Friday, November 2, 2012

"It’s not a ‘me’ place. It’s an ‘us’ place.”

First, something to muse on...
nezartdesign:

other-wordly:submitted by | andrew w. /submit words | here
found here


and on a slightly different note... or maybe not!

"Life has an inside as well as an outside. Consumer culture directs all resources and attention to life on the outside. What happens to the inner life? Art is never a luxury because it stimulates and responds to the inner life. We are badly out of balance. I don’t think of art / creativity as a substitute for anything else. I see it as a powerful expression of our humanity - and on the side of humanity under threat. If we say art is a luxury, we might as well say that being human is a luxury."
— Jeanette Winterson

                                                                                                  Found here

It was my brother who noticed an article recently in the New York Times he thought I'd love to read titled: The Island Where People Forget to Die... and last week I decided to post on it here. However ... a curious thing happened! 

The story tapped into all kinds of fond memories...and triggered a great flood of thoughts... so much so that I was reminded all over again of the tremendous impact of that visit all those years ago... one that made me reconsider every tiny thing in my life!

I've thought often and deeply about how we live, how people lived going back through time and what might shape how we live into the future. As I've pondered the complexity, the density and velocity of change from both a personal standpoint, communal and community perspectives and a global position I cant help but question the changes that I lament as much as the things I celebrate.
A friend commented a couple of months ago she'd have been happy if the world had stopped at where we got to about 1980. In part I know that sentiment well and could easily agree on many accounts. But life isn't like that and we all must work through the huge challenge of knowing when to stand still and when to move...when to yield and when to protest. Its the very stuff that stretches us from our comfort zones to find the the grit to make the best choices we possibly can. 

The story that inspired so much thought:


           The Island Where People Forget to Die



Pointing across the Aegean toward the neighboring island of Samos, he said: “Just 15 kilometers over there is a completely different world. There they are much more developed. There are high-rises and resorts and homes worth a million euros. In Samos, they care about money. Here, we don’t. For the many religious and cultural holidays, people pool their money and buy food and wine. If there is money left over, they give it to the poor. It’s not a ‘me’ place. It’s an ‘us’ place.”

In early 1987 when working in London, I puzzled over where to go on my European sojourn from May through to October. Bumping into someone I'd known years before in Australia she pointed to the eastern island of Corfu in Greece, suggested I meet her and her friends there, insisting I must not miss this country despite my focus on Italy. With my mind crammed with images of Italy, Greece had been completely ignored. Back then my ideas of Greece were pathetically reduced to little more than the Parthenon, ancient vases + museum pieces... whereas my sense of what waited for me in Italy was founded on pure romance, fountains, cafes, markets... images of an exciting past, present and future. 




Thankfully one to listen to solid recommendations I hopped on a charter flight from London to Corfu that May.... springtime! It was 5am when I arrived, disoriented to say the least, but from the minute I stepped out of the plane I could taste the salty sea air and was enraptured. After months on the London tube and buses staring at people in black, with those seemingly endless grey sky days, my arrival in Corfu seemed to be delivering me into a paradise of apricot sunrises, aqua waters, the taste of the sea, lemons, almonds, honey, aniseed and so much more. "Yes" I thought... "this was the place for me!"



Andrea Frazzetta/LUZphoto for The New York Times
Residents of the island Ikaria in Greece 
live profoundly long and healthful lives.

Ten weeks into a trip across the mainland via Delphi to Athens, the Peloponnese, Crete, Santorini, Rhodos, Athens again, with a brief interlude in Turkey, I was heading from Athens to Ikaria on an overnight ferry with a Greek friend to visit his Grandfather's island. We stayed almost a month and our companions were mainly the elderly relatives of the grandfather who had passed on.

These older Ikarians stunned me. I will never forget asking Vassilis many times over about this Aunt and that one ...  and "how old did you say that one was?"... 86, 92, 89... still growing their own food and walking daily from the top of a ridge to the port-side village to chat or pick up supplies.

I was frequently amazed... the lifestyle I was learning about during that stay was remarkable. I was told that those with money on this island lived modestly alongside everyone else. I watched people deliver their home-cooked dishes to the village baker to be popped into the communal oven and baked... and later picked up for home.
I remember being really shocked to see stores for single products... like a Yoghurt outlet with well designed ceramic dishes the yoghurt was set in. Did I say delicious! I kept asking about these yoghurt dishes... "so... not throwaway containers... really... Wow!"
There was a shop facing the post with seating outside just making loukoumades: Loukoumades (Greek), lokma tatlısı or simply lokma (Turkish) or lokmades (Cypriot) (Greek:λουκουμάδες, singular λουκουμάς loukoumasluqmat al-qadi (Arabic:لقمة القاضي, Persian: بامیه bamieh, see etymology below) are a kind of fried-dough pastry made of deep fried doughsoaked in sugar syrup or honey and cinnamon, and sometimes sprinkled with sesame. (Wiki)
... honey doughnuts. 
Stores had modest shelves of products... not endless consumer goods but real foods with simple labels. It all made sense...no matter what was being sold. There seemed to be a clear relationship between where the goods came from, the sellers and their products. I recall buying retsina after a long and humorous engagement with locals in another small shop. You tended to get a lot of history during these exchanges.

I had a camera and snapped away... but often not shooting the things that curiously have stayed with me. Some cousins were holidaying at a village to the left of the port and we went for dinner one night. By taxi-boat. And when we got there the gathered relatives brought their own chicken to the waterside cafe and the  owner then took it away, cooked it and delivered it back in a while with the freshest salad and crispy fries. We played guitars, sang, danced, made jokes... so relaxed and casual under the summer sky with waves lapping at the small pier where we sat.

