The Bell Curve -- Joseph N. Bell
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While I’m reading the sports section over my coffee in the morning, my
wife is surfing the New York Times on her computer, which gives us a nice
intellectual balance. When she runs across something she deems of
interest to me, she prints it out. These items tend to run heavily to
health and diet, and typically suggest such dire punishment as an early
death for eating chicken-fried steak and gravy, both staples of my diet.
But last week she came up with the results of a study that intrigued
both our elderly dachshund, Coco, and me. It seems that two behavioral
neuroscientists -- one of them Dr. Carl Cotman of the Institute for Brain
Aging and Dementia at UC Irvine -- have been studying old dogs as models
of human aging. I tend to see myself as an old dog more frequently than
Coco, who is 98 going on 105 but resists such a vision of herself. So in
the hope that I might better learn from her, I took a longer look at this
study.
It was disquieting to find that the study’s heaviest emphasis is on
the care and feeding of our aging brains -- disquieting partly because
intellect has never been one of Coco’s strong points, but mostly because
the researchers want to feed our brains by severely restricting the
things they consider good for us to eat.
This is partly based on the discovery that a diet of blueberries,
strawberries and spinach smartened up some elderly rats, leading to the
conclusion that such an antioxidant-rich diet would perform the same
service for dogs. Even Coco. Even me, according to the researcher who was
quoted as saying: “We should all be doing this -- eating at least five
servings of fruits and vegetables a day to forestall or even improve the
effects of aging.”This information is being incorporated in the design of
some dog foods, which is probably OK with Coco, who will eat anything she
can get her mouth around. I like strawberries and blueberries -- I even
like spinach -- but I found it a little off-putting that there was no
mention in the study of the emotional or esthetic benefits of
chicken-fried steak.
The researchers also discovered that this draconian diet was most
effective for dogs when their owners combine it with such mental
stimulation as walking their pets, playing with them, talking to them and
petting them. Parallel auxiliary activities for aging humans were not
spelled out in the summary of the study I read, but they would certainly
be more attractive than eating blueberries all the time. Especially the
petting part.
A number of other parallels between elderly dogs and their human
counterparts were explored in the study. Declining hearing, for example.
Both Coco and I hear selectively. She shows no awareness of hearing
orders to go outside, especially when it’s cold, or to get off a
forbidden couch but seldom misses a summons to dinner. I am accused --
unfairly, of course -- of similar selectivity, especially in my inability
to pick up the voices of women.
Another example is the flagging interest displayed by elderly dogs and
humans in activities that were embraced in youthful and even middle years
with a kind of uncritical enthusiasm -- or at least tolerance -- and are
mostly looked at in advanced age with a jaundiced eye. For most of her
life, Coco delighted in hanging out with us, whatever we were doing. Now
she frequently rejects us without guilt by crawling under a bed. I have
similar urges to retreat but haven’t altogether kicked the guilt while
wallowing in my growing iconoclasm. Coco has to be dragged out from under
the bed; I still emerge on my own.
Although I have no scientific qualifications to do so, I would like to
respectfully offer the dog researchers one final area they seem to have
bypassed: the effect of the mind-set of dogs on the aging process.
Coco has convinced me that physical achievements at an old age depend
as much on the head as the body. I can’t jump a 12-inch hedge, although I
once held the Fort Wayne, Ind., record for the 110-yard-high hurdles.
But Coco, who doesn’t know she’s 98, still almost effortlessly jumps
onto chairs four times her height, challenges the Great Danes next door,
loudly berates any stranger who violates her space, and races about our
dining room table in a paroxysm of joy when we come home late at night
and let her in the house. The one thing in this area she has acquired
with age is some smarts. She’s equally capable of dragging herself
pitifully in response to any order or task of which she doesn’t approve.
So, although this study seems to send some mixed signals, it has
convinced me of one thing: From now on, I’m going to study Coco more
carefully for clues about how to age better. We’re in this together.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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