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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

At 65 , I Committed To These 5 Daily Habits , Now I Am 99 And Still Thriving - YouTube

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At 65 , I Committed To These 5 Daily Habits , Now I Am 99 And Still Thriving 

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Transcripts:

I've been on this earth for 94 years now. And when you stay around that long, you start seeing things a little differently than most people. You notice patterns, things that repeat themselves in people's lives. And I'm going to tell you something that may surprise you a bit. Living a long life usually isn't about all the new things you start doing.

 Most of the time it comes down to the things you finally decide to stop. Now that may sound strange [music] at first. These days everybody's always asking the same question. What should I add to my [music] routine? What new habit should I start? What new trick will help me live longer? But from where I'm sitting, after almost a century of watching [music] people live and die, the real difference shows up when a person [music] finally lets go of the things that have been quietly harming them for years.

My name is Walter Hayes, and over these many years, I've said goodbye to a lot of people I loved. my mother, my father, two brothers, my wife, and more old friends than I can count anymore. [music] At a certain age, you realize something. You end up attending far more funerals than birthday parties.

 And after standing beside enough graves, a [music] man begins to pay attention. A long time ago, I noticed something about the people who left this world earlier than they should have. It usually wasn't just bad luck, and it wasn't always some terrible disease. More often than not, it was habits, small everyday habits they held on to, even when those habits were slowly wearing their bodies down.

So today, I want to share a few things I stopped doing many years ago. And I truly believe those changes are part of the reason I'm still sitting here talking to you. Now, I'd like you to listen closely, because one of these things might be happening in your own life right now [music] without you even realizing it.

The first thing I stopped doing [music] was eating late at night. Now, I know that probably sounds old-fashioned, [music] and maybe it is, but sometimes the old ways stick around because they actually [music] work. When I was a young boy, my grandfather used to say something simple. He'd say, "Son, the body likes to rest when the sun goes down.

" Back then, I didn't pay much attention like most young people. I figured the older generation didn't know what they were talking about. For years, I'd eat dinner in the evening. Then later on, I'd sit down in front of the television. Before long, I'd grab something else to snack on. [music] Maybe a few crackers, maybe bowl of ice cream.

 Nothing too big, just a little something while [music] watching the evening shows. It didn't seem like a big deal at the time, but over the years, I started noticing something. I began waking up feeling tired. My joints felt stiff in the mornings, and sometimes I carried this strange heaviness through the day. It took me a long time to realize what was causing it.

 Then, about 40 years ago, I remembered what my grandfather used to say. [music] So, I decided to try something different. I stopped eating late. These days, my final meal usually happens around 6:00 in the evening, sometimes closer to 7 during the summer when daylight lasts longer. After that, nothing but water or maybe a cup of tea.

 [music] No snacks, no late night eating. And something interesting happened. Within a few weeks, my mornings felt different. I woke up clearer. My body [music] felt lighter. My sleep felt deeper. You see, your body does a lot of its repair work while you're asleep. Quiet work inside your organs and cells. But it can't focus on that repair if it's still busy digesting food.

 It's like trying to clean a house while dinner is still cooking in the kitchen. The body prefers to finish its work before resting. Once I understood that, I never went back to late night eating again. Now, [music] the second thing I stopped doing, this one took me a long time to learn. I [music] stopped arguing with people who have no interest in listening.

[clears throat] When I was younger, I had a bit [music] of a temper. If somebody said something foolish or stubborn or [music] clearly wrong, I felt like it was my responsibility to correct them, I would [music] jump into the discussion and start explaining things. I wanted them to understand my point.

 And if I'm being honest, I wanted to win the argument. But you know what? All that arguing actually gave me headaches, stress, long nights lying awake [music] replaying conversations in my head and not a single changed opinion. Not one. Because the truth is, people tend to believe what they already want to believe. And trying to force someone to change your thinking [music] is usually a waste of energy.

