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The Okinawa Way: How to Improve Your Health and Longevity Dramatically [Paperback]

Andrew Weil , Bradley J. Willcox , Makoto Suzuki , Craig D. Willcox
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 496 pages
  • Publisher: Mermaid Books (19 Jun 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0718144945
  • ISBN-13: 978-0718144944
  • Product Dimensions: 23.2 x 14.8 x 4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 268,009 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

If ever there were a prescription for longevity, the people of Okinawa, a collection of islands strung between Japan and Taiwan, have found it. In The Okinawa Way, Bradley J Willcox, Craig Willcox and Makoto Suzuki reveal the islanders' age-defying secrets. Considered the world's healthiest people, residents of this tropical archipelago routinely live active, independent lives well into their 90s and 100s. Their rates of obesity, heart disease, osteoporosis, memory loss, menopause and breast, colon and prostate cancer rank far below the rates for these illnesses in the UK and other industrialised countries. In fact, researchers believe many Okinawans are physically younger than their chronological ages. In essence, the Okinawans have found a way to beat the clock.

How do they do it? Of course, there are really no surprises here: a low-fat diet, exercise, stress management, strong social and family ties and spiritual connectedness--the same things experts have been recommending for years--all play key roles in keeping the Okinawans youthful. But in this fascinating read, which is peppered with inspiring anecdotes about these remarkable people, the authors provide concrete evidence that adopting these healthy habits pays off significantly in terms of tacking more productive years onto our lives.

Based on the authors' 25-year Okinawa Centenarian Study, this extraordinarily well-written book demonstrates that genetics provide only so much protection against disease. Indeed, the authors often remind us that when younger Okinawans pick up Western habits, their rates of obesity, illness and life expectancy start to match ours as well. Clearly, when it comes to longevity, healthy lifestyle habits will out. That said, the major message of The Okinawa Wayis that we can easily adopt the life-lengthening strategies that have served the Okinawans so well for generations. To that end, the authors pack chapters with suggestions for following "The Way", from eating a low-fat, low-calorie diet packed with fibre and complex carbohydrates (cooking up the book's more than 80 recipes is a start) and learning tai chi to finding time to meditate and relax, developing one's spirituality, doing volunteer work and building a solid network of friends and family. Rounding out the book, the authors pull their key recommendations into a comprehensive yet doable four-week plan that's meant to get you started. Following "The Way" isn't a free shot at immortality but it certainly helps stack the deck in your favour. --Norine Dworkin

Publishers Weekly, April 2, 2000

"The outcome of years of extensive medical research, this book offers a practical and optimistic vision of growing old."

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Customer Reviews

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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A well researched and presented book, 30 Aug 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Okinawa Way: How to Improve Your Health and Longevity Dramatically (Paperback)
I have an aversion to a particular genre of American health books that lavish gushing case histories on the reader along with patronising text written for cretins. I'm glad to say THIS ISN'T ONE. No, this is an intelligent, well researched and carefully presented book on how you can modify your lifestyle to mirror the exceptionally long lived Okinawans. The recipes are somewhat unintelligible to us Brits as the text is barely Anglised. However, the book hangs together well and is easy to read whilst full of information. I'm actually using it, which is praise indeed.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A longer/healthier life without too much adjustment..., 19 July 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Okinawa Way: How to Improve Your Health and Longevity Dramatically (Paperback)
I bought this book after seeing a programme about Okinawa on television. It is not about fad diets, or the pain=gain nonsense or any other trendy hype that floats around the media from time-to-time.It is based on a real lifestyle lived by thousands of people over many years. This IS a way of life but not one that totally disrupts your life. It is about making adjustments up to the level you want to invest.

I actually found that I had already adopted some of the strategies without even realising it. But there is a lot more you can do, if you choose. The Okinawan approach is holistic. It is about mental/spritual welfare as well as exercise and food but one doesn't have to partake in all three areas to make a change.

