Anti-Ageing Secrets of The Okinawans
Anti-Ageing Secrets of The Okinawans
Most of us want to know how to live a long life and have the good health to enjoy it.
Okinawa, a group of islands in Southern Japan, has the largest percentage of healthy old people of any
place on earth.
Many live to well over the age of 100, and very few succumb to diseases which we have come to
expect as part of ageing - strokes, cancer, heart disease and dementia. In fact Okinawans have the
lowest frequency of these diseases in the world.
So what is it about the diet and lifestyle of the Okinawans that gives them this extraordinary long and
healthy life?
A group of doctors has spent 25 years collecting information on the diet and lifestyle of the Okinawans
and analysing it.
The results are fascinating and fit very well with the recommendations of the Zone diet.
Here are a few tips from the Okinawans, combined with principles of the Zone Diet. You can use these
to turn your diet and lifestyle into one that can slow down the ageing process and ward off the diseases
of old age.
The researchers found 10 key factors that contributed to the excellent health and longevity of the
Okinawans. Check your own health and lifestyle against these, and then use the suggestions that follow
to help correct potential health problems, and ward off disease.
The 10 Factors
1. Okinawans have healthy arteries, low cholesterol, and low homocysteine levels.
Cholesterol clogs arteries, clogged arteries lead to poor blood supply, which causes strokes and heart
attacks.
Homocysteine is an amino acid, a by-product of meat protein consumption. High homocysteine levels
are linked with heart disease and inflammation.
Homocysteine levels are reduced by vitamins B6, B12 and folic acid. These are used by the body to
turn homocysteine into a harmless protein. The Okinawan diet has high levels of these vitamins.
Okinawans also maintain a healthy blood pressure.
You can ask your doctor to check cholesterol, homocysteine levels and blood pressure.
2. Okinawans have low body fat and are fit.
Healthy body fat levels are 10 to 20% for men and 15 - 30% for women.
You can use the Zone calculator on www.drsears.com to check your body-fat levels.
3. Okinawans have a low risk for hormone dependant cancers. The have 80% less breast and prostate
cancer and half the ovarian and colon cancer rates of North Americans.
4. Okinawans have strong bones and about half the risk for hip fractures of North Americans.
5. Most Okinawans have remarkable mental clarity - even over the age of one hundred. This is related
to the fact that they have clean arteries and good blood circulation to the brain. They also engage in
lifelong learning to keep brain cells active.
6. Okinawan women have a natural menopause and don't use hormone replacements. They have very
few complications such as hip fractures, hot flushes and heart disease.
7. Youthful levels of sex hormones are found in elderly Okinawans. DHEA, oestrogen and testosterone
levels are higher than Americans of a similar age.
8. Free radicals are found in low levels in the blood of Okinawans. Free radicals are highly reactive
compounds that damage cells in the body are thought to be one of the main causes of ageing. Free
radicals are increased with a high calorie and poor diet, smoking, and stress.
9. Long living Okinawans have excellent psycho-spiritual health. They have optimistic attitudes, are
adaptable, have low stress levels, are self confidant, and have an easy going attitude to life. They also
have strong social networks.
10. Okinawan Health is a combination of both Eastern and Western healing methods.
See Book The Okinawa Way, Bradley Wilcox, Craig Wilcox, Makoto Sukuki
Fat is calorie dense. There can be a huge amount of fat (mostly saturated) in some protein sources - for
example reduced fat cheese is 50% fat. Use low fat protein sources, such as egg whites, low fat cottage
cheese, protein powders, fish and tofu. Cut down on hard cheese, red meats and remove all visible fat
from meat.
e) Have glass of water before you eat, as it helps reduce your appetite.
f) Reduce portion size of bad foods
If you are tempted to have bad foods such as chips, cakes etc.; instead of depriving yourself, have a
very small portion and savour it.
Carbohydrate rules
Eat 10 servings daily of vegetables and fruits, with the emphasis on vegetables.
Have a rainbow of colours on your plate - 5 colours at a meal. Red, orange, green, white, black, yellow,
purple.
Eat small amounts of whole grains with their bran - unrefined grains have their nutrients and fibre
intact. Barley and oats are the most Zone favourable grains.
Eat vegetables and fruit as close in as possible to the same state as they were picked. Whole fruit, not
fruit juice.
Minimise or cut out refined grains such as flours, sugars, processed cereals and white rice. Refined
grains are little different from eating pure sugar. Eat 3 or less servings per week.
Eat low glycemic carbohydrates and do not eat them in excess. Zone favourable carbohydrates are low
glycemic.
Protein
Okinawans eat very little red meat, eggs and dairy products. They do eat 2 servings of soy products per
day and seafood / fish several times per week. They eat small portions of protein with meals (about 85
grams) which is similar to Zone recommendations.
Red meat and dairy products are high in saturated fat. Saturated fat is linked with high cholesterol
levels. Too much protein from animal sources can lead to high levels of artery clogging homocysteine.
Red meat, egg yolks and organ meats also contain arachidonic acid - the building blocks of
inflammatory prostaglandin hormones. Inflammation is linked with many diseases of ageing.
Soy products on the other hand have high levels of protective flavonoids. Fish and seafood contain
Omega-3, a fatty acid which suppresses inflammatory hormones.
Protein Rules
Use soy products instead of milk products, e.g. soy milk instead of cows milk.
Keep dairy products to a minimum, no more than 2 servings per day (serving size 1 cup milk or 45
grams of cheese.
Eat at least one serving of soy per day.
Eat one or more servings of fish or seafood daily.
Eat no more than a total of 7 servings per week of meat / poultry and whole eggs.
Do not eat more than a palm size of protein at each meal.
Protein powder is an excellent source of low fat protein.
Fat
Fat intake should be 30% of calories. Monounsaturated fat should be the main type of fat eaten.
Okinawans use mainly canola oil. Cold pressed is the best.
Okinawans eat another important fat in large amounts - Omega - 3. You can increase the amount of
Omega-3 in your diet by eating fish and seafood daily (especially dark coloured fish), using canola oil
and flax oil, or taking fish oil capsules. Be sure NOT to eat fish or take fish oil capsules that may be
high in mercury as this is a very toxic metal. Avoid tuna and non purified fish oil.
Fat rules
Use monounsaturated fats: Nuts, nut oils, avocados and avocado oil, olives and olive oil, sesames and
sesame oil.
Increase omega-3 fats: Fish oils (best choice), canola oil and flax oil.
Avoid bad fats
Saturated fat - found in whole dairy foods and meat, palm and coconut oils. Saturated fat raises LDL
or bad cholesterol.
Trans fat (hydrogenated oils) are worse than saturated fats and are linked with high rates of heart
disease. They are found in non-separating peanut butter, and most commercial baking using margarine.
They are also used in chips and crackers to increase the shelf life, and are found in deep fried food.
Limit Omega-6 fats. Although a small amount of Omega-6 fat is essential, too much Omega-6 can
promote inflammation, blood clotting and possibly cancer growth. Omega-6 is found in seed oils such
as sunflower oil. Using the monounsaturated oils listed above will stop you getting excess.
Centenarians also have strong social networks where people live in communities with a strong help
thy neighbour attitude. This community could be friends, relatives, membership of a church or social
group.
Reference: The Okinawa Way, Bradley Wilcox, Craig Wilcox, Makoto Sukuki