Some researchers are predicting that one out of every three babies born this year will live to be a hundred.  Here are some clues that MIGHT mean your chances are good too.

 

 

#1.)  You have a lot of old relatives.  There's a lot of evidence that longevity has a lot to do with genetics.  At least half of all people who live to be 100 also have a sibling, parent, or grandparent that reached 90-plus. 

 

--And the closer your relatives are who are over 100, the more likely you are to join them.

 

 

#2.)  You can walk fast over long distances.  One study found that the average person typically walks about two miles per hour . . . and for every two-tenths of a mile per hour faster than that, a person would have a 12% decrease in the risk of death. 

 

 

--In another study, adults in their 70s who COULDN'T walk a quarter-mile were less likely to be alive six years later . . . and more likely to suffer from long-term illness or disability before they died.

 

 

#3.)  You have a lot of friends.  The more you interact with other people, the more likely you are to live a long time.  And lonely people tend to die earlier, and be less healthy in general.  Sorry.

 

 

--An 80-year study of 1,500 people born around 1910 found that religious women lived longer . . . mainly because they were involved in a lot of social groups.  People who were non-religious but involved in civic and community groups also lived longer.

 

 

 

#4.)  You're a woman.  Out of roughly 80,000 Americans who are older than 100 today, 85% are women.  And women who bear children naturally beyond the age of 40 are FOUR TIMES more likely than other women to live to 100.

 

 

--Not because they gave birth late, but because their bodies are aging less quickly.

 

#5.)  You worry just enough to stay safe.  New research says that SOME worry is actually good for you.  It might cause stress, but people who worry . . . as long as it's within reason . . . actually live longer on average. 

 

 

--It's probably because they tend not to take risks, and have fewer accidents.

 

 

#6.)  You have a positive attitude.  Lots of studies suggest that a positive outlook on life tends to give you more years.  Obviously if you tend to stay happy, you experience less stress, and that can help you stay more healthy.

 

 

--But the BEST clue that you'll live to be 100 is . . . if you're 99 right now.  According to the best current data, two out of every three 99-year-olds will live to see at least one more year.

 

 

(MSN Healthy Living)