One night we attended a nearby mountain village Saint's Name's Day Festival ... more eating, dancing and merriment. I remember having endless questions I couldn't ask and trying hard to absorb everything. We stayed in the grandfather's house next to the aunt's house. There was a very large old weaving frame that took up a whole room of what was really a very small house. But the most wonderful place to stay and absolutely the kind of place an artist could claim happily and stay forever in! 

Daily routines were simple... I was drawing quite a bit. A trip was made to neighbouring Island Samos ... touristic and busy, by comparison, with little of the out-of-the-way charm of Ikaria. One thing I remember well was the ferry dropping us off at a village port on the other side of the island, too late to get the bus back ... so we ate at the most wonderful tiny place by the Port, and like others returning on the ferry, many slept on the beach till morning when the bus took us back to our base on the north of the island. 

Its unlikely I would rough camp in my own country... but there at that time, people of all ages would make beds where they were needed and bunk the night. There weren't snakes and spiders to worry about for a change... nor mosquitos.

I was a stranger....but I was also somehow 'at home'. At home with the rustic ways, the sense of a pared back, pre-consumerist daily life... kinship with true essentials. It tore at my heart somehow... this plethora of humble things I was being dished up daily. A deep, hard to articulate longing surfaced... and it stayed with me for many years without my being able to fully comprehend why it had mattered so much!

Returning home to Australia the following year, after 2 years away, I was shocked that some of the elements I liked about life in my own country that were disappearing before my eyes. There was a relentless pace of change... old(?) buildings being torn down and a huge desire to emulate US lifestyles and culture it seemed. Greece in 1987 had been an antidote to that!

After  a couple of years spending time in London, so steeped in history, and Greece, Israel, Egypt and Turkey where one encounters an ancient sense of the past arriving home to Australia was indeed a shock... new buildings, young cities ... and suburbia.

The shock was huge and I consequently moved to Melbourne in late 1988 so I could live in the heart of the oldest-looking, most European flavoured city in Australia. Once there I tried to recover my senses by shopping weekly at a huge market filled with Greek delis, Italian produce venders and for variety, Vietnamese fish sellers. I taught music at a secondary school with 60% greek students thus  delaying the reality of having returned by surrounding myself with people who were immigrants, often yearning for farther shores, or at least often reminiscing about other places!

Bit by bit of course I worked this through...settled back and made stronger connections to where I was from. A trip to central Australia that first year back made a huge difference. I fell in love with the heart of this land and slowly came back!

My work now is very much the result of a long journey to find a relationship of meaning to this land, its indigenous people and nature, its future as well as its past. 

The Anglo-celtic added-on version I grew up with was not enough... there were missing layers and it had failed to go deep enough for my own sense of well-being when I was younger. Greece paradoxically offered me an important opportunity, at the age of 29, to experience a strong, intact cultural heritage that is so deeply connected to its soil, its seas, its climate and histories. It was such an open moment in my life... so very deeply affecting ... and slowly, slowly transformational in retrospect.



A beach I well remember swimming at.
As for Ikaria itself, moving to the Island never seemed the answer, as much as I loved being there! I talked to people who'd found various reasons to stay in Greece and make it their home during my months of travel. I heard complex stories and of adjustments that hadn't come easy. In fact... often didn't happen at all! Historically as well, harsh realities like starvation and poverty had driven people from the Islands at various times in search of a better life for their families. And in 1987 many young people were definitely leaving. 

But... all that said, it was a very special place that I returned to in my thoughts many times in the years afterwards. This story from the New York Times seems to have resonated deeply with so many readers... no doubt those from there or connected .. or with experience of something similarly precious.



Andrea Frazzetta/LUZphoto for The New York Times

The Ikarian diet: Vegetables from the garden, legumes and greens, and plenty of olive oil.

I could pull excerpts out of this N.Y.Times article but instead I will share it in full below... with full credits. It raises important themes in contemporary life and the point is clearly made that other places share similar kinds of acclaim for their health-giving lifestyles.

Posting this story speaks to a very precious experience in my life that has lived in me and through my thinking and creating over and over for the last 25 years. The reason I've kept faithful to key ideas over many years and have ultimately pursued the 'homage to the Seed' project is in some way a tribute to what time spent in Ikaria brought forth.

Being drawn into the Ikarian way of life where different ideas of sharing, conviviality and respect for essentials was centre stage was very informing. My Anglo-Celtic-Australian heritage of course offered a great deal, over years just what it offered has become far clearer! 

Greece presented me with a counter-point, the necessary contrast. Cultural attitudes, patterns and values were easily experienced there and reviewed.



Pleased note that: this article is adapted from new material being published in the second edition of “Blue Zones,” by Dan Buettner, out next month from National Geographic.

If the article discusses the diet of these people at great length  what impressed me easily as much were the other layers to the story. A certain detachment to acquiring wealth and status symbols and a huge value on convivial daily interactions pictured for me a lifestyle where communities may have perhaps a stronger access to a sense of well-being. 

Cultural traits of sharing and socialising and not hankering too much after money, progress and development are mentioned. If you are still reading I applaud you! I'm sure it will mean very different things to whoever reads this. I find it curious to acknowledge being drawn to very different ends of the lifestyle spectrum all at once when it comes to the present. 

Its quite something to imagine how to bring elements that so mattered from that time in Ikaria to life here where I am right now, plugged in as I am to the web, pursuing the work that I do, driving around in a big city and participating in a more fragmented (yet definitely NOT soul-less) community.

