logo
Secrets of longevity from the world's 'blue zones'

Secrets of longevity from the world's 'blue zones'

Yahoo17-03-2025
The average life expectancy in the U.S. is just over 78 years — but in certain countries and regions, more people make it past 100, seemingly without even trying.
What are the secrets of these pockets of the world — known as "blue zones" — where residents have not only more longevity, but more healthy years?
Dan Buettner, a Florida-based author, explorer and longevity researcher who first coined the term "blue zone," embarked on a mission to find out.
Woman, Age 107, Has A Few Big Secrets Of Living A Long, Happy Life
"Only about 20% of how long you live is dictated by your genes," he told Fox News Digital during an on-camera interview. "The other 80%, we reason we might find among the longest-living populations."
For the recent Netflix documentary "Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones," Buettner visited five destinations — Okinawa, Japan; Sardinia, Italy; Ikaria, Greece; Nicoya, Costa Rica; and Loma Linda, California — to discover why they have the highest rates of living centenarians.
Read On The Fox News App
"We verified ages and found that in these areas, people were living about 10 years longer at middle age," he said.
Wwii Veteran Turns 100, Reveals The Secrets Of A Long, Healthy Life
"It's because they're not suffering from the diseases that are plaguing us, like type 2 diabetes. They're not dying of cardiovascular disease prematurely, or dementia, and they have 40% lower rates of cancer."
Buettner and his team of demographers and researchers investigated the lifestyle and environmental characteristics in these five areas to determine what people may be doing differently.
"The big insight we learned from blue zones is that in places where people are actually living longer, it's not because they try," Buettner said.
"In America, we tend to pursue health. We try to identify the right diet or exercise program or supplement regimen — but our brains are hardwired for novelty."
"We're constantly bombarded and bamboozled by new health news and people — and in blue zones, they never tried to live a long time."
The reason for this longevity, according to Buettner, is that they live in environments where the healthy choice is easy.
One of the characteristics most blue zones share is their walkability, as people walk to work, school, friends' homes or gardens.
"They're getting 8,000 to 10,000 steps a day without thinking about it," Buettner said.
Also, the cheapest and most convenient foods in blue zones are unprocessed.
"People in blue zones also eat healthier, as they consume primarily whole, unprocessed, plant-based foods," Buettner noted.
The average American eats about 220 pounds of meat a year, which he believes is "too much."
"I'm not advocating a no-meat diet, but I will tell you, people in blue zones eat about 20 pounds of meat a year, so about once a week as a celebratory food — and they are getting all the nutrients they need."
People also eat far more fiber in these areas, Buettner found.
"In blue zones, the cheapest and most accessible foods were full fiber," he said. "They pull them out of their garden … whole grains or beans are the cornerstone of every longevity diet in the world."
Fresh Food Consumption Could Help Solve Diet-related Illness: Experts
Fiber is often neglected in the American diet, Buettner said, with only about 5% to 10% of Americans getting enough.
"If you don't get enough fiber, it often goes to work at the mucous membrane and creates a certain permeability or leaky gut, and that causes all kinds of problems," he warned.
Studies have shown that people who wake up and have a sense of purpose, whether it's a duty, a passion or an outlet, have greater health outcomes.
"The blue zone purpose almost always includes an altruistic dimension," Buettner shared.
"There's almost always doing it for the next generation, or for the community or their church. There's always some philanthropic dimension to their purpose."
"In blue zones, we see very clearly that people are connecting face to face, probably five to six hours a day," Buettner said.
People in these areas often live in extended families.
"Grandma never gets lonely, because she lives upstairs and helps with the garden," Buettner shared as an example. "She helps cook food and she helps with childcare. And the kids do better because they're getting better attention. And it's this virtuous circle."
In blue zones, people typically live in communities where they care about each other, he added.
"They're not spending nearly as many stress hormones arguing about things — and there's more time for laughter when you're not angry."
Data shows that people who regularly go to church live anywhere from four to 14 years longer than people who don't, Buettner noted.
"You can't measure faith, but you can measure religiosity," he said. "Scientists simply ask people how often they show up at church, temple or mosque, and then they compare the longevity of the people who show up to those who don't show up at all."
Warding Off Dementia Means More Reading, Praying And Listening To Music: Study
Part of this likely stems from the fact that churchgoers have a built-in community, he said, as loneliness has proven to be "toxic."
"Religious people are also less likely to get involved in risky behaviors, and they often have a sense of purpose, which is their faith in God," Buettner added.
Those who worship on Sunday may also benefit from having one day a week where they "stop everything."
"Being human is inherently stressful, and church gives us an hour or maybe a couple of hours where we fully take the focus off of our everyday life and troubles, and we get to sort of elevate to a higher plane and focus on a greater good," Buettner said.
The act of prayer itself could also "stack the deck" in favor of longevity and health, he added.
"By the way, people who sing in the choir actually even live longer," Beuttner said. "So if you want a little extra bump, join the church and sing in the choir."
In his visits to blue zones, Buettner found that the residents are usually early to bed, early to rise.
"They have kind of two sleeps, where they'll go to bed shortly after sunset, and then get up at 3 or 4 a.m. and do some chores, and then go back to sleep until sunrise," he told Fox News Digital.
Click Here To Sign Up For Our Health Newsletter
Napping is also very common throughout all blue zones.
"And some good research shows that people who take a 20-minute nap five days a week have significantly lower rates of cardiovascular disease and about 30% lower rates of cardiovascular mortality," Buettner said. "So napping is definitely part of the blue zone approach to longevity."
Overall, he concluded, anyone can benefit from the lessons learned from the blue zones — primarily the importance of keeping people healthy in the first place.
"It's about shaping their environment so that healthier choices are easier or unavoidable and setting them up for success, so they're subconsciously making better decisions on a day-to-day basis for years or decades," Buettner said.
For more Health articles, visit www.foxnews.com/health
"Blue zones give us a very clear set of choices and environmental factors that would help us mindlessly get the years we deserve."
"That's what works in all the blue zones, and it will indisputably work for you — whether you live in Akron, Ohio, or New York City or Los Angeles."Original article source: Secrets of longevity from the world's 'blue zones'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hospital Heroes ride sees 280 bikers hit the road
Hospital Heroes ride sees 280 bikers hit the road

