The age of Obama
Time roughs up presidents.
Photos of Barack Obama on Election Night 2008 look like they were taken
much longer ago. Now his face has deeper creases and crow’s feet, while
his hair has turned white. “You look at the picture when they’re
inaugurated and four years later, they’re visibly older,” said Connie
Mariano, White House physician from 1992 to 2001. “It’s like they went
in a time machine and fast-forwarded eight years in the span of four
years.”
Why presidents age quickly
Presidents face unabated, unfathomable stress. “You see
it over a term,” said Ronan Factora, a physician specializing in
geriatric medicine at the Cleveland Clinic. “It’s a good study of
chronic stress on a person’s overall health.”
Obama
and his national security team monitor the hit on Osama bin Laden.
(Pete Souza/White House; Photo altered to obscure a classified
document.)
Changes in skin or hair are gradual, he said. “If you do
have a stressful event, nothing is going to happen right away.” Nothing
visible anyway. Inside the body, the pituitary gland jolts the adrenal
gland, just above the kidneys. Hormones start coursing. Adrenaline
cranks up heart rates and blood pressure. Cortisol, another hormone from
the same gland, causes inflammation and preps the body for converting
sugars into energy.
“It’s not intended that people would be chronically
exposed to these levels,” said Sherita Golden, a physician at the Johns
Hopkins Medical Bloomberg School of Public Health. Cortisol strains the
circulatory system, battering artery walls. The hormone also thins the
skin, makes muscles waste and bones lose mass. The immune system
weakens, and viruses that cause colds and cold sores take hold. Sleep
turns fitful.
“Your cognition slows, you may feel more depressed, your
ability to concentrate goes down,” Factora said. “And it just builds on
itself — a real cascade.”
The only known cure
There is one known treatment:
exercise. “It is the best benefit a physician can recommend,” Factora
said. “There is no drug that can present as many benefits as exercise
can.”
Obama plays basketball during his 2008 campaign. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Obama is a fiend for exercise. In hour-long workouts, he has been known
to hit treadmills hard, weight train with arms and legs, build quickness
through “plyos” or plyometrics — exercises that involve explosive
movements. He also throws footballs, shoots basketballs and thwacks at golf balls.
His predecessors exercised, too, some of them fiercely.
George W. Bush ran till his aging knees made cycling a better option.
Presidents Carter and Bill Clinton jogged, while Ronald Reagan rode
horses and split logs with such vigor, he once cut his thigh. President
Gerald Ford performed a daily exercise regimen while still in his robe
and PJs.
Good exercise leads to better thinking, brain-mapping
has shown. “Exercise actually brings more blood flow,” explained Linda
Fried, an epidemiologist and geriatrician at Columbia University. “Parts
of the brain are activated and they’re associated with complex thinking
and problem-solving.” Workouts also force a president to — truly,
finally, deeply — rest. Only then can the relaxed brain start to make
creative associations.
Infirmity and vice
The job has compounded certain human frailties. Most
famous perhaps is the lethal case of pneumonia that 68-year-old William
Henry Harrison caught at his inauguration. Woodrow Wilson’s stroke
certainly limited his leadership of the country, and Franklin D.
Roosevelt worked around the problems related to his polio more ably than
might have been expected.
But daily habits also
affect presidential well-being in lesser-known ways. Dwight D.
Eisenhower was so dedicated to his form of exercise that he played 800
rounds of 18 holes over eight years as president, according to Evan
Thomas, the author of “Ike’s Bluff: President Eisenhower’s Secret Battle to Save the World.”
Then, in 1955, Eisenhower had a heart attack, and two years later, a
stroke. Intestinal surgery came in between, all as he was staving off
nuclear war and realigning Southeast Asia.
“Toward
the end,” Thomas said, “he was taking an extra sleeping pill at night” —
the powerful, old-school kind, with barbiturates. And that was on top
of a nightly scotch, never more than five ounces, except when it was,
Thomas said. “A couple of times he says to his doctor, ‘Let’s get
drunk.’”
To the best of the public’s knowledge, recent presidents
have not exacerbated their stress through bad behaviors such as
drinking. Obama, however, confirmed that he had to kick a cigarette habit of unknown intensity at some midpoint in his first term.
The side effects of smoking might show up as those lines
in his face, the doctors said. While sun exposure can also make a face
look withered, Obama’s darker skin has melanin to alleviate UV ray
damage. That same coloring, however, can make his white hair look more
pronounced.
A special lot
Obama had a fitness test on
Jan. 12, and the White House said the results would be released by
February. His previous physical was in October 2011; it showed that he
had added one pound since his February 2010 physical (his 2011 weight:
181, very good for a man who was then 50 and 6-foot-1).
Like all presidents since 1992, Obama has been under
constant medical watch: a military physician is on hand wherever a
president goes. Burton Lee,whom the first President Bush brought to the
White House to monitor his health, agreed with Mariano that presidents
are a special lot. They push their bodies and minds, and thus they
develop a greater capacity to fight off infection. They shake enough
hands to fell a lesser creature, he said.
But the mental intrusions — the sense that someone needs
something from the president every moment of every day — are as
insidious as the germs. “It’s just a phenomenally demanding job,” he
said. “You never get one minute off.”
Despite the extraordinary stress levels, many recent
presidents have lived well beyond normal life expectancy. Ronald Reagan
and Gerald Ford died at 93; Jimmy Carter and the George H.W. Bush are
88. Doctors are coming to understand that stress may have an upside.
“Human beings need some degree of stress to keep their systems tuned,”
Fried said. “Some people enjoy the stimulation of it and the excitement
and couldn’t live without it.”
Plus, human minds literally seek reasons to live. “Many
people, as they get older, deeply care about future generations and the
world’s survival,” Fried said. “If they have a chance to make a
difference, that keeps people healthy.”
PHOTOS: Washington Post staff, Associated Press and AFP/Getty Images.
Labels: Crisis Politics, Democracy, Diplomacy, Human Relations, United States
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