Tim The Monk Miller has passed on.

Jam: Love ya and your always well-reasoned and contributory writing, but I must helpfully add to your post a bit.

I'm waaay past 65 and want to add that most falls in the bathroom (and elsewhere in the home) have little to do with speed of gait and limberness of muscles -- but rather more important: the brain factors that govern elderly folks sense of balance, visual acuity, and spatial distances perception.

Quality physical therapists are excellent at prescribing, teaching, and monitoring exercises that effectively enhance and go a long way in correcting and aligning many of these brain/muscles factors so critical to balance, judgment, and self-protection against falling during daily life in aging folks. And of course there's an important role here for the several kinds of doctors that specialize in diagnosing and implementing vision correction.

Arnaldo
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I appreciate it very much.

I base my opinion on the National Institute of Aging and the Senate Special Committee on Aging tidbits I've learned about in recent years.

The speed of gait slows down as people age, and the tendons and muscles stiffen which causes falls and poor balance. This is why it is important for senior citizens to keep moving and exercise. I am sure vision does play a role in slip-and-falls too.

Here is an article which may help to understand gait and balance disorders associated with old age. https://www.aafp.org/afp/2010/0701/p61.html

It is advised that older adults should exercise to avoid some of these medical maladies. Weight training is also recommended to keep those muscles healthy. There's a lot more I could share, but I'll leave it there.

Thanks again for sharing your thoughts.
 
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I appreciate it very much.

I base my opinion on the National Institute of Aging and the Senate Special Committee on Aging tidbits I've learned about in recent years.
Excellent info and links; thank you Jen. Having absorbed and implemented what you've learned, are there now significantly longer intervals between the many falls you earlier mentioned as having experienced each year? Or are they still happening, and with cumulative spinal damage as measured via radiology imaging?

Arnaldo
 
  • Like
Reactions: JAM
Excellent info and links; thank you Jen. Having absorbed and implemented what you've learned, are there now significantly longer intervals between the many falls you earlier mentioned as having experienced each year? Or are they still happening, and with cumulative spinal damage as measured via radiology imaging?

Arnaldo
My neighbor who lives across the street has fallen numerous times in the last year. We both have big dogs, which contributes to the falls as well when walking, and we are both senior citizens. The last fall, she injured her back. She went to several doctors, one of whom wanted to perform surgery on her disk. Apparently, one of her lower-back disks slipped out a little. She went to another doctor for a second opinion, who sent her to a sports doctor. The sports doctor recommended strength training and building up the muscle around that lower-back disk as well as going to physical therapy. She did this and the back is better now. No surgery needed, thank goodness. Strength training, exercise, and muscle building seems to be helpful with older people.

I am much more careful now when I walk my dog. I have fallen several times, but I now make sure I walk on level pavement, not in the woods where I trip over exposed tree trunks, and I have good walking shoes, which really helps. I still have moments where I almost fall, but I have been fortunate to catch myself before falling. It's a scary feeling. I've never had falling scares like this when I was younger.

The other morning, I speeded up my gait. I walked 5,000 steps in 45 minutes. It usually takes me 60 minutes to do 5,000 steps. Gait speed slows down when we age, so now that I know this, I am trying to not get too much slower. I just watched a movie with 91-year-old Clint Eastwood, "Cry Macho," and you can see how old age has affected his gait. His posture is not good. Bad posture can also affect gait speed, which results in falls.

 
Keith McCready told me that the passing of Tim "The Monk" Miller is fake news, that he is very much alive. Harry Platis spoke to The Monk on the phone yesterday and told Keith he is alive.
 
Here is what seems to be his Facebook page.
One of the posts includes his obituary.

Perhaps there was some confusion with Warren Costanzo.
 
Here is what seems to be his Facebook page.
One of the posts includes his obituary.

Perhaps there was some confusion with Warren Costanzo.
That has to be it. I was unaware of two Monks. Thanks for the clarification.
 
Back
Top