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Hospital Heroes ride sees 280 bikers hit the road

Hopes are high that a charity ride involving 280 bikers has beaten last year's total raised for cancer care. The fifth annual Hospital Heroes ride between Needham Market and Ipswich was in aid of services offered at Ipswich and Colchester hospitals. Motorbike groups from across East Anglia took part in the event. Some £4,000 was raised last year, and organisers hope to have surpassed that amount with Sunday's 42-mile round trip. Weggy Wegg, of Ipswich-based Suffolk Biker Family, said: "To us personally, it's extremely important... There's never enough money from our perspective for research and for the wards. "Because we've got such a great community, something like this just builds and builds every year." This year's ride will particularly benefit the Woolverstone Macmillan Centre at Ipswich Hospital. Keith 'Pip' King, 76, from Cockfield, near Bury St Edmunds, has been taking part since the charity ride started. "Us old bikers, even though we get a bad name, we're always there for the charities," he said. Debbie Gibb and Michelle Hermitage were also taking part. Ms Gibb, who lives on the Norfolk/Suffolk border, said: "It's a great charity. "Cancer affects so many people and there's a lot of people who've suffered with it themselves, or have got family [with it], so it's really, really important." Ms Hermitage, from Framlingham, who was taking part for the second year, said: "I do know a lot of people that have suffered with cancer." She added she wanted to "give something back" to the hospitals in Ipswich and Colchester after her husband had used them. Ms Gibb said it had been a good ride, with people donating as the bikers rode through the villages. James Stephens, of the Colchester and Ipswich Hospitals Charity, said: "The contributions go towards helping patients [and] to provide care that's over and above what the taxpayers can pay for." Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. More local stories Suffolk to host opening stages of Tour of Britain Football fans helping foodbanks back for fourth year How common are wild wallabies in East Anglia?