I do lament that I rarely break bread at simply laid tables in friend's homes or my own. Invitations are often for going out... eating out! That informal and freer sense of community I have known so well in the past is something I miss and rarely experience here. We got into TV-driven 'food bling' and food fashion in recent years and quite forgot how to say "drop in and share a plate with us". No wonder Jamie Oliver is on the TV with 15 minute meals and real food ingredients trying to remind us of the home kitchen and table... and low fuss kind of hospitality. 
I do hope you enjoy this story and please forgive me for this extra-long river of words.


The Island Where People Forget to Die




In 1943, a Greek war veteran named Stamatis Moraitis came to the United States for treatment of a combat-mangled arm. He’d survived a gunshot wound, escaped to Turkey and eventually talked his way onto the Queen Elizabeth, then serving as a troopship, to cross the Atlantic. Moraitis settled in Port Jefferson, N.Y., an enclave of countrymen from his native island, Ikaria. He quickly landed a job doing manual labor. Later, he moved to Boynton Beach, Fla. Along the way, Moraitis married a Greek-American woman, had three children and bought a three-bedroom house and a 1951 Chevrolet.
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Andrea Frazzetta/LUZphoto for The New York Times
Residents of the island Ikaria in Greece live profoundly long and healthful lives. More Photos »
Andrea Frazzetta/LUZphoto for The New York Times
The Ikarian diet: Vegetables from the garden, legumes and greens, and plenty of olive oil. More Photos »
Figures from the Ikaria Study, which surveyed the island's over-80 population More Photos »
Andrea Frazzetta/LUZphoto for The New York Times
The key to Ikarian longevity is not simply a healthful diet; daily socializing may be just as crucial. From left: Christos Ploutis, 75; Konstantinos Sakoutis, 82; and Thanasis Kamperis, 62. More Photos »
Figures from the Ikaria Study, which surveyed the island's over-80 population More Photos »

