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Want To Live Past 100? Centenarians Share Secrets Of Knee Bends And Nips Of Scotch

Birthday Candle Number 123

Gertrude Siegel is 101 and hears it all the time. 鈥淓veryone says 鈥業 want to be just like you.鈥 I tell them to get in line,鈥 she said.

John and Charlotte Henderson, 104 and 102, often field questions from wannabes eager to learn their secrets.

鈥淟iving in moderation,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e never overdo anything. Eat well. Sleep well. Don鈥檛 overdrink. Don鈥檛 overeat. And exercise regularly.鈥

Mac Miller, who is 102, has a standard reply.

鈥淧eople ask me 鈥榃hat is the secret?鈥 The answer is simple. Choose the right grandparents. They were in their 80s. My mother was 89, and my father was 93,鈥 he said.

John Henderson and his wife of 77 years, Charlotte, live in Austin in the independent living section of Longhorn Village, a community of more than 360 seniors. They were the first people to move into the retirement community when it opened. (Sharon Jayson for KHN)

Genetics and behaviors do play roles in determining why some people live to be 100 or older while others don鈥檛, but they aren鈥檛 guarantees. And now, as increasing numbers are reaching triple digits, figuring out the mysteries of longevity has taken on new importance among researchers.

Although those 100 and older make up a tiny segment of America鈥檚 population, show that centenarian ranks are growing. Between 1980 and 2010, the numbers rose from 32,194 to 53,364, an increase of almost 66 percent. The latest population estimate, released in July 2015, .

鈥淭he number of centenarians in the U.S. and other countries has been doubling roughly every eight聽years,鈥 said James Vaupel, founding director of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany.

鈥淲hen the baby boomers hit, there鈥檚 going to be acceleration, and it might be doubling every five or six years,鈥 he said.

John Henderson鈥檚 secret to a long life? 鈥淟iving in moderation,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e never overdo anything. Eat well. Sleep well. Don鈥檛 overdrink. Don鈥檛 overeat. And exercise regularly.鈥 (Sharon Jayson for KHN)

Henderson and his wife of 77 years live in Austin in the independent living section of Longhorn Village, a community of more than 360 seniors, many of whom have ties to the University of Texas at Austin. Henderson is UT鈥檚 oldest-living former football player, arriving in 1932 as a freshman. They鈥檙e the only centenarians in the complex and are a rare breed: married centenarians.

Charlotte Henderson said she believes being married may have helped them reach these 100-plus years.

鈥淲e had such a good time when John retired. We traveled a lot,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e just stay busy all the time, and I鈥檓 sure that helps.鈥

Bernard Hirsh, 100, of Dallas agrees. His wife, Bee, is 102. They married in 1978 when both were in their early 60s and each had been widowed, she for the second time.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 been such a wonderful marriage, and we鈥檝e contributed to each other鈥檚 benefit,鈥 he said.

Little research exists on the effects of marriage on longevity. One 2015 Belgian of centenarians born between 1893 and 1903 did focus on their living arrangements during ages 60 and 100 and found 鈥渋n very old age, living with a spouse is beneficial for men but not for women, for whom living alone is more advantageous than living with a spouse.鈥 The study explained that 鈥渓iving with one鈥檚 spouse at the oldest ages does not provide the same level of protection as it does at younger ages. This may be explained by the decline of the caregiver鈥檚 own health as the needs of his or her spouse increase. Caregiving could also have negative consequences for the health and economic condition of the spouse who is the primary caregiver, especially for older women.鈥

However, Vaupel, who directs the Institute鈥檚 International Research Network on Aging, said being married is a positive for both.

鈥淓specially if you鈥檙e quite old, it鈥檚 very helpful have a spouse. If you鈥檙e very old and don鈥檛 have a spouse, the chance of death is higher,鈥 he said.

Siegel, who lives in a senior living community in Boca Raton, Fla., outlived two husbands. She never smoked and occasionally has a glass of dry, red wine.

鈥淚 am not a big eater. I don鈥檛 eat much meat,鈥 said Siegel, who said she weighs 90 pounds and used to be 5 feet tall but is shrinking.

She stays active by walking inside the building about a half-hour each day, playing bridge twice a week and exercising.

鈥淚 feel that鈥檚 what really kept my body pretty good. It wasn鈥檛 sports. It was exercises,鈥 she said of the routine she does daily twice a day for about 20 minutes.

Miller, of Pensacola, Fla., also outlived two wives.

He was a fighter pilot in the Marine Corps during World War II and spent eight years in active duty, which Miller said 鈥渨as not so good for me because I sat in the cockpit of a plane for 5,000 hours.鈥

But, he was active as a youth 鈥 running track, playing football and spending hours surfing while living in Honolulu.

Charlotte and John Henderson, now 102 and 104 years old respectively, have been married for 77 years. Charlotte said she believes being married may have helped them reach these 100-plus years. (Courtesy of the Henderson family)

Miller is gluten-free because of allergies and doesn鈥檛 eat many carbohydrates. He also never smoked. And, he still enjoys a scotch in the evening.

The Hendersons usually have wine or a cocktail before dinner. She never smoked. He quit in 1950.

Hirsh, of Dallas, another non-smoker, attributes his long life to 鈥済ood luck.鈥

鈥淚 was very active in my business and did a lot of walking during the day. I was not sedentary,鈥 he said.

Now, exercise is limited to 鈥渟ome knee bends every morning to keep my legs stronger.鈥

鈥淢y father died of a heart attack in his early 50s, and my mother died in her early 60s of a stroke, so I don鈥檛 think my genes were very good,鈥 Hirsh said.

Geriatrician Thomas Perls, director of the New England Centenarian Study at Boston Medical Center, said research shows that behaviors have a greater influence on survival up until the late 80s, since he said most people have the right genes to get there as long as their behaviors aren鈥檛 harmful. But once people reach the 90s and beyond, genetics play a more significant role.

鈥淭o get to these very oldest ages, you really have to have the right genes in your corner,鈥 he said.

As an international leader in the field, Perls鈥 focus is on finding the right mix of behavior, environment and genetics to produce long lives. His work includes a National Institute on Aging study called the Long Life Family Study.

鈥淭here are always questions about environment versus genes,鈥 said endocrinologist Nir Barzilai, founding director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx, N.Y. 鈥淲e are with our genes in this environment. It鈥檚 really 50-50, no matter how you look at it.鈥

Barzilai鈥檚 studies include centenarians and their children, as well as efforts to slow the process of aging.

Perls said his research and that of Barzilai and others has found聽commonalities among those who reach the 100-year-old milestone: Few smoke, nearly all of the men are lean, and centenarians have high levels of the 鈥済ood cholesterol.鈥 Studies show that whatever their stress level, they manage its well. And they鈥檙e related to other centenarians or have a parent or grandparent who lived past 80.

These lessons of long life are playing well with the public, who have made changes for the better in the 21st century, Vaupel said.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 smoke or drink so much, and we鈥檙e better at exercise. People are taking better care of themselves. People are better educated, and the more educated know when to go to the doctor and follow the doctor鈥檚 advice,鈥 he said, adding that people now tend to have higher income and can spend more on health care and improved diet.

鈥淭he most important thing is we鈥檙e living longer and living longer healthy,鈥 Vaupel said.

KHN鈥檚 coverage related to aging & improving care of older adults is supported by and its coverage of aging and long-term care issues is supported by .

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Aging