The book is fascinating and packed with lots of information. It is very practical, yet also very interesting. I have already begun to make changes in my eating habits - there isn't much effort required to do this. I recommend this book for anyone who is interested in nutrition, who would like to be healthier/fitter, or would like to live longer. I shall be buying it for all my freinds.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lifestyle Lessons of Long-Lived, Healthy People in Okinawa, 25 July 2004
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 110,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Okinawa Way: How to Improve Your Health and Longevity Dramatically (Paperback)
The Okinawa Program deserves more than five stars for its valuable, thoughtful look at how good health can follow from a better lifestyle. This book will undoubtedly become the basis for a change in lifestyle by millions of people. Whether or not it will extend their lives and the length of the healthy period in their lives is something that only time can tell. On the other hand, anyone who follows this advice will probably feel better and have more energy.

This book is based on 25 years of research by Dr. Suzuki with those who lived to be over 100 years of age in Okinawa. The Drs. Willcox joined the project in 1994, adding many more measurements and perspectives to what has become an important international research project.

The physiological and psychological findings about these centenarians (aged over 100) show them to be healthy, vigorous, and largely free of common Western diseases. The book summarizes the findings, connects the findings to Western research, and outlines ways to follow what was discovered to be associated with better health.

The book begins by debunking the idea that there were long-lived people in the Caucasus, Pakistan, and Ecuador with whom similar work could be done. Investigation showed in each case that there was no unusual longeveity in these communities. On the other hand, records dating from the Japanese conquest of Okinawa in 1879 make the Okinawan cases valid.

The statistical findings are fascinating. Okinawans live to be over 100 at rates 3 to 7 times more often than Americans. Even more impressive is that the combined rate of heart disease, cancer, and stroke is a small fraction of the American rate. Where one woman in ten will have breast cancer in the United States, the typical Okinawan will probably not even know any one who will get that disease. Mammograms are not even needed as a health screening technique there. Yet, young Okinawans who live a different lifestyle show all the Western diseases. Okinawans who left the area and adopted the lifestyles of the places where they now live experience disease at the same rate as in those locales.

The book then dives into the physiological findings. Basically, some Okinawans at 100 have young bodies showing health markers similar to a 40-60 year old in the United States. In fact, they often look 30 years younger than they are. They are physically and mentally active, and do not retire. The bulk of those over 100 still work in the same ways they did when they were younger.

The book takes the major statistical differences, and looks for possible clues in the Okinawan lifestyle. The potential causes seem to relate to diet, exercise, spiritual/religious practices, social connections, and mixing Western and Eastern medicine beneficially.

The authors go on to suggest changes in the diet recommendations for Americans to reflect this experience, new exercise paths, and a changed approach to lifestyle. The diet recommendations are expressed both in terms of Western-only foods and a mixture of Eastern and Western foods. There is a four week changeover program to help you move from what you do now, to a healthier alternative.

As the authors point out, the study itself has some weaknesses. No one can know for sure how much each of these environmental factors contribute. Also, the genetic make-up of Okinawans could mean that results for non-Okinawans could be different. There is also no attempt to adjust for blood type (as the research cited in Live Right 4 Your Type describes).

I also think there is a measurement bias towards measurements used by Western scientists looking at certain diseases. For example, I remember Dr. Dean Ornish emphasizing the importance of touching as a factor favoring good health in Love and Survival. This book makes no reference to touching, but I do recall that people in the Philippines (not far from Okinawa) touch more than people in any other country (with favorable results for health and happiness). What do the Okinawans do?

The book also contains a lot of recipes. It is beyond the scope of my expertise to comment on them. The book cites many other studies that find similar results within Western cultures. One thing I noticed was that some of these studies have been criticized as being incorrectly conducted by others, yet those criticisms were not presented here. Overall, I found the references to other studies helpful in a directional sense for providing context for the findings.

Assuming for the moment that this book is on the right track, isn't it interesting that this information only recently became available? It makes you wonder what other obvious research into having a healthy lifestyle has not been done. Have we just wasted hundreds of billions of dollars ineffectively treating diseases caused by sick lifestyles while hundreds of millions experienced lives unnecessarily shortened by 20-40 years and made unncessarily miserable? If so, what a tragic waste of human potential!

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