One day in 1976, Moraitis felt short of breath. Climbing stairs was a chore; he had to quit working midday. After X-rays, his doctor concluded that Moraitis had lung cancer. As he recalls, nine other doctors confirmed the diagnosis. They gave him nine months to live. He was in his mid-60s.
Moraitis considered staying in America and seeking aggressive cancer treatment at a local hospital. That way, he could also be close to his adult children. But he decided instead to return to Ikaria, where he could be buried with his ancestors in a cemetery shaded by oak trees that overlooked the Aegean Sea. He figured a funeral in the United States would cost thousands, a traditional Ikarian one only $200, leaving more of his retirement savings for his wife, Elpiniki. Moraitis and Elpiniki moved in with his elderly parents, into a tiny, whitewashed house on two acres of stepped vineyards near Evdilos, on the north side of Ikaria. At first, he spent his days in bed, as his mother and wife tended to him. He reconnected with his faith. On Sunday mornings, he hobbled up the hill to a tiny Greek Orthodox chapel where his grandfather once served as a priest. When his childhood friends discovered that he had moved back, they started showing up every afternoon. They’d talk for hours, an activity that invariably involved a bottle or two of locally produced wine. I might as well die happy, he thought.
In the ensuing months, something strange happened. He says he started to feel stronger. One day, feeling ambitious, he planted some vegetables in the garden. He didn’t expect to live to harvest them, but he enjoyed being in the sunshine, breathing the ocean air. Elpiniki could enjoy the fresh vegetables after he was gone.
Six months came and went. Moraitis didn’t die. Instead, he reaped his garden and, feeling emboldened, cleaned up the family vineyard as well. Easing himself into the island routine, he woke up when he felt like it, worked in the vineyards until midafternoon, made himself lunch and then took a long nap. In the evenings, he often walked to the local tavern, where he played dominoes past midnight. The years passed. His health continued to improve. He added a couple of rooms to his parents’ home so his children could visit. He built up the vineyard until it produced 400 gallons of wine a year. Today, three and a half decades later, he’s 97 years old — according to an official document he disputes; he says he’s 102 — and cancer-free. He never went through chemotherapy, took drugs or sought therapy of any sort. All he did was move home to Ikaria.
I met Moraitis on Ikaria this past July during one of my visits to explore the extraordinary longevity of the island’s residents. For a decade, with support from the National Geographic Society, I’ve been organizing a study of the places where people live longest. The project grew out of studies by my partners, Dr. Gianni Pes of the University of Sassari in Italy and Dr. Michel Poulain, a Belgian demographer. In 2000, they identified a region of Sardinia’s Nuoro province as the place with the highest concentration of male centenarians in the world. As they zeroed in on a cluster of villages high in Nuoro’s mountains, they drew a boundary in blue ink on a map and began referring to the area inside as the “blue zone.” Starting in 2002, we identified three other populations around the world where people live measurably longer lives than everyone else. The world’s longest-lived women are found on the island of Okinawa. On Costa Rica’s Nicoya Peninsula, we discovered a population of 100,000 mestizos with a lower-than-normal rate of middle-age mortality. And in Loma Linda, Calif., we identified a population of Seventh-day Adventists in which most of the adherents’ life expectancy exceeded the American average by about a decade.
In 2003, I started a consulting firm to see if it was possible to take what we were learning in the field and apply it to American communities. We also continued to do research and look for other pockets of longevity, and in 2008, following a lead from a Greek researcher, we began investigating Ikaria. Poulain’s plan there was to track down survivors born between 1900 and 1920 and determine when and where individuals died. The approach was complicated by the fact that people often moved around. That meant that not only were birth and death records required, but also information on immigration and emigration.
The data collection had to be rigorous. Earlier claims about long-lived people in places like Ecuador’s Vilcabamba Valley, Pakistan’s Hunza Valley or the Caucasus Mountains of Georgia had all been debunked after researchers discovered that many residents didn’t actually know their ages. For villagers born without birth certificates, it was easy to lose track. One year they were 80; a few months later they were 82. Pretty soon they claimed to be 100. And when a town discovers that a reputation for centenarians draws tourists, who’s going to question it? Even in Ikaria, the truth has been sometimes difficult to nail down. Stories like the one about Moraitis’s miraculous recovery become instant folklore, told and retold and changed and misattributed. (Stories about Moraitis have appeared on Greek TV.) In fact, when I was doing research there in 2009, I met a different man who told me virtually the exact same story about himself.
The study would try to cut through the stories and establish the facts about Ikaria’s longevity. Before including subjects, Poulain cross-referenced birth records against baptism or military documentation. After gathering all the data, he and his colleagues at the University of Athens concluded that people on Ikaria were, in fact, reaching the age of 90 at two and a half times the rate Americans do. (Ikarian men in particular are nearly four times as likely as their American counterparts to reach 90, often in better health.) But more than that, they were also living about 8 to 10 years longer before succumbing to cancers and cardiovascular disease, and they suffered less depression and about a quarter the rate of dementia. Almost half of Americans 85 and older show signs of Alzheimer’s. (The Alzheimer’s Association estimates that dementia cost Americans some $200 billion in 2012.) On Ikaria, however, people have been managing to stay sharp to the end.
Ikaria, an island of 99 square miles and home to almost 10,000 Greek nationals, lies about 30 miles off the western coast of Turkey. Its jagged ridge of scrub-covered mountains rises steeply out of the Aegean Sea. Before the Christian era, the island was home to thick oak forests and productive vineyards. Its reputation as a health destination dates back 25 centuries, when Greeks traveled to the island to soak in the hot springs near Therma. In the 17th century, Joseph Georgirenes, the bishop of Ikaria, described its residents as proud people who slept on the ground. “The most commendable thing on this island,” he wrote, “is their air and water, both so healthful that people are very long-lived, it being an ordinary thing to see persons in it of 100 years of age.”
Seeking to learn more about the island’s reputation for long-lived residents, I called on Dr. Ilias Leriadis, one of Ikaria’s few physicians, in 2009. On an outdoor patio at his weekend house, he set a table with Kalamata olives, hummus, heavy Ikarian bread and wine. “People stay up late here,” Leriadis said. “We wake up late and always take naps. I don’t even open my office until 11 a.m. because no one comes before then.” He took a sip of his wine. “Have you noticed that no one wears a watch here? No clock is working correctly. When you invite someone to lunch, they might come at 10 a.m. or 6 p.m. We simply don’t care about the clock here.”
Pointing across the Aegean toward the neighboring island of Samos, he said: “Just 15 kilometers over there is a completely different world. There they are much more developed. There are high-rises and resorts and homes worth a million euros. In Samos, they care about money. Here, we don’t. For the many religious and cultural holidays, people pool their money and buy food and wine. If there is money left over, they give it to the poor. It’s not a ‘me’ place. It’s an ‘us’ place.”
Ikaria’s unusual past may explain its communal inclinations. The strong winds that buffet the island — mentioned in the “Iliad” — and the lack of natural harbors kept it outside the main shipping lanes for most of its history. This forced Ikaria to be self-sufficient. Then in the late 1940s, after the Greek Civil War, the government exiled thousands of Communists and radicals to the island. Nearly 40 percent of adults, many of them disillusioned with the high unemployment rate and the dwindling trickle of resources from Athens, still vote for the local Communist Party. About 75 percent of the population on Ikaria is under 65. The youngest adults, many of whom come home after college, often live in their parents’ home. They typically have to cobble together a living through small jobs and family support.
Leriadis also talked about local “mountain tea,” made from dried herbs endemic to the island, which is enjoyed as an end-of-the-day cocktail. He mentioned wild marjoram, sage (flaskomilia), a type of mint tea (fliskouni), rosemary and a drink made from boiling dandelion leaves and adding a little lemon. “People here think they’re drinking a comforting beverage, but they all double as medicine,” Leriadis said. Honey, too, is treated as a panacea. “They have types of honey here you won’t see anyplace else in the world,” he said. “They use it for everything from treating wounds to curing hangovers, or for treating influenza. Old people here will start their day with a spoonful of honey. They take it like medicine.”
