HOW TO LIVE LONG
It may be no coincidence that so many creative types have long lives. New findings show how doing what you love
can add years
One of the greatest buildings ∈New York City, the snow white, round drinking ∪ that is the Guggenheim Museum, was created by a very old man. The human genius behind that structural genius was Frank Lloyd Wright, who started designing the building ∈1943, when he was 76, kept at it until ground was broken ∈1956 and lived until 1959 — just shy of both his 92nd birthday and the museum's official opening.
There's something very real about the way creativity endures ∈ the face of age — and maybe even pushes back age. By now it's a gerontological given that the active, busy brain is also the brain that stays lucid longer, that resists dementia and other cognitive problems better. And it's a biological given that sedentary, bored or depressed people are far likelier than happy and occupied ones to come down with physical ailments. Increasingly, brain research is showing that ∈ the case of creative people, this mortal cause-and-effect pays powerful dividends — that it's not just the luck of living a long life that allows some people to leave behind such robust bodies of work but that the act of doing creative work is what helps add those extra years. And that's something that can be available to
everybody. Adapted from: http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2151786,00.html
It can be inferred from the conclusion of the passage that