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by Rakefet Tavor
April 24, 2026
from
TheEpochTimes Website
Article also
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They are over 80, 90, and even 100,
yet their
minds are as sharp
as those
of people decades younger.
Superagers
challenge everything
we assume
about aging...
She sold her home in New Jersey and moved to a one‑bedroom apartment
in the heart of Manhattan.
At over 100 years old, Jaffe has been a
longtime volunteer tour and exhibition guide at the historic New
York Public Library. She cleans her small apartment by herself and
walks about half a mile from her home to the library, and to local
grocery stores, carrying her groceries home.
As part of her volunteer work at the library, Jaffe gained in-depth
knowledge about the roughly 250 items displayed there, from which
she selected 40 to present in her tours.
"The tour is not [based on]
a script. It is something that you have to work out yourself," she
said in a interview with Fortune.
She uses WhatsApp, Zoom, and
emails to keep in contact with her close family.
"I never expected to be 102. I'm as surprised as everybody else that
I'm here," she told KFF Health News.
She attributes her longevity,
by order of importance, to genetics, luck, and her commitment to
staying active.
"You don't work toward it: It happens. Every day,
you get up and you are a day older."
Jaffe describes herself as a pragmatic woman:
She assesses clearly
what she can and cannot do, and prefers to live alone as long as she
is independent and able to do things her own way.
It is no wonder she is considered exceptional.
Today, about 101,000
centenarians live in the United States, and only about 15 percent of
them manage to lead independent lives as Jaffe does.
While many of
us fear old age mainly because of diseases such as dementia and
Alzheimer's - incurable conditions that in their advanced stages lead
to inability to recognize loved ones and even loss of
self‑identity –Jaffe represents an entirely different category:
Superagers...!
Science has already shown that the aging process is usually
accompanied by a gradual decline in memory.
For instance, on
average, 80-year-olds score half as well on memory tests as people
aged 56 to 66, a decline that is considered normal and unavoidable.
But groundbreaking research shows that there are rare individuals,
or "superagers," who manage to maintain cognitive sharpness and
memory comparable to those decades younger.
The SuperAging Program at Northwestern University in Evanston,
Illinois, launched in 1999, studies this phenomenon.
The program was
initiated following an extraordinary finding: In a postmortem
examination of the brain of an 81‑year‑old woman, researchers
discovered that her cognitive functioning resembled that of a woman
in her 50s–a discovery that challenged the assumption that severe
cognitive decline is inevitable.
That particular brain had been
donated from the University of Miami's brain bank.
Now Northwestern
University operates its own independent brain bank, to which many
study participants have pledged to donate their brains after their
death.

"We follow these individuals and examine their cognitive functions
every year, collecting blood samples and performing
MRI scans and
other brain imaging scans,"
Tamar Gefen, professor of Cognitive
Neurology and Alzheimer's Disease Center at the Northwestern
University School of Medicine and one of the program's lead
researchers, told me in an interview.
"Many of them plan to donate
their brains to science after they die. In fact, 98 percent of the
program's participants have committed to doing so."
Gefen continued,
"We are trying to understand the reverse of
Alzheimer's disease...
If Alzheimer's involves memory loss, then the Superaging research seeks to answer a different question:
How can
memory be preserved despite the advancement of age...?"

PeopleImages/Shutterstock.com
What's the Secret
Ingredient?
One of the most intriguing
findings of the research (The
first 25 years of the Northwestern University SuperAging Program) is the
enormous variation in the lifestyles of superagers.
Some maintained
a healthy lifestyle throughout their lives–balanced nutrition,
physical activity, and regular sleep–while others did exactly the
opposite:
They smoked, drank alcohol, didn't exercise, lived under
constant stress, and didn't even sleep adequately.
Surprisingly, their medical histories were not necessarily "cleaner"
than those of their peers, and their medication regimens were not
fundamentally different, either.

Professor Tamar Gefen (left) in her lab.
Despite this, Gefen and her colleagues found significant differences
between the brains of typical elderly individuals and those of
superagers.
One of the most striking findings is that the rate at
which their brains age is entirely different:
MRI scans showed that superagers' brains lose almost no volume over the years.
A study comparing 24 superagers with 12 "typical" elderly adults
found that the rate of brain atrophy among superagers was only about
half of their age‑matched peers.
In fact, superagers' brain volume
resembles that of people 20 or 30 years younger, unlike typical
elderly adults of the same age, who show clear brain shrinkage.
"Once you pass 80 years of age, it's normal for things in the body
and brain to begin to shrink," Gefen explained.
"Once the process
begins and the brain loses volume... personality, communication, and
life itself begin to shrink along with it."

