I'm 73 and already struggling with aphasia, plus my husband is blind so my life is bounded by tending to his needs.
But being engaged and learning new things are what our brains need to stay as healthy as possible for as long as possible, for example I joined the group slow reads for both War and Peace and Wolf Hall on Simon Heisell's Substack "Footnotes and Tangents."
We can curate our own online community experiences here to best suit our own needs.
Wow—there are quite a few if us in our 70s ready to dispel the myths about impending dementia.
I'm 73 and already struggling with aphasia, plus my husband is blind so my life is bounded by tending to his needs.
But being engaged and learning new things are what our brains need to stay as healthy as possible for as long as possible, for example I joined the group slow reads for both War and Peace and Wolf Hall on Simon Heisell's Substack "Footnotes and Tangents."
We can curate our own online community experiences here to best suit our own needs.
And it’s OK once in a while, not to use commas.
PS writing is a lot more interesting to me than working crossword puzzles.