Over the span of the next three days, I met some of Leriadis’s patients. In the area known as Raches, I met 20 people over 90 and one who claimed to be 104. I spoke to a 95-year-old man who still played the violin and a 98-year-old woman who ran a small hotel and played poker for money on the weekend.
On a trip the year before, I visited a slate-roofed house built into the slope at the top of a hill. I had come here after hearing of a couple who had been married for more than 75 years. Thanasis and Eirini Karimalis both came to the door, clapped their hands at the thrill of having a visitor and waved me in. They each stood maybe five feet tall. He wore a shapeless cotton shirt and a battered baseball cap, and she wore a housedress with her hair in a bun. Inside, there was a table, a medieval-looking fireplace heating a blackened pot, a nook of a closet that held one woolen suit coat, and fading black-and-white photographs of forebears on a soot-stained wall. The place was warm and cozy. “Sit down,” Eirini commanded. She hadn’t even asked my name or business but was already setting out teacups and a plate of cookies. Meanwhile, Thanasis scooted back and forth across the house with nervous energy, tidying up.
The couple were born in a nearby village, they told me. They married in their early 20s and raised five children on Thanasis’s pay as a lumberjack. Like that of almost all of Ikaria’s traditional folk, their daily routine unfolded much the way Leriadis had described it: Wake naturally, work in the garden, have a late lunch, take a nap. At sunset, they either visited neighbors or neighbors visited them. Their diet was also typical: a breakfast of goat’s milk, wine, sage tea or coffee, honey and bread. Lunch was almost always beans (lentils, garbanzos), potatoes, greens (fennel, dandelion or a spinachlike green called horta) and whatever seasonal vegetables their garden produced; dinner was bread and goat’s milk. At Christmas and Easter, they would slaughter the family pig and enjoy small portions of larded pork for the next several months.
During a tour of their property, Thanasis and Eirini introduced their pigs to me by name. Just after sunset, after we returned to their home to have some tea, another old couple walked in, carrying a glass amphora of homemade wine. The four nonagenarians cheek-kissed one another heartily and settled in around the table. They gossiped, drank wine and occasionally erupted into laughter.
Dr. Ioanna Chinou, a professor at the University of Athens School of Pharmacy, is one of Europe’s top experts on the bioactive properties of herbs and natural products. When I consulted her about Ikarians’ longevity, she told me that many of the teas they consume are traditional Greek remedies. Wild mint fights gingivitis and gastrointestinal disorders; rosemary is used as a remedy for gout; artemisia is thought to improve blood circulation. She invited me to give her samples and later tested seven of the most commonly used herbs on Ikaria. As rich sources of polyphenols, they showed strong antioxidant properties, she reported. Most of these herbs also contained mild diuretics. Doctors often use diuretics to treat hypertension — perhaps by drinking tea nightly, Ikarians have gently lowered their blood pressure throughout their lives.
Meanwhile, my colleagues Gianni Pes and Michel Poulain set out to track down the island’s 164 residents who were over 90 as of 1999, starting in the municipality of Raches. They found that 75 nonagenarians were still alive. Then, along with additional researchers, they fanned out across the island and asked 35 elderly subjects a battery of lifestyle questions to assess physical and cognitive functioning: How much do you sleep? Did you ever smoke? They asked them to get up and down from a chair five times and recorded how long it took them to walk 13 feet. To test mental agility, the researchers had subjects recall a series of items and reproduce geometric shapes.
Pes and Poulain were joined in the field by Dr. Antonia Trichopoulou of the University of Athens, an expert on the Mediterranean diet. She helped administer surveys, often sitting in village kitchens to ask subjects to reconstruct their childhood eating habits. She noted that the Ikarians’ diet, like that of others around the Mediterranean, was rich in olive oil and vegetables, low in dairy (except goat’s milk) and meat products, and also included moderate amounts of alcohol. It emphasized homegrown potatoes, beans (garbanzo, black-eyed peas and lentils), wild greens and locally produced goat milk and honey.
As I knew from my studies in other places with high numbers of very old people, every one of the Ikarians’ dietary tendencies had been linked to increased life spans: low intake of saturated fats from meat and dairy was associated with lower risk of heart disease; olive oil — especially unheated — reduced bad cholesterol and raised good cholesterol. Goat’s milk contained serotonin-boosting tryptophan and was easily digestible for older people. Some wild greens had 10 times as many antioxidants as red wine. Wine — in moderation — had been shown to be good for you if consumed as part of a Mediterranean diet, because it prompts the body to absorb more flavonoids, a type of antioxidant. And coffee, once said to stunt growth, was now associated with lower rates of diabetes, heart disease and, for some, Parkinson’s. Local sourdough bread might actually reduce a meal’s glycemic load. You could even argue that potatoes contributed heart-healthy potassium, vitamin B6 and fiber to the Ikarian diet. Another health factor at work might be the unprocessed nature of the food they consume: as Trichopoulou observed, because islanders eat greens from their gardens and fields, they consume fewer pesticides and more nutrients. She estimated that the Ikarian diet, compared with the standard American diet, might yield up to four additional years of life expectancy.
Of course, it may not be only what they’re eating; it may also be what they’re not eating. “Are they doing something positive, or is it the absence of something negative?” Gary Taubes asked when I described to him the Ikarians’ longevity and their diet. Taubes is a founder of the nonprofit Nutrition Science Initiative and the author of “Why We Get Fat” (and has written several articles for this magazine). “One explanation why they live so long is they eat a plant-based diet. Or it could be the absence of sugar and white flour. From what I know of the Greek diet, they eat very little refined sugar, and their breads have been traditionally made with stone-ground wheat.”
Following the report by Pes and Poulain, Dr. Christina Chrysohoou, a cardiologist at the University of Athens School of Medicine, teamed up with half a dozen scientists to organize the Ikaria Study, which includes a survey of the diet of 673 Ikarians. She found that her subjects consumed about six times as many beans a day as Americans, ate fish twice a week and meat five times a month, drank on average two to three cups of coffee a day and took in about a quarter as much refined sugar — the elderly did not like soda. She also discovered they were consuming high levels of olive oil along with two to four glasses of wine a day.
Chrysohoou also suspected that Ikarians’ sleep and sex habits might have something to do with their long life. She cited a 2008 paper by the University of Athens Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health that studied more than 23,000 Greek adults. The researchers followed subjects for an average of six years, measuring their diets, physical activity and how much they napped. They found that occasional napping was associated with a 12 percent reduction in the risk of coronary heart disease, but that regular napping — at least three days weekly — was associated with a 37 percent reduction. She also pointed out a preliminary study of Ikarian men between 65 and 100 that included the fact that 80 percent of them claimed to have sex regularly, and a quarter of that self-reported group said they were doing so with “good duration” and “achievement.”
During our time on Ikaria, my colleagues and I stayed at Thea Parikos’s guesthouse, the social hub of western Ikaria. Local women gathered in the dining room at midmorning to gossip over tea. Late at night, after the dinner rush, tables were pushed aside and the dining room became a dance floor, with people locking arms and kick-dancing to Greek music.
Parikos cooked the way her ancestors had for centuries, giving us a chance to consume the diet we were studying. For breakfast, she served local yogurt and honey from the 90-year-old beekeeper next door. For dinner, she walked out into the fields and returned with handfuls of weedlike greens, combined them with pumpkin and baked them into savory pies. My favorite was a dish made with black-eyed peas, tomatoes, fennel tops and garlic and finished with olive oil that we dubbed Ikarian stew.
Despite her consummately Ikarian air, Parikos was actually born in Detroit to an American father and an Ikarian mother. She had attended high school, worked as a real estate agent and married in the United States. After she and her husband had their first child, she felt a “genetic craving” for Ikaria. “I was not unhappy in America,” she said. “We had good friends, we went out to dinner on the weekends, I drove a Chevrolet. But I was always in a hurry.”
When she and her family moved to Ikaria and opened the guesthouse, everything changed. She stopped shopping for most groceries, instead planting a huge garden that provided most of their fruits and vegetables. She lost weight without trying to. I asked her if she thought her simple diet was going to make her family live longer. “Yes,” she said. “But we don’t think about it that way. It’s bigger than that.”
