Seniors
Related: About this forumI get a lot of "great advice" but who doesn't need a helping hand (or a ride) a bit more?
I got a text message the other day from a friend, a little bit junior to me, full of "helpful" advice, all of which is valid, but it's quite a long list, I'd have to print it and post it on the fridge to remember all the items.
What should you reduce?
1. Salt
2. Sugar
3. White flour
4. Dairy products
5. Processed foods
6. Arguments
7. Unnecessary disputes
What should you eat?
1. Vegetables
2. Lentils
3. Peanuts/Legumes
4. Dry fruits
5. Cold-pressed oils (olive, coconut)
6. Fruits
7. Anything bitter from nature
8. Swallow your sorrows and move forward
Try to forget these three things:
1. Your age
2. Your past
3. Your complaints
4. The hurts caused by relatives
Take special care of these:
1. Your family
2. Your friends
3. Your positive thoughts
4. A clean and happy home
5. Saving enough resources for possible tough times ahead
Adopt these habits:
1. Always keep smiling
2. Exercise regularly
3. Maintain your weight
4. Even if your tongue is not sweet, learn to speak sweetly
5. Develop the habit of listening to others
Six lifestyle habits to follow:
1. Dont wait until youre thirsty drink water regularly
2. Dont wait until youre exhausted rest on time
3. Dont wait until you fall sick get regular check-ups
4. Dont wait for miracles
5. Believe in yourself
6. Always stay positive and think of a bright future
7. Dont sit in one place for too long
Do you have friends aged 47 to 90? Then make sure to send them this message!
On the other hand, I KNOW all these things. I've heard them all before, and maybe you have too. I actually follow a few. Very few. But how about a little payback in a tangible and supportive way for us, instead of just advice?
Id print it up on a card, but Id just lose it
Some ideas, and DU lets me edit past posts, so I can add to it, and hope that. you will create lists of your own.
Things that friends and family can do.
* Stay in touch via messages, email, DU. Anything but toxic social media.
Staying in touch helps keep memory sharp, and as I was recounting various jobs and why I stayed or quit, with my daughter, she was intrigued by interesting tidbits she never knew, because she was too young to understand at the time. Now, theyre relevant.
* Have discussions with like-minded friends. Everyone involved will gain new insights. Sharing is caring. Most discussions Ive been involved with lately have fizzled. I had a fabulous conversation going, when we were the only two participants in a zoom discussion group, with a guy who died from a very rare disease, and that discussion ceased.
Things that businesses et. al. can do
-
Some of these are way speculative and in my things for entrepreneurs to create file.
* Anything to help low vision (and thats a giant problem) One periodical I get has some white text on a bright yellow background. Solution: I wrote them. Waiting
* Finding things, whether in the home or at local stores (whose inventory varies, as in Stuff comes and goes at Trader Joes) or even online (which is tough for many people since online stuff is largely bogus scams bolstered by SEO and now, overrun by AI ) Home and food and medicine inventory (data to be private and not fed to sellers, thank you.)
* Exoskeletons. This technology is already old. Whats the hang-up? Other mobility?
* Backpacks that have gyroscopes built in to stabilize people.
* Fall mitigation. TBD
* Finding real help nearby, trusted people, not pay to get referrals right now, as in Im in a jam. Includes tech advice. And spares to loan.
* Filtering email and websites for scams and malware.
* Any sane noncommercial alternative to social media. (Thats a larger issue but very important in my mind,)
* That opens the matter of getting important, pertinent, personal and timely news and situational awareness rather than noise. (See above)
* Creating secure family communications to bust AI-generated phony ransom calls (and more)
* Simple robotics, of the bring your slippers and reading glasses sort. Cellphone, too. Seems its always charging when I need it.
* Oh, and since Im in the foothills, places to go when theres an evacuation, power is out, and cool places to hang out.
* Loan seasonal stuff - Christmas trees (artificial), serving pieces, cookware, or even medical things like walkers, wheelchairs as needed and recycle them rather than letting them waste space when not needed. I met The Wheelchair Guy who raised money for wheelchairs for the needy. (Ken Behring)
A "small" wish list.
Santa ??????
marble falls
(70,446 posts)... that crap list is not helpful and feels more like the list maker's virtue signaling than helpful.
They needn't worry so much about gramma and grampa, they need to worry about their children who have no clue of hunkering down and surviving.
usonian
(23,289 posts)I'll read it "sometime soon"
marble falls
(70,446 posts)BOSSHOG
(44,601 posts)I have been very fortunate damn near all my life. Some bumps and bruises along the way. Recently I have had to remind my self Im old, not the young stud who is now in my past. Im 71. The knees crack, the eyes sometimes let me down, the hearing is going. Your list is time well spent.
SheltieLover
(76,122 posts)No white text on light yellow (Aldi corn label), light gray text on websites, & variable size type in dark black type for ebooks.
Human vision usually begins to deteriorate around age 40. Wtf are they thinking?
usonian
(23,289 posts)Cheers.
No common sense.
Grim Chieftain
(1,130 posts)I did notice on the "What should you reduce list" alcohol was not included!
Cheers!
usonian
(23,289 posts)I take decongestant, which is hell with alcohol.
I get allergies, probably from dust, which gets ahead of me in a three bedroom home. Unpaved everything here, and countless trees that seem to make pollen year-round. Scrub oak, pine, manzanita ...
And the butler and groundskeeper quit!
Who wouldn't work for free?
Grim Chieftain
(1,130 posts)I don't know how you get through the days with the orange one without a nip or two! Sorry about the groundskeeper and the butler. Good help is so difficult to keep these days.
Take care, friend, and best wishes for a Merry Christmas and a very Happy New Year!
usonian
(23,289 posts)Daughter and son in law visited recently and will visit for Christmas.
So-called friends never visited, so last visit, I broke out the 47 year old Cabernet. Bless THEM for caring!
It was great.
I mock Jabba the orange Hutt plenty, to get some creative graphics and satire action going.