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avatar_Facemirror

What you will start to notice in your body after 50 years

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After fifty, the body stops sending polite emails and begins issuing official memos.


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Facemirror

After fifty, the body stops sending polite emails and begins issuing official memos.

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Facemirror

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Facemirror

After fifty, the body stops sending polite emails and begins issuing official memos.

You wake up one morning and discover that your knees now have opinions. Your back has started keeping records. Your blood pressure has developed ambitions. Somewhere inside you, cholesterol is quietly building a retirement home along your arteries without asking for planning permission.

At this age, the doctor no longer greets you with "How are you?" but with "What are we monitoring this year?"

Cardiovascular disease waits like an old classmate who never forgot you owed him money. Type two diabetes lurks like a relative who visits without notice and stays longer than expected. Osteoporosis is busy negotiating with your bones, slowly convincing them that density is overrated. Arthritis joins the conversation just to ensure every movement is discussed in advance.

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Facemirror

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Facemirror

And cancer, well, cancer is that uninvited guest whose name everyone lowers their voice to mention.

This is the season of life where the body demands respect, receipts, and a lifestyle audit.

Suddenly you begin to hear sentences you once ignored. Eat more vegetables. Reduce salt. Walk daily. Sleep well. Avoid stress. Drink water. You realize these were not suggestions. They were survival tips that your younger self laughed at while chewing mandazi, which are deep fried dough pastries, at midnight.

Exercise becomes less about looking good and more about remaining able to stand up without negotiating with the furniture. You are told to do weight bearing exercises for your bones. Brisk walking, stair climbing, squats. At this point, even climbing into a bus feels like resistance training. You are advised to practice balance exercises like standing on one leg. You try it and immediately discover why chairs were invented.

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Facemirror

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Facemirror

Swimming is recommended for your joints. Cycling is excellent. Yoga is wonderful. Tai chi is calming. You nod seriously, knowing very well the only consistent exercise you have mastered is turning over in bed with skill and experience.

Then the diet arrives.

Calcium. Vitamin D. Vitamin K. Magnesium. Fiber. Protein. Antioxidants. Suddenly your plate begins to look like a pharmacy shelf. You are told to eat sukuma wiki, which is collard greens, mrenda, which is jute mallow, omena, which are small dried sardines, beans, whole grains, fruits, nuts, fish, and leafy things that your younger self considered decoration.

You are told to reduce salt to less than two grams a day. Two grams. That is the amount of salt that accidentally falls from the shaker while you are thinking about something else.

Sugar becomes a criminal. Fried food becomes suspicious. Processed food becomes a public enemy. Mandazi are now spoken of in past tense like former lovers who were bad for your future.

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Facemirror

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Facemirror

You are advised to flavor food with garlic, ginger, lemon, and herbs. You discover that food without salt tastes like a motivational speech. Healthy, inspiring, and slightly difficult to swallow.

Portion control is introduced. A fist sized portion of carbohydrates. A palm sized portion of protein. You begin to look at your hands and wonder why they are not bigger.

But beneath all the humor, something becomes very clear.

After fifty, health is no longer automatic. It is a daily decision. It is a quiet discipline. It is choosing to walk when you could sit. Choosing vegetables when you could fry. Choosing sleep when you could scroll. Choosing kindness to your body the same way you should choose kindness to people.

You realize that old age is not decided by years but by habits.

So you walk. Slowly at first. You eat your sukuma wiki with new respect. You stare at omena and whisper apologies for past neglect. You attempt a squat and hear sounds from your knees that remind you of opening an old wooden door.

And in the middle of all this, you laugh.

Because the same body that carried you recklessly through youth is now asking for a little cooperation. Not miracles. Just moderation. Not punishment. Just discipline.

After fifty, you finally understand something profound.

Good health is not a gift. It is a project.

And like all serious projects, it begins with small, stubborn, consistent actions.

@Charles Gondosio
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Facemirror

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