Lectura Forever Young

                       Forever Young
Comprensión de Lectura Primer Nivel


  1. UBICACIÓN DEL TEMA

  2. Revisa el texto “Forever young?”. De acuerdo con los elementos visuales, ¿cuál es el tema del texto?  La longevidad de una persona de 102 años


  1. Subraya los verbos en presente del párrafo uno y, por el contexto, deduce su equivalente en español, como en el ejemplo.


Every  morning Seiryu  Toguchi rises  at  6 o'clock, washes  his  face and  performs  exercises in the lush  front yard of his home  in Okinawa. He prepares  a breakfast  of rice and miso  soup with spinach and  egg. Then he  tends  his  nearby  farm, where  he grows  carrots,  cabbage and  other vegetables. At 5 p.m., he takes a hot bath and  cooks homegrown radish  with pork for supper. His wife  passed away a few years ago  and his children live in  other  cities. But he  is a lot more self-sufficient than many Japanese  men. He reads newspapers  and magazines, does his own laundry and sewing, and when he gets cravings for brown-sugar doughnuts, he takes a bus to the nearest town to buy them. In his spare  time, he plays the sanshin, a traditional three-stringed  instrument. It's nothing out of the ordinary--until you consider that Toguchi is nearly 102 years old.







Línea
Inglés
Español
1
rises
se levanta
1
washes his face
se lava la cara
2
prepares a breakfast
el prepara su desayuno
1
performs exercises
realiza ejercicio
4
takes a bus
toma el autobus
9
plays the sanshin
toca el sanshin
3
tends
atiende
6
live
viven
8
takes
toma
1
washes
se lava
7
reads
lee
4
grows
cultiva
4
takes
toma
4
cooks
cocina
7
gets
tiene
9
plays
toca
4
cooks
cocina
7
does his laundry/sewing
lava su ropa y la cose
7
gets cravings
cuando se le antoja







  1. Describe un día típico en la vida de Seiryu Toguchi.


para cualquier persona, pero si consideramos que Toguchi tiene 102 años, no lo es.

Toguchi. se levanta todos los días muy temprano y solo realiza sus actividades básicas diariamente, como bañarse y desayunar. Es una ´persona muy independiente, vive solo y está atento a sus vegetales los cuales el los cultiva.
Tiene horarios específicos, a las 5 de la tarde cocina y come.
le gusta leer el periódico y revistas, lava y cose su ropa y le gusta tocar el shashis.
Es una vida tranquila y metódica.







  1. Subraya los verbos en pasado del párrafo tres y, por el contexto, deduce su equivalente en español, como en el ejemplo.


What's their secret? In  2001, three specialists published  a study  of the locals'  longevity in a book called  "The  Okinawa  Program,"  which reached  best-seller  lists in the  United States. (The Japanese  translation comes out this spring.)  The authors--Okinawa International University gerontologist  Makoto Suzuki, Bradley J. Willcox, a former geriatrics fellow  at Harvard Medical School, and his twin brother D. Craig Willcox,  a medical anthropologist--found  that  elderly Okinawans  had remarkably  clean arteries and low cholesterol. Heart  disease, breast cancer and prostate cancer  were rare, which  they attributed to  the consumption  of locally grown  vegetables and huge  quantities of tofu and  seaweed, rigorous activity  and a low-stress lifestyle. Suzuki  and the Willcox brothers also determined that  Okinawans have no genetic predisposition to longevity: when they grow up in other countries, they take on the same arterial disease risk as those in their adopted land. The book, which prescribes a plan for healthy eating, says: "If Americans lived more like the  Okinawans, 80 percent of  the nation's coronary care units, one-third of the cancer wards, and a lot of the nursing homes(caasa de retiro) would be shut down."



