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GraytonBound

Beach Fanatic
Nov 15, 2004
947
2
59
The Nooga
WOW!


Guess it's too late now for those of us who have aleady followed dr's orders with our kids :sosad: At least we we will be more aware when considering future Rx's.
 

beachmouse

Beach Fanatic
Dec 5, 2004
3,499
741
Bluewater Bay, FL
There's a small health food grocery store in the shopping center with, I think, Big Daddy's in Blue Mountain Beach. Pretty good selection of products, but their prices can be a little high.

Publix generally has a decent amount of organic foods as well.
 

BeachDreamer

Beach Fanatic
Mar 19, 2005
444
0
48
The Peaceful Piney Woods.
GraytonBound said:
WOW!


Guess it's too late now for those of us who have aleady followed dr's orders with our kids :sosad: At least we we will be more aware when considering future Rx's.

We had our first daughter vaccinated too Grayton, before we knew anything about it. At least we can teach our kids about it so they can make informed decisions with the grandbabies when the time comes.

Organic food sounds like a great idea. It is indeed a budget buster though! Worth it I bet if you could afford it.
 

Kurt

Admin
Oct 15, 2004
2,391
5,077
SoWal
mooncreek.com
BeachDreamer said:
We had our first daughter vaccinated too Grayton, before we knew anything about it. At least we can teach our kids about it so they can make informed decisions with the grandbabies when the time comes.

Organic food sounds like a great idea. It is indeed a budget buster though! Worth it I bet if you could afford it.

Getting sick is what is expensive.
 

GraytonBound

Beach Fanatic
Nov 15, 2004
947
2
59
The Nooga
beachmouse said:
Publix generally has a decent amount of organic foods as well.

What I would give for a Publix in the Nooga...that's another one of the things we love about the beach...you have a Publix down there!
 

beachmouse

Beach Fanatic
Dec 5, 2004
3,499
741
Bluewater Bay, FL
You'd think that since they're in both Nashville and Atlanta, sooner or later Publix would fill in the bigger population spaces kind of between between the two cities.

As for vaccinations, there have been a number of studies on helath risks over the years, and from everything I've seen, the benefits far outweigh the risks. (and even the risks people claim may not really be risks if you look at the large sample size studies)
 

DBOldford

Beach Fanatic
Jan 25, 2005
990
15
Napa Valley, CA
My mother lives in DeFuniak Springs and is part of a very active and healthy group of women, most of them in their late 80s. One of their bridge ladies was active until the age of 102, when she passed away. None of their little group has had any kind of cancer or heart disease, and none have had hysterectomies or even so much as a gall bladder removal. They eat fried chicken, fried cornbread, and coconut cake all the time and get hardly any exercise except for gardening. A few years ago, I considered the common denominators. None of the ladies took birth control pills or hormone replacement therapy and they had a pretty simple life in that little town, so probably minimal stress over the years. They also go to church a lot!
 

Bob

SoWal Insider
Nov 16, 2004
10,366
1,391
O'Wal
GraytonBound said:
What I would give for a Publix in the Nooga...that's another one of the things we love about the beach...you have a Publix down there!
The greatest shame in this world,at least as big as not having a local Publix, is not being able to purchase their stock. Employees only I believe. Publix gets my vote for the best run company I've ever seen. Started in Central Fl., and became famous for their consistency, clean stores and white/green terrazzo floors. Every year they have a giant corporate meeting/drinkfest at Disney for their 1500-2000 managers and I would venture to say most of 40/50 something bosses are very well from stock purchases.
 

Paula

Beach Fanatic
Jan 25, 2005
3,747
442
Michigan but someday in SoWal as well
Donna said:
My mother lives in DeFuniak Springs and is part of a very active and healthy group of women, most of them in their late 80s. One of their bridge ladies was active until the age of 102, when she passed away. None of their little group has had any kind of cancer or heart disease, and none have had hysterectomies or even so much as a gall bladder removal. They eat fried chicken, fried cornbread, and coconut cake all the time and get hardly any exercise except for gardening. A few years ago, I considered the common denominators. None of the ladies took birth control pills or hormone replacement therapy and they had a pretty simple life in that little town, so probably minimal stress over the years. They also go to church a lot!

Yup, the things you mention do contribute to longevity. According to Thomas Perls MD who is in charge of the New England Centennarian studies, most of us are genetically programmed to live to about 85 if we take care of ourselves (of course, there are exceptions -- diseases and events we can't control -- but barring these, 85 is a reasonable goal). The centennarians tend to share certain characteristics: they eat well and they typically eat fewer calories (although there's some new research that suggests that people who are slightly overweight but not obese tend to bounce back from illness better than people who are thin); they stay physically active; they have supportive relationships; they cope with stress very well (they don't necessarily have fewer stressful life events than others -- many centennarians have lived long enough to experience some terrible life events, but they cope with them better -- they face their problems, grieve, forgive others, make adjustments, move on and don't dwell on the past and they have ways of making sense of life's events that make them feel better rather than worse); they stay intellectually engaged; they go to the doctor regulary and take care of their health (they do tend to get vaccinations and they floss their teeth -- apparently good flossing is one way of preventing heart disease - strange but true); and they are optimistic about life and aging.

As for faith, I don't know if the studies suggest it contributes to longevity (I don't think this was found in the centennarian studies), but the research on happiness consistently shows that faith contributes to happiness -- although the researchers can't pinpoint why (it may have to do with faith giving people a way to make sense out of life in a way that is supportive and calming). Another interesting finding of the happiness research is that people who "satisfice" (don't always look for the "best" decision but rather are satisfied with the decisions they make -- interesting insight for SoWal given all the speculation about housing, housing values, property, etc.) are happier than people who "maximize" (always look for the best decision, but that's a set up for unhappiness because there's always going to be a "better" choice no matter what you choose). As for money, once you're over the poverty level, it doesn't predict happiness. If you don't have money to feed your family, get health care, etc., of course money would make you happier.

Interesting stuff...
 
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