The Longevity Playbook. Simple Daily Moves For a Body That ages Well.
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony
, qui est-ce ?Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN8231619306
- EAN9798231619306
- Date de parution15/10/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurWalzone Press
Résumé
Epilogue: Your Next Chapter Starts HereIf you've made it to these final pages, take a breath and let that sink in-you've just completed something powerful. You've walked through the playbook, learned the habits, and uncovered what it means not just to live longer, but to live better. But this isn't the end. It's the turning of a page. Because the real work-the beautiful work-happens now, in your daily life, in the choices that unfold between one sunrise and the next.
Longevity isn't a finish line. It's a rhythm. It's waking up each day and saying, Today, I'll move. Today, I'll nourish myself. Today, I'll choose gratitude over hurry, purpose over autopilot. The Journey AheadHere's the thing about ageing well-it's not about holding on to youth, but about growing into the fullness of who you're meant to be. Every wrinkle tells a story. Every scar proves you've healed.
Every year adds wisdom that no twenty-year-old could trade for. You've learned that muscles matter, but mindset matters more. That sleep repairs what effort builds. That joy is medicine. That connection and curiosity are as vital as any vitamin. And that play, laughter, and purpose aren't extras-they're lifelines. If you take just one lesson from this book, let it be this: you're not getting older-you're getting deeper.
Deeper in grace, gratitude, and strength. A Final Story: The Long WalkThere's a man in my neighbourhood named John. He's 84, and every morning, no matter the weather, he walks a mile around the block. Slowly, deliberately, with his baseball cap pulled low. One day, I stopped him and asked what kept him going. He smiled and said, "Because I still can. And because I want to make sure I still can tomorrow."That's it.
That's the entire philosophy of longevity in one sentence. Not perfection. Not competition. Just quiet consistency rooted in gratitude. Every step is an act of defiance against decline-and a declaration of hope. A Blessing for the Road AheadAs you step into the next chapter of your life, carry these reminders with you: You are not behind. You are not too old. You are not done growing. The world still needs what you have to give-your laughter, your stories, your wisdom, your presence.
Take care of your body not because you fear ageing, but because you honour the life that flows through it. Take care of your mind because it's the lens through which you see beauty. Take care of your spirit because it's what connects you to everything that matters. And when the world rushes by in noise and pressure, pause. Remember your playbook. Come back to the basics: breathe, move, rest, connect, give thanks.
Those are your anchors. Your InvitationAs you close this book, ask yourself one question:What's one small thing I can do today to live better tomorrow?Then do it. And tomorrow, ask again. Over time, those tiny answers will become your life's masterpiece-a living testament that aging can be done with joy, courage, and grace. Final Takeaway:Ageing isn't something to fear-it's something to live into.
So keep walking, keep growing, keep playing. You're not just adding years to your life-you're adding life to your years. And that, dear reader, is the truest kind of longevity.
Longevity isn't a finish line. It's a rhythm. It's waking up each day and saying, Today, I'll move. Today, I'll nourish myself. Today, I'll choose gratitude over hurry, purpose over autopilot. The Journey AheadHere's the thing about ageing well-it's not about holding on to youth, but about growing into the fullness of who you're meant to be. Every wrinkle tells a story. Every scar proves you've healed.
Every year adds wisdom that no twenty-year-old could trade for. You've learned that muscles matter, but mindset matters more. That sleep repairs what effort builds. That joy is medicine. That connection and curiosity are as vital as any vitamin. And that play, laughter, and purpose aren't extras-they're lifelines. If you take just one lesson from this book, let it be this: you're not getting older-you're getting deeper.
Deeper in grace, gratitude, and strength. A Final Story: The Long WalkThere's a man in my neighbourhood named John. He's 84, and every morning, no matter the weather, he walks a mile around the block. Slowly, deliberately, with his baseball cap pulled low. One day, I stopped him and asked what kept him going. He smiled and said, "Because I still can. And because I want to make sure I still can tomorrow."That's it.
That's the entire philosophy of longevity in one sentence. Not perfection. Not competition. Just quiet consistency rooted in gratitude. Every step is an act of defiance against decline-and a declaration of hope. A Blessing for the Road AheadAs you step into the next chapter of your life, carry these reminders with you: You are not behind. You are not too old. You are not done growing. The world still needs what you have to give-your laughter, your stories, your wisdom, your presence.
Take care of your body not because you fear ageing, but because you honour the life that flows through it. Take care of your mind because it's the lens through which you see beauty. Take care of your spirit because it's what connects you to everything that matters. And when the world rushes by in noise and pressure, pause. Remember your playbook. Come back to the basics: breathe, move, rest, connect, give thanks.
Those are your anchors. Your InvitationAs you close this book, ask yourself one question:What's one small thing I can do today to live better tomorrow?Then do it. And tomorrow, ask again. Over time, those tiny answers will become your life's masterpiece-a living testament that aging can be done with joy, courage, and grace. Final Takeaway:Ageing isn't something to fear-it's something to live into.
So keep walking, keep growing, keep playing. You're not just adding years to your life-you're adding life to your years. And that, dear reader, is the truest kind of longevity.