Sick Doctors: Don't Be the Kind of Patient You Hate
Sick Doctors: Don't Be the Kind of Patient You Hate

Medscape

time32 minutes ago

  • Medscape

Sick Doctors: Don't Be the Kind of Patient You Hate

That night changed her. 'You always think, oh, that's never going to happen to me,' Sullivan says. 'I'm young, I'm healthy, I work out every day, I'm vegan. But that feeling of I could die tonight, especially as a doctor, it changes your perspective on everything.' The White Coat Comes Off Doctors spend their careers taking care of patients. But when the roles reverse, it's often disorienting. Many physicians report difficulty trusting the system they helped build — they second-guess diagnoses, resist rest, micromanage their own care. Kathy May Tran, MD 'They are often not used to taking care of themselves or being taken care of,' says Kathy May Tran, MD, a physician at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and advocate for clinician well-being. 'A challenge arises when the physician becomes a patient. Then, the repeated dosages of pain, fear, anxiety, or grief arise from the physician, not the patient, and the physician cannot adaptively separate the physician emotions from the patient emotions.' The stakes are high. Nearly half of all US doctors — 45.2% — reported symptoms of burnout, according to a 2025 study in Mayo Clinic Proceedings. That number is down from a pandemic-era peak, but still far exceeds the burnout rates of other American workers. Doximity's 2024 Physician Compensation Report found that 8 in 10 physicians say they're overworked. Mental health issues, chronic fatigue, and age-related conditions are on the rise in medicine. But the culture still whispers: Doctors don't get sick. Or if they do, they don't talk about it. Interns who screen positive for depression seek help just 22% of the time. Many doctors fear that admitting illness could jeopardize their license, their practice, or their reputation. What happens when the stethoscope comes off and the wristband goes on? The Double-Edged Sword of Medical Knowledge A physician's clinical expertise might help her recognize early symptoms or communicate more effectively with care teams. But it can also fuel anxiety, second-guessing, and a paralyzing awareness of what could go wrong. David V. Diamond, MD 'I ran a healthcare system,' says David V. Diamond, MD, aged 73 years, former chief of medicine at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, who was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome in 2018. 'I practiced medicine for over 40 years. I knew all the vagaries of how systems can be as weak as the weakest link, you know? There's always someone who messes up or forgets something or does something wrong.' After being given just a 6% chance of survival, he approached his 2019 bone marrow transplant with trepidation — not just because of the procedure but also because he knew how human error could tip the scales. Sullivan knows that unease. For her, the deeper issue was psychological. 'As a doctor, you're supposed to be the strong one,' she says. 'You're supposed to guide the others through this. I will freely admit it, I don't want to be seen as weak.' Like many physicians, Sullivan found it difficult to trust others with her care, even doctors she respected. 'Half the reason I became a doctor and half the reason my husband became a doctor was to protect our families from bad doctors,' she says. 'Relinquishing control to somebody else is really hard, even if you know that they're fully capable.' The culture of clinical stoicism — the expectation that doctors keep it together no matter what — leaves little room for uncertainty, fear, or weakness. Peter Grinspoon, MD 'There are societal expectations that we're supposed to be these robots that just show up to work and perform without any problems,' says Peter Grinspoon, MD, aged 59 years, a primary care physician at Massachusetts General Hospital and an instructor at Harvard Medical School, Boston. 'When in reality, not only do we have the same problems that everybody else has — like elderly parents, bipolar [disorder] issues, divorces, kids that are troublesome — but we also have the unique problems of being a doctor.' Grinspoon speaks from hard-won experience. At age 33, addiction overtook his life. He snorted oxycodone in his office, forged prescriptions in the names of family members, and struck secret deals with patients to share narcotics. 'In my head, it was no different than people who have a drink after work,' he says. 'I also justified it as, like, I'm a primary care doctor. I'm giving every molecule of myself at this crappy, underrated job to help other people, which is so draining. The least I deserve is to rest and relax after work. It could be excruciating being a primary care doctor.' He felt justified: 'I work so hard to help other people, so therefore, I deserve to do this thing that I've discovered to get rid of all my stress,' he says. 'It was not a good conclusion.' Letting Go Without Falling Apart 'Many times, physicians don't take instructions well,' says Bala Subramaniam, MD, professor of anesthesiology at Harvard Medical School. 'We think we know it all.' Subramaniam suffered a heart attack in 2021. But he was prepared in an unusual way. For nearly a decade, he'd dedicated 2-3 hours a day to yoga and meditation, cultivating what he calls 'stillness and enhanced awareness.' When the heart attack came, it didn't bring panic or fear. 'I was surprised that there was zero fear. The chest pain came with no suffering, just pure awareness,' he says. His mind remained calm as he told his doctor, 'I feel my lungs are flooding. Could you please give me some Lasix?' His presence of mind didn't come from trying to control the doctors around him but from mastering what was happening inside himself. That distinction — between controlling others and participating in your own care — is what made the difference for Diamond. His experience, he says, was overwhelmingly positive, and not because he called the shots. 'It just reinforced my personal philosophy and approach to medicine,' he says. 'Because I had really good doctors who practice medicine the way I practice medicine, which is they listen.' Diamond embraced a collaborative role. 