I read a book a day.
Everyday.
And… a couple weeks back… I was reading this book by 92-year-old Japanese fitness trainer, Mika Takishima, who’s stronger, faster, and fitter than most 30 or 40 year olds these days.
Case in point:
One time, she was hurrying down the staircase of a subway station.
Trying to get there in time for an appointment.
She slipped. And was about to fall.
But instead of letting herself fall all the way down the stairs, she decided to kick her feet, jump into the air, and landed at the bottom of the staircase.
Beautifully.
Without any injuries whatsoever.
From a height that would break the bones of most 30 or 40 year-olds these days.
The best part?
She only started fitness training at the age of 65. At the instigation of her husband. Who was worried about her health. Because she was obese, and severely out of shape.
She remarks (and I paraphrase from memory):
“I feel like I was just a newborn baby when I was 65. Before that, it was like I wasn’t even born yet. As I get stronger, faster, and more flexible every year, it is only now at 90+ that I feel like I’m just starting to reach adulthood. Age is just a number.”
And I agree with that.
Age is just a measurement of time.
It has no relation whatsoever on how you are at 60, 70, 80, 90, or even 100+. What matters more is what you do with those years of time.
Use them wisely, and you get stronger every year.
Smarter every year.
And even… richer every year.
On the contrary:
Use them foolishly, and you’ll end up contributing to what one of my health mentors, who is doing research into how humans can live to their 200s or 300s, calls… the “Culture of Death” which is so prevalent in Western Cultures like the US and UK where people just assume you have to get weaker and dumber as you get older and… the decisions you make reflect that… like a self-fulfilling prophecy that dooms you to die before your time, which only makes governments happier because they have less pensions to pay off.
Anyways…
You don’t see this “death culture” in countries like Japan where people “age like fine wine”.
And thrive more the older they get.
And it’s not just people.
Even technology in Japan ages, and is treated, with similar esteem.
For example:
In my “A.I. Content Apocalypse” survival PLR email series, I talked about how one of the top gaming companies in the world, the Japanese company Nintendo, takes “caveman old” technology and uses it to surpass basically every gaming company in the world that’s using the most cutting-edge tech and probably even A.I.
It doesn’t have to get harder to make money online the more you age.
On the contrary.
If you use your time (and ‘old’ tech) wisely, you can do what Mika Takishima calls… “Power Aging”… where the older you get, the stronger you get… the faster you get… the smarter you get… the richer you get.
And that’s true for you.
And it’s true for tech too.
Click here if you want to check out how Nintendo does it to totally change the playing field in a world where everyone is jumping on the new A.I.-tech bandwagon, so you can apply this ‘game-changing’ philosophy to your marketing tech too and make the competition ‘irrelevant’:
https://themysteriousmarketer.com/a-i-content-apocalypse-10-plr-emails/
Sincerely,
Allen Walker
The Mysterious “Power Aging” Marketer