Línea
Inglés
Español
1
published
publicaron
2
reached
alcanzó
6
found
encontraron
6
had
tenían
7
were
aran
8
attributed
atribuyeron
2
called
llamaron
10
determined
determinaron
12
lived
vivieran












  1. Llena el siguiente cuadro:


Números

Información relacionada

102
años de edad Toguchi
600/1.3 million
proporción mundial: Toguchi es una de los 600 centenarios de una población de 1.3 millones
39.5/100,000
proporción local: casi el 40 es en okinawa
10/100,000
en estados unidos es 10 de 100000
2001
año que se publicó el estudio




  1. Contesta las siguientes preguntas:
¿A qué atribuye Toguchi su larga vida?
R=  a que es muy metódico, todo el tiempo está activo y come saludable, en modo de broma dice que es por una batido que se prepara diario

¿Qué es y en dónde se encuentra Okinawa?
R= es un grupo de islas que se encuentran entre japón y taiwán

Según los autores del libro, ¿cuál es el estado físico de los habitantes longevos de Okinawa?
R=sano, arterias limpias y bajo colesterol, raro cáncer de próstata y mama, no cardiopatías

¿A qué atribuyen los autores del libro la longevidad de los habitantes de Okinawa?
R=cultivan sus propios vegetales, como algas, tofu, bajo estrés y actividades rigurosa

¿Cuál es el estilo de vida que están adoptando los habitantes de Okinawa?
R= se están occidentalizando,


¿Cuáles son las consecuencias de este nuevo estilo de vida?
R= hemorragias, problemas del corazón, estrés

¿Qué medidas está adoptando el gobierno para contrarrestar lo anterior?
R=programa okinawa saludable, recuperar sus origenes( claSES DE COCINA, DANZA)

¿Cuál es tu opinión sobre el artículo?
R=Bastante interesante, para lograr ser tan metódico y llevar una vida sana desde niños debe de inculcar, es cuestión de educación. por mala influencia dejamos de hacer las cosas, me parece bastante interesante que la poblacion de okinawas luiche por rescsatar sus origenes y buenas costumbres











Forever Young?


Every  morning Seiryu  Toguchi rises at  6 o'clock, washes his  face and performs exercises in the lush  front yard of his home in Okinawa. He  prepares a breakfast of rice and miso soup  with spinach and egg. Then he tends his nearby  farm, where he grows carrots, cabbage and other vegetables. At 5 p.m., he takes a hot bath and  cooks homegrown radish with pork for supper. His wife passed away a few years ago and his children  live in other cities. But he is a lot more self-sufficient than many Japanese men. He reads newspapers and magazines, does his own laundry and sewing, and when he gets cravings for brown-sugar doughnuts, he takes a bus to the nearest town to buy them. In his spare  time, he plays the sanshin, a traditional three-stringed instrument. It's nothing out of the ordinary--until you consider that Toguchi is nearly 102 years old.

Lean and  fit, Toguchi jokes that the key  to his long life is a special drink  he takes before bed: a mixture of garlic, honey, turmeric and aloe poured into awamori, the local distilled liquor. His sharp mind  and high energy may be rare among the elderly in other  parts of the world, but he's not so unusual in Okinawa,  the southern  group  of islands  located between  Japan's main islands  and Taiwan.  Toguchi  is one of  about 600 centenarians  out of a population of  1.3 million. Indeed, Okinawa has  the highest proportion of centenarians in  the world: 39.5 for every  100,000 people, compared to about 10 in 100,000 in the United States.

What's their secret? In  2001, three specialists published  a study of the locals' longevity in a book called  "The Okinawa Program," which reached best-seller  lists in the United States. (The Japanese translation  comes out this spring.) The authors--Okinawa International  University gerontologist Makoto Suzuki, Bradley J. Willcox, a  former geriatrics fellow at Harvard Medical School, and his twin  brother D. Craig Willcox, a medical anthropologist--found that elderly Okinawans  had remarkably clean  arteries and low cholesterol. Heart  disease, breast cancer  and prostate cancer were rare, which  they attributed to the consumption of  locally grown vegetables and huge quantities of tofu  and seaweed, rigorous activity and a low-stress lifestyle.  Suzuki and the Willcox brothers also determined that Okinawans have no genetic predisposition to longevity: when they grow up in other countries, they take on the same arterial disease risk as those in their adopted land. The book, which prescribes a plan for healthy eating, says: "If Americans lived more like the  Okinawans, 80 percent of the nation's coronary care units, one-third of the cancer wards, and a lot of the nursing homes would be shut down."