'If there was a choice to be made and it wasn't really clear which way to go, we would engage in a little discussion and they would try to get my opinion, and sometimes I made the decision. Sometimes I was like, 'I'm not sure, you decide,' in which case they decided.' He didn't need to dominate the process. He just needed to be part of it. 'I was happy for the treating physicians to make the big choices because I figured they knew best, right? And I didn't become the world's expert on my disease or its treatment. I mean, I knew what was going on, but it's not like I was researching things and saying, 'Did you read the article in Science that says this is better or that's better?' I didn't do that. I was happy to be supported by the system.' Now retired, Diamond thinks his experience would've helped him if he'd returned to the clinic. 'I think I would've been perceived a little differently, certainly by people facing cancer,' he says. 'Maybe my story and my survival would in some ways have been more encouraging.' That kind of personal experience, says Tran, can be meaningful. 'Understanding the patient's experience as fully as we can, with compassion, empathy, and connectedness, is fundamental to be an effective physician who practices patient-centered and individualized medicine.' When Control Isn't Comforting When Sullivan landed in the hospital with AFib, she had to confront something new: helplessness. 'When you're in AFib, you can feel it,' she says. 'I'm not somebody who likes to really ever admit that there's something wrong.' Her husband told her what any well-meaning spouse might. 'Mish, I'll let you know if it changes. Just try to sleep, try to rest.' She tried, but it didn't sit right. Then, in the middle of the night, something shifted. 'They had planned for a cardioversion the next morning,' she says. 'I woke up and I looked at Bill and I said, 'I'm in sinus.' And he goes, 'How do you know?' I just knew. The palpitations were gone. I beat the cardioversion.' Her echo looked great, and the diagnosis never fully clarified her heart issue. 'It was a one and done.' If that was a moment of grace, Grinspoon's wake-up call came with handcuffs. In 2005, the state police and drug enforcement administration (DEA) showed up at his Boston office. He was charged with three felony counts of illegally prescribing a controlled substance and sentenced to 90 days in rehab. 'I'm an atheist Jew from the Northeast who got forced by the medical board to go to this very Christian rehab in Virginia,' Grinspoon says, calling it 'not the most scientifically based experience of my life.' He couldn't believe the rigidity. 'You literally just have to do what you're told. You just have to surrender. There's no advocacy as a physician who's in trouble.' The result was three and a half years without a medical license. Now, his license has been back for 15 years, and he's been in recovery for 20 years. Looking back, Grinspoon sees a system designed more for punishment than healing. 'If we were just more supportive and less punitive, we could help people earlier along in their addiction, so it doesn't only become a problem when a surgeon shows up drunk in the OR or a primary care doctor gets raided by the DEA.' He now attends physician-specific support groups. 'We talk about our frustrations and how you have to sort of let go and ask for help, and how being the doctor in charge of everything is part of how we got into this problem in the first place.' Learning to Let Go, on Your Own Terms For doctors who become patients, healing often starts with autonomy. Grinspoon urges physicians to seek help quietly and deliberately. 'It's about getting treated on your terms,' he says. 'So go to a private addiction specialist and do what you have to do to clean up.' If you become a patient, Sullivan advocates researching doctors. 'There are enough docs out there who I wouldn't want touching my family.' Control, she's learned, is not something to abandon lightly, it just has to be redefined. Subramaniam, the Harvard anesthesiologist, believes the medical community needs to evolve altogether. 'We truly don't understand the psychological component of all illnesses,' he says. 'We may intellectually understand that psychological component, but we don't truly know it.' He's not talking about patient care alone. He's talking about doctors, too — how they break, how they heal, and what keeps them going. For Diamond, writing became his lifeline. During his cancer treatment, he began updating a private CaringBridge blog. 'At first it was matter-of-fact reporting,' he says. 'But then I started slipping into metaphor and prose and soft reflections. People appreciated my honesty and my writing.…That gave me strength.' He believes others could benefit from the same. 'Writing down their thoughts and feelings is a good way not only to hear themselves but to share what they're going through in a way they couldn't really in conversation.' Tran, who launched a storytelling series at Massachusetts General Hospital, says 'The process of recollecting and retelling is extremely therapeutic for the storyteller and for those who hear it. They discover truths about themselves and their lives.' In fact, she adds, 'The most impactful and effective way to become a better physician is to become a more grounded human….Embracing our 'human' side is what makes us better physicians.' Even now, Sullivan says she's still working on it. 'I get a lot of inspiration from my husband. He's an ER doc and also an attorney, so he's a pretty bright guy.' But when he was diagnosed recently with thyroid cancer, something surprised her. 'For how in control he is for most of his life, he readily allows others to step in when he becomes the patient, and he trusts them — including me — which is something, right?' She pauses, thinks about that for a moment. 'I really want to get there.' Are you a doctor with a dramatic story about life as a patient? Medscape would love to consider your story for Dr. Patient. Please email your contact information and a short summary to access@ . Read more in the series: A Doctor's Tumor Rupture Upends All She Thought She Knew Lead image: Medscape Composite: Dreamstime Image 1: Medscape Composite: Getty Images Image 2: Michael and Michelle Sullivan Image 4: David V. Diamond

