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- Path: sparky!uunet!peora!usenet.ccur.com!catfish!tsdiag!acupain!emilio
- From: emilio@acupain.UUCP (Elizabeth Milio)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: RE: Youthful Appearance
- Message-ID: <1462@acupain.UUCP>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 20:01:19 GMT
- Reply-To: emilio@accurate.com.UUCP
- Organization: ACCURATE Information Systems, Eatontown, NJ
- Lines: 44
-
- In article <1dei8bINNjpv@darkstar.UCSC.EDU> haynes@cats.ucsc.edu (Jim Haynes) writes:
- >
- >There's the common practice of estimating a person's age from physical
- >appearance. There were some postings from people in their twenties who
- >look sixteen, and from people in their teens who look mid-twentyish.
- >
-
- We all look young in my family -- so I get my youthful appearance from both
- Mom and Dad. I will be 50 (yuck!) soon and I still look 35. Ask anyone
- to guess my age and the answer is always 35 or less. When I was 25 people
- thought I was under 16. My sister doesn't show her age either -- she is
- almost 45 and looks like she is in her 20s. My dad is 77 and he looks
- about 60; his sister is close to 80 and she looks 60ish. On the Maternal
- side of my family -- Mom didn't look her age, even after a year of chemo,
- her younger sisters (now close to or in their 70s) look 10 to 15 years
- younger than they actually are.
-
- Looking young was a problem as I progessed up the ladder when I was in my
- 30s, and I soon learned how to handle the "what does a kid like you know" --
- either I pushed my corporate weight around, or told them I had an IQ over
- 170 ;-) (couldn't believe some of them fell for it)
-
- Not everyone in my family was/is long lived. My mother and two of her
- sisters died in their early 60s of cancer; my maternal great aunts died in
- their mid-to late 70s; and my Mother's other two sisters and her brother (
- also in his 60s and doesn't look his age) are alive and fairly healthy.
- My maternal grandparents don't figure in to this because they were lost in
- and accident long before I was born.
-
- On my Father's side -- my grandfather was 89 when he passed away (didn't
- look his age either)
-
- >So I've been wondering if people who look young for their age in the
- >teens and twenties continue looking younger than their true age
- >throughout life, and if they age more slowly and live longer than
- >average. Conversely do people who look old for their age as teens
- >continue to do so throughout life and age more rapidly and have shorter
- >life spans than average?
- >
-
- I don't know if any studies have been done -- it is difficult to study
- long lived species (man, chimps and dolphins). The history of
- one family doesn't prove a thing. Let me know if you come to any
- conclusions.....:-)
-