H
enry ���Harry��� Lodge does
health. He does it very well for a wide
circle of patients from his office on
Madison Avenue in New York City.
Others are influenced by his New
York Times best selling books, coauthored with Chris Crowley, titled
Younger Next Year, and Younger
Next Year for Women. Dr. Lodge is
energetic, engaged, prescient and
possesses a youthful demeanor.
He is also my doctor.
The books, fluidly written, make for fast reading. They
brim over with no-nonsense, practical and insightful
advice. They are compelling dispatches. In tandem with
his PBS DVD, Younger Next Year: The New Science of
Aging, they go a long way in informing us about practices
that lead towards better health and that may help prevent
illness.
The authors believe decay is often a choice due to poor
habits, that we must be in motion, thereby transforming
at the cellular level, that emotions are key to health and
that knowledge helps diminish the risk of disease.
On the authors��� website, under ���Harry���s Pieces,��� in a
section on extreme aging, he writes:
HYLAND