 It's like trying to empty the ocean using a teaspoon. You'll wear yourself out and the ocean won't notice. These days, when someone says something that once would have made my blood [music] boil, I simply smile. Maybe nod my head. Then I [music] move on. Not because I agree, but because protecting my peace matters more than winning an argument. That isn't weakness.

 That's something you learn after watching how stress can slowly destroy [music] a person's health. Peace of mind is one of the most valuable things a man can protect. Every argument you choose not to have saves you a little energy and maybe even [music] a little time on this earth. The third thing [music] I stopped doing was sitting all day.

 Now, I'm not talking about exercise [music] programs or gyms. I've never been the kind of man who spends hours lifting weights. What I'm talking about is simple movement using your body throughout the day. My wife used [music] to joke that chairs are comfortable traps. And there's some truth in that. It's easy to sit for hours without realizing how long you've been still watching television, reading, scrolling through things.

 But the body was designed to move. These days, I make sure I stay active in small ways. I walk down the driveway to check the mailbox. I spend time in the garden. Sometimes I stand up while talking on the phone. Simple things, [music] but they keep the body awake. I've always thought of the body like a stream of water.

 When water keeps moving, it stays clean. But when water sits still for too long, it becomes cloudy, [music] slow, unhealthy. Our bodies work the same way. Movement [music] keeps things flowing. And I don't care whether someone is 30 years old or 80 years old. If a person spends [music] most of their day sitting still, they're quietly speeding up the aging process. That's just the truth.

Now the next thing I [music] stopped doing, this one took many years for me to understand. I stopped carrying grudges and that one nearly took the best years of my life. Now the next thing I had to learn [music] the hard way, it took me many years before I finally understood it. I stopped carrying grudges. And that one nearly took the best years of my life.

There was a time in my life when I held on to anger like it was something valuable, like it proved I had been wronged. Many years ago, I had a younger brother named Daniel. We grew up together. Same house, same table, same backyard. When we were boys, we did [music] everything side by side. fishing trips, baseball in the street, getting into [music] trouble, our father had to straighten out.

 But somewhere along the road of adulthood, something happened between us. Money was involved. Family disagreements, words that should never have been said. And the kind of hurt that comes from family, well, that kind of [music] pain sticks deeper than anything else. For years after that, I refused [music] to speak to him.

 If someone mentioned his name, I would change the subject. If we ended up in the same room at a family gathering, I'd walk the other [music] direction. And I told myself I was justified. But one day, something dawned on me. While I was carrying around all that anger, he was living his life just fine. sleeping at night, laughing with his children, going about his days.

 The grudge wasn't hurting him. It was sitting inside my own chest, wearing me [music] down. Bitterness has a strange way of living inside the body. It tightens the muscles. It keeps the [music] mind restless. Doctors will tell you about stress hormones and [music] blood pressure and all sorts of medical terms. But an old man like me will tell you something simpler.

 Holding anger for years is like slowly swallowing poison and hoping the other person feels sick. [cough] One afternoon, [music] after nearly a decade of silence, I picked up the phone. I remember my hand shaking just a little. When he answered, I didn't give a long speech. I just said [music] a few simple words.

 I think we both carried this long enough. There was a long pause on the other end. Then I heard him take a breath. And just like that, something heavy between [music] us started to disappear. We never spend hours picking apart the past. Sometimes forgiveness doesn't [music] need a courtroom. Sometimes it just needs two people willing to stop carrying the weight.

When I hung up the phone that day, I felt lighter than I had in years. And that's when I [music] realized something important. Your body cannot fully heal while your heart is still holding on to old wounds. Ah, the next thing I stopped doing, [music] this one took a lifetime to understand. I stopped watching the news before going to bed.

Now, don't misunderstand [music] me. Staying informed is fine, but there came a point when I noticed something. Every night, the television seemed to bring the same things into [music] my living room. Violence, arguments, fear, people shouting at each other across a screen. Then I would turn the lights off and try to fall asleep with all that noise still spinning around inside my head.