Although unemployment is high — perhaps as high as 40 percent — most everyone has access to a family garden and livestock, Parikos told me. People who work might have several jobs. Someone involved in tourism, for example, might also be a painter or an electrician or have a store. “People are fine here because we are very self-sufficient,” she said. “We may not have money for luxuries, but we will have food on the table and still have fun with family and friends. We may not be in a hurry to get work done during the day, so we work into the night. At the end of the day, we don’t go home to sit on the couch.”
Parikos was nursing a mug of coffee. Sunlight sifted in through the window shades; the waves of the nearby Aegean could be barely heard over the din of breakfast. “Do you know there’s no word in Greek for privacy?” she declared. “When everyone knows everyone else’s business, you get a feeling of connection and security. The lack of privacy is actually good, because it puts a check on people who don’t want to be caught or who do something to embarrass their family. If your kids misbehave, your neighbor has no problem disciplining them. There is less crime, not because of good policing, but because of the risk of shaming the family. You asked me about food, and yes, we do eat better here than in America. But it’s more about how we eat. Even if it’s your lunch break from work, you relax and enjoy your meal. You enjoy the company of whoever you are with. Food here is always enjoyed in combination with conversation.”
In the United States, when it comes to improving health, people tend to focus on exercise and what we put into our mouths — organic foods, omega-3’s, micronutrients. We spend nearly $30 billion a year on vitamins and supplements alone. Yet in Ikaria and the other places like it, diet only partly explained higher life expectancy. Exercise — at least the way we think of it, as willful, dutiful, physical activity — played a small role at best.
Social structure might turn out to be more important. In Sardinia, a cultural attitude that celebrated the elderly kept them engaged in the community and in extended-family homes until they were in their 100s. Studies have linked early retirement among some workers in industrialized economies to reduced life expectancy. In Okinawa, there’s none of this artificial punctuation of life. Instead, the notion of ikigai — “the reason for which you wake up in the morning” — suffuses people’s entire adult lives. It gets centenarians out of bed and out of the easy chair to teach karate, or to guide the village spiritually, or to pass down traditions to children. The Nicoyans in Costa Rica use the term plan de vida to describe a lifelong sense of purpose. As Dr. Robert Butler, the first director of the National Institute on Aging, once told me, being able to define your life meaning adds to your life expectancy.
The healthful plant-based diet that Seventh-day Adventists eat has been associated with an extra decade of life expectancy. It has also been linked to reduced rates of diabetes and heart disease. Adventists’ diet is inspired by the Bible — Genesis 1:29. (“And God said: ‘Behold, I have given you every herb yielding seed . . . and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for food.’ ”) But again, the key insight might be more about social structure than about the diet itself. While for most people, diets eventually fail, the Adventists eat the way they do for decades. How? Adventists hang out with other Adventists. When you go to an Adventist picnic, there’s no steak grilling on the barbecue; it’s a vegetarian potluck. No one is drinking alcohol or smoking. As Nicholas Christakis, a physician and social scientist at Harvard, found when examining data from a long-term study of the residents of Framingham, Mass., health habits can be as contagious as a cold virus. By his calculation, a Framingham individual’s chances of becoming obese shot up by 57 percent if a friend became obese. Among the Adventists we looked at, it was mostly positive social contagions that were in circulation.
Ask the very old on Ikaria how they managed to live past 90, and they’ll usually talk about the clean air and the wine. Or, as one 101-year-old woman put it to me with a shrug, “We just forget to die.” The reality is they have no idea how they got to be so old. And neither do we. To answer that question would require carefully tracking the lifestyles of a study group and a control group for an entire human lifetime (and then some). We do know from reliable data that people on Ikaria are outliving those on surrounding islands (a control group, of sorts). Samos, for instance, is just eight miles away. People there with the same genetic background eat yogurt, drink wine, breathe the same air, fish from the same sea as their neighbors on Ikaria. But people on Samos tend to live no longer than average Greeks. This is what makes the Ikarian formula so tantalizing.
If you pay careful attention to the way Ikarians have lived their lives, it appears that a dozen subtly powerful, mutually enhancing and pervasive factors are at work. It’s easy to get enough rest if no one else wakes up early and the village goes dead during afternoon naptime. It helps that the cheapest, most accessible foods are also the most healthful — and that your ancestors have spent centuries developing ways to make them taste good. It’s hard to get through the day in Ikaria without walking up 20 hills. You’re not likely to ever feel the existential pain of not belonging or even the simple stress of arriving late. Your community makes sure you’ll always have something to eat, but peer pressure will get you to contribute something too. You’re going to grow a garden, because that’s what your parents did, and that’s what your neighbors are doing. You’re less likely to be a victim of crime because everyone at once is a busybody and feels as if he’s being watched. At day’s end, you’ll share a cup of the seasonal herbal tea with your neighbor because that’s what he’s serving. Several glasses of wine may follow the tea, but you’ll drink them in the company of good friends. On Sunday, you’ll attend church, and you’ll fast before Orthodox feast days. Even if you’re antisocial, you’ll never be entirely alone. Your neighbors will cajole you out of your house for the village festival to eat your portion of goat meat.
Every one of these factors can be tied to longevity. That’s what the $70 billion diet industry and $20 billion health-club industry do in their efforts to persuade us that if we eat the right food or do the right workout, we’ll be healthier, lose weight and live longer. But these strategies rarely work. Not because they’re wrong-minded: it’s a good idea for people to do any of these healthful activities. The problem is, it’s difficult to change individual behaviors when community behaviors stay the same. In the United States, you can’t go to a movie, walk through the airport or buy cough medicine without being routed through a gantlet of candy bars, salty snacks and sugar-sweetened beverages. The processed-food industry spends more than $4 billion a year tempting us to eat. How do you combat that? Discipline is a good thing, but discipline is a muscle that fatigues. Sooner or later, most people cave in to relentless temptation.
As our access to calories has increased, we’ve decreased the amount of physical activity in our lives. In 1970, about 40 percent of all children in the U.S. walked to school; now fewer than 12 percent do. Our grandparents, without exercising, burned up about five times as many calories a day in physical activity as we do. At the same time, access to food has exploded.
Despite the island’s relative isolation, its tortuous roads and the fierce independence of its inhabitants, the American food culture, among other forces, is beginning to take root in Ikaria. Village markets are now selling potato chips and soda, which in my experience is replacing tea as the drink of choice among younger Ikarians. As the island’s ancient traditions give way before globalization, the gap between Ikarian life spans and those of the rest of the world seems to be gradually disappearing, as the next generations of old people become less likely to live quite so long.
The big aha for me, having studied populations of the long-lived for nearly a decade, is how the factors that encourage longevity reinforce one another over the long term. For people to adopt a healthful lifestyle, I have become convinced, they need to live in an ecosystem, so to speak, that makes it possible. As soon as you take culture, belonging, purpose or religion out of the picture, the foundation for long healthy lives collapses. The power of such an environment lies in the mutually reinforcing relationships among lots of small nudges and default choices. There’s no silver bullet to keep death and the diseases of old age at bay. If there’s anything close to a secret, it’s silver buckshot.
I called Moraitis a few weeks ago from my home in Minneapolis. Elpiniki died in the spring at age 85, and now he lives alone. He picked up the phone in the same whitewashed house that he’d moved into 35 years ago. It was late afternoon in Ikaria. He had worked in his vineyard that morning and just awakened from a nap. We chatted for a few minutes, but then he warned me that some of his neighbors were coming over for a drink in a few minutes and he’d have to go. I had one last question for him. How does he think he recovered from lung cancer?
“It just went away,” he said. “I actually went back to America about 25 years after moving here to see if the doctors could explain it to me.”
I had heard this part of the story before. It had become a piece of the folklore of Ikaria, proof of its exceptional way of life. Still, I asked him, “What happened?”
“My doctors were all dead.”
This article