Anatoly Epaneshnikov
These differences are not limited to the general structural level,
and they are also evident at the cellular level.
One such difference
relates to neuron size.
"When we examined the hippocampus - the region
of the brain responsible for encoding memories - we saw that in the
brains of superagers, the neurons are larger, stronger, and have
greater structural integrity.
This was found to be the case not only
when they were compared to healthy adults their own age, but also
when they were compared to people in their 40s," Gefen said.
Another significant difference was found in the anterior cingulate
cortex (another area of the brain involved in memory).
"In my
doctoral work, I examined this region in superagers and compared it
to that of their age‑matched peers as well as much younger adults.
We found that superagers have a much higher density of Von Economo
neurons.
These neurons are not only more numerous but also longer
and healthier among superagers, even when they are compared to
people in their 30s or 40s",
...Gefen said, adding that these special
neurons may contribute to high cognitive abilities and the
preservation of memory sharpness.
Another interesting finding relates to microglia, the brain's immune
cells.
Like other immune cells in the body, they can cause
inflammation and damage to neurons when they become overly active.
In many elderly adults, microglia show increased activity with age,
but in superagers, an entirely different picture emerged in
research:
The activity level of these cells remained low.
This
likely helps reduce inflammation in the brain as well as maintain
its proper functioning at an advanced age.
Gefen said that in addition to the structural and cellular
differences, there are also psychological differences among
superagers.
"Not long ago we conducted a study and found that
superagers generally rank very low on neuroticism and relatively
high on extraversion - they value social connections," she said.
But according to Gefen, this does not necessarily mean a broad love
of socializing.
"Some of them said they were especially close to
their religious community or to religion in general, while others
spoke of strong connections with their families.
The common
denominator is the need for a personal, emotional, and stable
connection. This is something that sustained them.
Think of people
in nursing homes who lack personal connections–they tend to decline
more quickly.
Superficial visits aren't enough; the connection must
be personal, consistent, and deeply emotional. Having such a tie is
a tremendous force."
Asked how superagers cope with challenges, Gefen stressed their
emotional toughness.
"I don't have specific empirical findings on this, but I can tell
you from observation that after meeting so many superagers, I see
that they possess extraordinary emotional
resilience.
We have, for
example, Holocaust survivors, and when you speak with them - they do
not deny their pain - but they are able to withstand it and move
forward.
It's a kind of positivity that allows them to remain
future‑oriented.
They look ahead."
The most striking example, in her view, is Edith Smith, who recently
celebrated her 111th birthday, making her the oldest superager in
the program.
"She is simply amazing," Gefen said.
"In every meeting,
she smiles and radiates wisdom. She lived through two world wars,
contracted COVID twice after the age of 105, and still emanates
lightness and spirituality.
She tells us to take things lightly. She
experienced tremendous loss, has seen everything, and still remains
positive and humble.
She is an inspiration to us all."

Halfpoint/Shutterstock.com
A Plot Twist
Sister Mary, a nun from Pennsylvania, worked as a teacher until she
was 84 and later participated in the University of Kentucky's "Nun
Study."
As part of the study, 678 nuns from across the United States
were evaluated annually to assess their cognitive functioning.
Professor David Snowdon, a neurologist and the lead researcher,
recounted that Sister Mary excelled in all tests, even at the age of
101.
A few months later, she passed away, and an autopsy of her
brain revealed large amounts of the two well‑known biological
markers of Alzheimer's:
amyloid‑beta plaques and tau protein
tangles.
How could her brain appear "diseased," yet she remained cognitively
intact?
Similar cases have shown that the relationship between
pathological findings and cognitive functioning is not
straightforward:
Some people continue to function well even when
their brains are filled with proteins characteristic of Alzheimer's,
while others develop severe symptoms of the disease even with
relatively small amounts.
This led to the question:
What gives
certain individuals protection against cognitive decline?