 It took me a while to realize how much that was affecting my rest. Your mind needs quiet [music] before sleep, but if the last thing you feed it is worry, anger, and chaos, well, that's what it spends the whole night chewing on. These days, [music] I turn the television off early in the evening, around 5 or 6 most nights.

 After that, I keep things simple. Sometimes I read a few pages [music] of a book. Sometimes I sit on a porch and watch the sun settle down behind the trees. Sometimes I just listen to the quiet. Those small peaceful moments prepare the mind for rest. [music] And I sleep better now than I did 20 years ago.

 Eight solid hours most nights. People pay a lot of attention to what they put into their bodies, but very few people pay [music] attention to what they put into their minds before sleep. Both matter. Not a six thing I stopped doing. This one took [music] a lifetime to understand. I stopped trying to make everyone happy. For most of my younger years, I was the kind of man who said yes [music] to everything.

 If someone needed help moving furniture, I was there. If the church needed volunteers, I signed up. If a neighbor wanted to talk for hours, I would sit and listen. And for a long time, I believed that [music] was the right thing to do. Helping people is good. But somewhere along the way, I realized something. I was always busy, yet I rarely felt peaceful.

 I was always giving my time yet I often felt exhausted because when you say yes to everyone [music] eventually you start saying no to yourself. Your time disappears. Your energy fades and little by little you become worn thin. One day [music] a friend of mine said something that stuck with me. He said, "Walter, the people who truly care about you will respect your limits.

" That simple sentence changed the way I lived. Now when someone asks for something I cannot give, I answer kindly. But sometimes the answer is simply no. And that's all right. Protecting your time and energy is not selfish. It's necessary because the people who genuinely [music] care about you will understand.

 And the ones who don't understand, well, many of them were simply taken advantage of your kindness in the first place. Now, the last thing I stopped doing, this one may be the most important of all. I stopped waiting to live my [music] life. When I was younger, I always believed happiness was somewhere ahead of me.

 I told myself, "I'll relax once work slows down. I'll enjoy life once the kids are grown. I'll travel when retirement finally comes. There was always some moment in the future where I believed life would begin, but life doesn't really work that way. While you're busy waiting for the perfect moment, time keeps moving.

My wife and I once talked for nearly 30 years about taking a long trip out west. We wanted to see the mountains in Colorado, drive along the coast in [music] California. It was always something we planned to do someday. She [music] passed away 3 months before that trip ever happened. And that's when the truth finally hit me.

 Waiting can quietly steal years from your life. We assume tomorrow will always arrive, but tomorrow is never guaranteed to anyone. Not to a man who is 94 and not to someone who's 25. If there's [music] something you've been wanting to do, don't keep pushing it further down the road. Tell [music] people you love them while you still have the chance.

 Visit the places you've [music] been dreaming about. Enjoy the small moments that show up in ordinary days because life doesn't begin at some [music] future date on a calendar. Life is happening right now whether we notice it or not. So there you have it. [music] Seven things I stopped doing over the years. And I truly believe letting go of those habits helped keep me here this long.

 I stopped [music] eating late at night. I stopped wasting energy arguing with stubborn people. I stopped sitting around all day. I stopped carrying old grudges. I stopped filling my mind with noise before sleep. I stopped trying to please everyone. And finally, I stopped waiting for life to begin.

 None of those changes are complicated, but simple doesn't always mean easy. Every day you have to choose the habits that shape your life. And I've watched far too many good people leave this world earlier than they should have, not because life was unfair, [music] but because they held on to things that were quietly damaging them.

 Don't let that happen to you. You probably have more control over your health and your time than you realize. But sometimes the greatest change begins with a simple [music] decision to stop. Now, if you'll excuse me, that evening sun is starting to settle outside my porch. [music] And at 94 years old, I've learned not to miss a good sunset.

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