David Attenborough at 100: Discover the five secrets to a long and healthy life

SirDavid Attenborough, the beloved natural historian and environmental advocate, is set to mark his100th birthday next month on 8 May.This extraordinary milestone not only celebrates a seven-decade career that has profoundly shaped our understanding of the natural world but also prompts reflection on the secrets to a long and healthy life. TheBBCwill commemorate the occasion with aweek of special programming, including a new documentary,Making Life on Earth: Attenborough’s Greatest Adventure, offering a behind-the-scenes look at his seminal 1979 series,Life on Earth.

The Independent US

While human life expectancy has steadily risen over the past two centuries, reaching a century remains a remarkable achievement, sparking widespread curiosity about the factors contributing to such longevity.Dr Mohammed Enayat, a GP and founder ofLondon-based longevity clinic HUM2N, defines this increasingly popular health trend as "an approach that seeks to have your health working for you for as long as possible to ultimately give you the best quality of life for as long as possible."

He explains that longevity medicine focuses on implementing interventions to prevent the decline, deterioration, dysfunction, and disease often associated with ageing. "It helps identify the processes within you that we need to work on sooner so we can put interventions in place such as supplementation, nutrition, lifestyle modifications, behavioural changes, education, and sometimes smart therapies as well," Dr Enayat explains.

Dr Enayat highlights several crucial areas for individuals aiming to boost their own chances of living to 100.

King Charles III (right) meets David Attenborough as he attends the premiere of ‘Ocean with David Attenborough’, at the Southbank Centre, Royal Festival Hall in London (Alistair Grant/PA)

Regular Exercise

"Movement is a very important pillar of health because we need to make sure we put our body through enough energy expenditure requirements so that it can stay metabolically healthy, but also maintain muscle mass and function of the musculoskeletal system," Dr Enayat states. To preserve these vital functions into later life, he advises prioritising strenuous exercise. "Try and break a sweat a couple of times a week, because if you’re not breaking a sweat, you’re not using your body to its capacity or training your cardiovascular system and metabolic system to draw on energy quickly," he adds. He also recommends focusing on posterior chain muscles. "Try and work out your glutes, your hamstrings and your core to maintain muscle activation and muscle size," advises Dr Enayat. "You could do some planks, squats or ball sits."

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Avoid Stress

Chronic stress can have profoundly detrimental effects on our health. "Stress drives a massive inflammatory response in the body," Dr Enayat warns. "It can dysregulate our blood sugar and make us insulin resistance, which causes downstream effects. Stress depletes our stress hormones, which then can cause thyroid and other hormone imbalances, and can also affect our digestive tract and stop us efficiently digesting and absorbing our nutrients. This is all in the short term, so you do that cumulatively, you will find that your orchestral balance will be a disaster internally." He therefore suggests developing strategies for stress regulation. "I think it’s really important to try and develop some self-awareness about what drives you to mount a stress response and might cause you to be breathless, have racing thoughts and racing heartbeats," says Dr Enayat. "Develop tools – such as breath work, meditation, prayer or gratitude – to bring your nervous system back to balance."

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"Lots of good things happen in our sleep that help us live longer and healthier," Dr Enayat explains. "For example, we produce T-cells that help regulate our immune system and produce stem cells that stimulate regeneration and release of growth factors during the deep sleep phase." From a longevity perspective, he recommends implementing lifestyle changes to improve deep sleep. "Try to avoid stimulation too late at night, particularly blue light," he advises. "Avoid eating too late because your digestion keeps you up and avoid alcohol because it keeps prevents you from getting into a deep sleep." Adjusting the sleeping environment can also be beneficial. "Blackout blinds can be good and studies show that cooler environments can help promote deep sleep," Dr Enayat notes.

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Good Nutrition

"What we consume through our diet is really important because with bad diet comes inflammation, hormonal imbalance and metabolic dysfunction," says Dr Enayat. "When you put all those effects together, it becomes a melting pot for chronic diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and stroke risk." His primary nutritional advice is to view "food as fuel or food as medicine, rather than food as comfort." He further recommends prioritising "whole foods over processed foods and to make sure you have adequate protein in your diet, good vegetable intake, and some healthy fats."

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Community and Purpose

Beyond the core pillars of physical health, Dr Enayat highlights "indirect drivers of health and disease, which includes a sense of purpose and community." He points to Sir David Attenborough as a prime example of someone with "a clear sense of purpose, a clear value system and really understands community." Engaging with others, "talking to each other and sharing experiences with neighbours, family and friends can help people stay active, regulate their nervous system, find purpose and find motivation to start their day. Having people to support you through difficult moments that we all face is really important for improving quality of life," he concludes.

David Attenborough at 100: Discover the five secrets to a long and healthy life

SirDavid Attenborough, the beloved natural historian and environmental advocate, is set to mark his100th birthday next month on 8 May.T...
Billie Eilish responds to rumors she and brother Finneas O'Connell 'had a falling-out': 'How do we move on?'

Billie Eilish addressed rumors that she and brother Finneas O'Connell, her collaborator, have had a falling-out.

Entertainment Weekly Billie Eilish and brother Finneas O'Connell in 2024Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty

Key Points

  • The "Wildflower" singer says she and O'Connell are siblings, and they fight.

  • O'Connell was absent from his sister's most recent tour.

Billie Eilishknows there are rumors about why her brother and longtime collaborator, Finneas O'Connell, isn't with her as much these days.

"I heard somebody say, 'Did you guys hear Finneas and Billie had a falling-out?'" the singer recalls in an interview published Tuesday inElle.

The "What Was I Made For?" singer's response was clear: "Finneas and I have never and will never have a falling-out, ever in our lives. We'll get in the biggest f---ing fight you've ever heard of in your life…and five minutes later, we're back, laughing and making music. It's sibling s---. There's nothing else in the world like sibling relationships."

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In fact, Eilish said, much of her work depends on her brother.

"If I never saw Finneas at all, I might literally never make a song again," she said of her older brother. "But how do we move on and have separate lives?"

They gave that a go with Eilish's latest tour, in promotion of her 2024 albumHit Me Hard and Soft, which he contributed to as usual.

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"It was a few years in the making," Eilish told the magazine. "We got so busy that we would only see each other right before going onstage. Finneas and Andrew [her touring drummer], who were the only band members I had back in the day, performed on some sort of platform that was hard to leave. Finneas was stuck in a tower—like Rapunzel! He never said it, but I was feeling like, 'You have more to be doing than being my band member in the back.'"

In the meantime, O'Connell was able to release solo music that he promoted with his own tour.

Like his sister, he's already quite accomplished, with 11 Grammys to his name, compared to her 10.

Finneas and Billie Eilish perform in 2025Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty

"I think that it's the closest I am with Billie to like total trust of anyone," he toldCBS Newsin January 2024. "And total vulnerability. I'm sure there's something that she would be embarrassed to say in front of me, but not much."

He acknowledged that he had missed her when she was gone, and he even popped up at a few dates.

"It's basically true that I don’t like touring, but I love the show part of it," he toldElle. "And I love being around Billie. This past year, when she would be on tour for months, I missed her a lot."

A scene from Eilish's new concert film,Billie Eilish – Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour (Live in 3D), shows her reading a note that O'Connell sent her on the road. The James Cameron-directed film arrives in theaters May 8.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Billie Eilish responds to rumors she and brother Finneas O'Connell 'had a falling-out': 'How do we move on?'

Billie Eilish addressed rumors that she and brother Finneas O'Connell, her collaborator, have had a falling-out. Key Points ...

 

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