Over the past decades, three main mechanisms have been defined to
explain this
resilience.
The first is called "Brain Reserve,"
referring to the brain's "hardware" or its size and structure. A
heavier brain with more neurons or more neural connections can
"absorb" damage over time. Even when cells begin to deteriorate,
enough of them still remain to maintain normal functioning.
The second is "Cognitive Reserve," referring to the brain's
"software." Brains that operate efficiently, flexibly, and with high
capacity are able to bypass physical damage and delay cognitive
decline.
The third is "Brain Maintenance," the brain's ability to routinely
protect itself from the aging process. A brain that manages to
preserve itself over time will delay the onset of cognitive
symptoms.
The big question is how to reinforce these three mechanisms.
Back in
the 1990s, when the research began, it was believed that higher
education or mentally demanding professions were key factors.
Since
then, many additional factors were identified including physical
activity, active social lives, playing music, regular use of a
foreign language, and more.
The current understanding is that it
doesn't matter which activity we choose; what matters is that the
brain is challenged consistently and in varied ways to strengthen
neural pathways and create alternative ones that may help deter
aging.
Beyond that, some researchers suggest that the way we perceive our
lives may also be significant.
A strong sense of meaning in daily
life may increase our "reserves" and provide the brain with better
resilience.
"So even if we eat well, exercise, and challenge our brains
regularly, it may help us stay healthier as we age, but it won't
guarantee that we become 'superagers'," I said to Gefen.
"Correct. My adviser used to say that the best decision you can make
is to choose your parents wisely. In a sense, that's true - much
depends on genes and luck. But there are things one can do.
About a
year ago, an important paper was published showing that addressing
14 risk factors reduces the risk of dementia by 40 percent.
These
include, for example, controlling blood pressure, avoiding high
cholesterol, preventing traumatic head injuries, avoiding smoking,
and reducing chronic stress," Gefen said.
"When people ask me how to become a superager, I say, 'first of all,
protect yourself from dementia.' Today, about half of people aged 85
and older suffer from this disease," Gefen said.
"Beyond that, I
don't have a formula.
But meeting superagers has given me tremendous
hope about aging. As a child, I imagined old age as a woman sitting
in a chair knitting, quiet and fragile.
Superagers completely
changed that picture - aging no longer seems frightening or sad, but
full of vitality and hope."

PeopleImages/Shutterstock.com
'A Time to be Born, and a Time to
Die'
Since the dawn of history, humans have dreamed of delaying aging and
defeating death.
In the ancient epic of Gilgamesh, King Gilgamesh
embarks on a desperate quest for eternal life after the death of his
friend.
At the end of his journey, he discovers a bitter truth:
"Why, O Gish, does thou run about? The life that thou seekest, thou
wilt not find. When the gods created mankind, death they imposed on
mankind; life they kept in their power."
The desire to prolong life,
Gilgamesh was told, is a rebellion against natural order; humans are
destined to experience joy and sorrow within the boundaries of a
finite life.
In modern Western culture, the desire to "fight time" is reflected
in the anti‑aging industry and in scientific efforts to extend life.
The transhumanist movement even views aging as a "disease" that must
be cured. Yet, at the same time, many question whether such a
struggle is even valid, and some wonder if refusing to age also
means refusing to grow up.
Poetry and literature throughout the ages have used seasonal imagery
to describe the cycle of life, reminding us that any resistance is
futile.
Religious traditions also encourage us to view aging
differently.
According to Ecclesiastes,
"To everything there is a
season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: a time to be
born, and a time to die," and "One generation passes away, and
another generation comes; But the earth abides forever."
Each
generation is succeeded by the next, and that is the order of the
world.

Photobac/Shutterstock.com
In Leviticus, old age was perceived not as a flaw but as a virtue:
"You shall rise before the gray-headed and honor the presence of an
old man."
Instead of resisting the signs of age, we are advised to
honor the elderly and see them as sources of wisdom and experience
without neglecting the obligation to care for and heal them.
Perhaps this brings us back to Hilda Jaffe's words - aging well is
largely a matter of luck, genes, and fate.
Superagers may inspire in
us a longing for healthier, longer lives, but from a traditional
perspective, accepting our fate and the cycles of life may in itself
be a part of the secret of
resilience...!
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