On growing older, moving forward, and learning to ride the waves
There are days when life feels like water.
Unpredictable. Restless. Sometimes gentle, sometimes forceful enough to pull you under if you resist it too long.
And then there is that quiet reminder, familiar to many who listen to “Swim” by BTS—that perhaps the point is to stop fighting the waves.
It is to move with them.
The Body Was Built for Motion
Science offers an unexpected reassurance: the human body is designed for adaptation.
At the heart of longevity research is a concept called resilience, the body’s ability to recover, adjust, and continue despite stress. Studies on aging consistently show that those who remain physically active, emotionally engaged, and socially connected tend to experience not only longer lives, but better ones.
Movement whether through walking, swimming, or simply staying engaged in daily life supports cardiovascular health, cognitive function, and emotional stability. It keeps the body responsive.
EXPLORE: The Language of Bones and Joints
Why Resistance Exhausts Us
In swimming, what often wears us down is resisting the waves.
Psychological research describes this through stress reactivity—how strongly we respond to challenges. When we resist change, the body remains in a heightened state of alert, increasing cortisol levels and prolonging fatigue.
Acceptance, on the other hand, allows the nervous system to regulate.
It creates space for clarity, for decision, for forward motion.
The Practice of Riding the Wave
To “swim” through life is welcoming difficulty.
It is to remain in motion within it.
This can look deceptively simple:
- returning to movement after a setback
- choosing connection after isolation
- allowing rest without guilt
- beginning again, even without certainty
These are small acts.
But they accumulate into something larger: the ability to continue.
Longevity, Reimagined
We often think of longevity as something measured in years.
But research increasingly points to something more nuanced: healthspan—the quality of those years.
To grow older fearlessly is to become familiar with hardship.
It is to build the capacity to move through it.
Communities known for long life, such as those studied in longevity research share common traits: consistent physical activity, strong social bonds, purpose, and the ability to navigate life’s changes without becoming rigid.
They open up to the tide.
They live within it.
A Summer Reminder
As many make their way to the sea this season, there is something worth noticing.
No one stands against the waves for long.
At some point, the body learns—instinctively—to move with the water, to float, to adjust.
The same principle holds, quietly, in life.
The Joyful Wellness Perspective
We can avoid to master every moment.
We may need to keep moving.
To trust that the body, when supported with rest, nourishment, and connection, knows how to recover. That the mind, when given space, knows how to find its way forward.
And that even in uncertainty, there is rhythm.
The Takeaway
Perhaps this is what it means to live well over time:
To meet each wave with presence.
To allow movement instead of resistance.
And yes, to keep going steadily.
And in doing so, to discover something unexpected—
That what once felt overwhelming can, with time and practice, begin to feel like freedom.
Photo by Anderson W Rangel on Unsplash
REFERENCES
Rowe, J. W., & Kahn, R. L. (1997). Successful Aging.
— Introduces the concept of healthspan and active aging.
McEwen, B. S. (2007). Stress and Allostasis.
— Explains how the body adapts to stress and builds resilience.
Holt-Lunstad, J. (2010). Social Relationships and Mortality Risk.
— Highlights the importance of connection in longevity.
World Health Organization (WHO). Healthy Ageing Framework.
— Defines healthy aging as maintaining functional ability and wellbeing.
American Psychological Association. Stress Effects on the Body.
— Details how stress response and coping impact health outcomes.