But  increasingly,  Okinawans are living  more like Americans. That  means less bean curd and walking,  more burgers and stress. The islands'  children aren't expected to live nearly as  long as their grandparents. Heart disease, cerebral  hemorrhage and lung cancer are all on the rise. Okinawan  women now face a higher than average risk of uterine cancer,  and mortality rates are climbing. Worst of all, the latest government  survey, released last month, found that Okinawa fell in the ranking of male life expectancy to 26th among Japan's 47 prefectures, down from fourth in 1995 and first in 1985. No one is more concerned than Suzuki. "Most Okinawans  like to think that they will live long simply because the islands have been known for it," he says. "They should learn the reasons for the famous longevity and act now to restore their health before it is too late." Experts blame the  islands' dramatic history for the current health crisis. Okinawa, formerly the Kingdom of the Ryukyus, had its own culture, foods and language until it was forcibly assimilated into Japan in the late 1800s. The islands were so far from the central government that the people at  first continued to depend on local salt, sugar, vegetables, meat and fruit. Later, though, Okinawa became one of World War II's bloodiest battlefields. Even after the Allied occupation ended in 1952, the islands remained under U.S. control for 20 more years--long  enough for residents to develop a taste for American food. Only recently did Okinawans begin to recognize how those changes in diet and lifestyle were endangering their health.
 
Now  doctors  and government  officials are urging  Okinawans to return to  their roots. The prefectural  government has launched "Healthy  Okinawa 2010," aimed at strengthening  health education. Next month Suzuki and  his team will hold courses offering instruction  in the classic Okinawan lifestyle, complete with morning  walks, traditional dance lessons and cooking classes. On Jan.  1, the daily Ryukyu Shimpo began a series of articles on longevity. "We  want to give a serious warning to our people," says Editor in Chief Takenori  Miyara. "We will cover every area concerning our health situation, from history to  culture, and from produce to what measures we should take."

One  approach  is to target  the islands' schoolchildren. At Johoku Junior High School in Naha, the lunches often include local dishes: stir-fried papaya with carrots, rice with wakame (soft seaweed) and  tonjiru (soup with pork and vegetables). Many kids said that they learned about Okinawans' longevity on TV. "I like Big Macs, but I would rather eat more Okinawan food to  stay healthy and live long," says Masatsugu Uemura, 15. Yayoko Ishikawa, the principal of the junior high school, says that Okinawans believed for decades that their lifestyle was scorned by the rest of Japan. "It has taken  such a long time to realize what we had was a treasure for longevity," Ishikawa says. "We should start teaching our children about traditional foods and how the people lived." After all, few people know how to age well better than Okinawa's old folks.








Nota
Hay verbos llamados “phrasal verbs” en inglés cuya característica es que adquieren una(s) partícula(s) v. gr.preposición, sustantivo o adjetivo y su significado puede ser diferente a la suma de sus partes; es decir, puede tener un significado literal, un significado idiomático o ambos.

Ejemeplo1:

“take off”
You are all wet!. Take off your coat and put on something dry. En este ejemplo tenemos al verbo “take off” que significa en su sentido literal “quítate” y su antónimo “put on” “ponte”.


If the plane takes off on time, they will get to New York before midnight. En este ejemplo, “take off” tiene un significado idiomático y significa “despegar”.

En el texto “Forever young?” encontramos algunos verbos de este estilo:

do laundry = lavar la ropa
do sewing = hacer remiendos
get the cravings = antojar, apetecer

pass away = morir

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