The Island Where People Forget to Die

is adapted from new material being published in the second edition of “Blue Zones,” by Dan Buettner, out next month from National Geographic.

Editor: Dean Robinson
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: October 25, 2012
A previous version of this story misstated the period when inhabitants on the Greek island of Ikaria fast. They fast before Orthodox feast days, not during Orthodox feast days
x Sophia

10 comments:

Mlle Paradis said...

That was L-O-O-V-E-L-Y Sophia! Yes read this one last week and yes, couldn't agree more with you and how lucky you actually got to spend time in Ikaria! A well traveled friend this week said that Greece was his favorite place in the world.

Most importantly, as you say, knowing when where how to move forward AND to stay back Instead of being washed along by the tides.....


Sophie Munns said...

Mlle P ...
so glad you happened over here and left your thoughts.
I know how much you appreciate the conviviality of shared plates and tables... and soulful communities.
Funny thing was... a week before this article came out I found myself at dinner with about 5 people and banging on a little about the remarkable Ikarian lifestyle...after not really talking about it for a long time. I must have become so nostalgic that my brother remembered and sent to the article... he had been at that table and was surprised to hear the stories after years.
Just lately Ive thought of going back... for a long time I didnt want to rick upsetting the memories... but i still ear good things said ...esp re some islands that are not so commercial!

ah... instead of being washed by the tides... YES!
x

Sweetpea said...

