years old, it is easy to work for one's family and to achieve one's goals. But
in our later years, we should strive to contribute to society. Since the age of
65, I have worked as a volunteer. I still put in 18 hours seven days a week and
love every minute of it.
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