A number of years ago, Paula discovered a reasonably priced, aging house on a beautiful beach on an otherwise very expensive island, smack dab in front one of the best places we've ever found for kiteboarding. I would tell you where it is, but then you might rent it on "our" week and that would be the end of our friendship. Or I'd have to have you rubbed out, or whatever.
So, for the last eight years (minus the icky one with the pandemic thing), we've dragged along friends and have had a great time in XXXXXXXXXX (location redacted). And don't ask me why everyone ended up with red helmets. I was first!
So who are these guys in red hats? Look for the skinny legs, and that's me on the right. Next to me is our great buddy Winston, who interviewed for medical school the same day as me in August 1976, and so I've known him longer than Paula, and don't do the 'age' math thing.
OK, and the guy with the weird-colored legs? My bro Mark was an orthopaedic surgeon, and that guy (Harold by name) was one of the anesthesiologists that he worked with. Unfortunately, Harold is also the repository of a huge and awful collection of dad jokes, and would apparently pop up at the head of the operating table during procedures and torture the room with them.
In the past thirty or so years, it has become clear that along with proper diet, exercise, control of blood pressure, blah, blah, blah, social interaction not only makes life richer, but can actually extend it.
As an example, drawing on data from more than 2,100 participants in the long-running Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) project, researchers discovered that adults with higher cumulative social advantage—meaning long-standing, robust relationships with family and friends and in religious and community groups—had biological markers showing slower cellular aging and reduced levels of chronic inflammation as compared to their less-connected peers.
An analysis of 148 studies found that people with strong social bonds had a 50% greater chance of survival than those with poor social relationships. Harvard’s 80-year Study of Adult Development came to the same conclusion: “Loneliness kills. It’s as powerful as smoking or alcoholism.” A documentary in 2023 called "Join or Die" draws upon these findings to encourage participation in social interactions with others.
Of course, all of this begs the question of the health consequences of some of the activities during these 'social interactions.' Like not sticking too tightly to some of those old, stuffy 'dietary guidelines.'