Sophie, I always read your new posts but have become very remiss about commenting...all that hurrying we all do, I am as guilty as anyone ;>[

Today, I absolutely had to stop to thank you for this beautifully written and heartfelt post. I worry about that NY Times article, how it will now draw scrutiny & attention & probably bring on a band of visitors to that quiet place ~ as always seems to happen through the media. On the other hand, I deeply appreciate these reminders about other ways to *live.*

Had a grand time on your word-full river nonetheless!

Christi

ronnie said...

ahck! what a great post!

so much resonates for me in this - (no - I've never been to Greece) I recently met Roberto Perez (from Cuba - now there's another island that's got its food sorted!) and he told tales of the dramatic changes that have unfolded in cuba since the fall of the soviet union (have you seen the film 'power of community'? - roberto is in this - its a rippa tale of cuba's return to agrarian lifestyle....)

anyhoo - I'm rambling

when I could be gardening instead!

Sophie Munns said...

Hi Christi,
I completely understand re commenting as often as one would like. The tricky word verification process affects my blog visits!
You know ... I didn't even consider Ikaria being inundated after this article. Art for me = a mostly frugal life ... getting on and off planes has not been my life since extended travel in the late 80's.
I have noticed the tendency of restless cashed-up droves of people skimming the world often but not connecting meaningfully with anything or anyone... lives unchanged by the places visited. Many live like that at home now too! The contemporary mode of 'consumer' is worlds away from the possibilities of being a co-creator wherever one is.
Imagine if the past two decades had been filled with eco-tourism, study, community exchange, volunteering and all those ventures that some bring to their travel experiences. Or if people had settled in a community for a time and engaged more.Then again ... there are people who've done just that and founded dubious, even highly problematic ventures of all kinds.
The challenge always remains there for us, wherever we are, to bring something forth of value that enhances the natural environment and social fabric. The more people make that a priority in their choices whether at home or whilst travelling the better this world will be because of it.
Thanks Christi for you warm words and stopping to comment... the river of words will be much enhanced by the tributaries of thought that connect here.
S

Sophie Munns said...

Ronnie,
The Cuban urban-agrarian story is immensely inspiring. How wonderful for you to meet Roberto Perez.
About ten years ago when watching the rise and rise of the property portfolio phenomenon I felt disturbed about the fact it was completely dollar driven 99% of the time. No thought for sustainability of anything except financial portfolios. It drove up both the rental and property market, forced so many to relocate against their wishes, move into sharing anywhere they could and of course into homelessness... all steps that fracture continuity of families, communities, lifestyles and livelihoods.

Habitat and farming land was destroyed at an alarming rate to cater for this boom. Energy needs become greater... more mining... and so on. As long as the property portfolios were performing though there was no complaint. No doubt more architects were in employment... but how much of the property boom was concerned with architectural visions for sustainability and (modest) living in sync with the environment?

Now look what we're left with... land swallowed up, white elephants everywhere, lots of empty real estate with big price tags and more homeless or on the border-line. Than add on the mining rampage and biodiversity loss - a fifth of plant life at risk, food security issues and climate change. Plus take a look at East Coast USA this week and you have if nothing else a reminder of why modest aims for personal assets and far greater care in terms of communal life and well-being plus global eco-sytems and resource, energy and infra-structure systems is entirely necessary now.

Its ironical that the motivation for people to get ahead which translated often into looking after number one now bring us to an increasingly and desperately invalid future in terms of old paradigms.

Security is not made by looking after number one, not in the long-term... and we are seeing that writ large right now. Bangladesh has been swamped for years. Few have been worrying about the Pacific and Islands like Tuvulu. If something good can unfold from the sadness, loss and devastation of current events in the US then I hope it will get people everywhere thinking much harder about "we" ...not "I"... and making changes that foster authentic progress!
Thank god for all those like your family Ronnie whose labours contribute to our food security and whose land is cherished and sustains biodiversity.
S




Velma Bolyard said...

yes, i think you have been true to your deep calling, and the seed, so basic, reflects in what you do, both in longing to eat well and simply, to the wonderful painting/drawing that i see over here. we are born of a place, and in a sense we also find a place, but that journey unfolds for each of us individually. being true and aware of who and where and what we are is our responsibility. and connecting and staying connected to this good earth is more than necessary, our lives depend on it.

Sophie Munns said...

Interesting we've been talking of words this week Velma! Your beautifully succinct poetic way with words evident at your blog, and my impulse to tease out whole thoughts and deliberate over ideas that can end up in words... those things give away so much of what we are when being authentic.

This post allowed for a process to truly begin which is necessary now I will be working on a book. Trying not to think of the work...but rather have the words and ideas collect around the strongest impulses ... later doing the shaping of the material. It took a while to arrive at being ready to let the words here out of my private thinking space so I am glad to be reminded by you of it simply, quietly , being our task... all of us ... to find a way to be connected deeply to earth. And so to get on with it!

If in airing thoughts here and there later shows up in a book ... I'd like to at least strengthen the importance for others in honouring what matters for them. We need a world with people in it who can find/build/uncover potent and enriching values and connections in the midst of their toil.

ArtPropelled said...

Wonderful story and food for thought! “But we don’t think about it that way. It’s bigger than that" ... It's bigger than that.... I like that. Speaking about Corfu... I have been hankering to live there since I read My Family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell. I think I was about 10.

Sophie Munns said...

I saw a film of that Durrell book Robyn... just wonderful! Must read the book! I can understand how it got you wanting to live there.

Theres' so much in that article... i like how he identifies the ecosystem one is living in as being so significant... the social fabric. And conversation...!
Bigger than that for sure.