Celebrities Who Have PTSD
Celebrities Who Have PTSD

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Celebrities Who Have PTSD

Contrary to popular belief, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) doesn't just affect veterans. PTSD can stem from traumas of all kinds — which is why a growing number of celebrities who have this condition are speaking out and demystifying it. According to the American Psychiatric Association, PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that may occur in people who witness or experience a traumatic event, from an accident or natural disaster, to sexual assault, to bullying or intimate partner violence. It affects an estimated 3 to 5 percent of American adults each year. People who have PTSD may relive their trauma through harrowing flashbacks or experience disturbing thoughts or feelings about the event long after it has ended. This can cause them to have highly emotional reactions to ordinary things — for instance, a loud noise could trigger an argument or a full-blown anxiety attack. PTSD symptoms can disrupt a person's ability to function normally, especially in situations that may trigger memories of their trauma. Complex PTSD (CPTSD) is a related but distinct condition. Per Mayo Clinic, CPTSD stems from prolonged exposure to a traumatic situation, such as child abuse or domestic violence. Its symptoms — including anxiety, flashbacks or nightmares, heightened emotional reactions, issues in relationships, and trouble with identity or sense of self — are similarly disruptive. Both PTSD and CPTSD are treated with psychotherapy protocols like trauma-focused CBT, exposure therapy, or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). These tools can be transformative for people whose lives are clouded by traumas they experienced years or even decades ago. So, yes, many veterans do develop PTSD, but they aren't the only people impacted by this condition. Thanks to outspoken celebrity mental-health advocates like Lady Gaga and Travis Barker, more people are becoming aware of the nuances of PTSD and CPTSD. Keep reading to learn more about nine celebrities who have spoken out about having PTSD or CPTSD. More from SheKnows Stuck in Your Head During Sex? Here's Why - & 8 Ways to Get Out of It Best of SheKnows Amanda Seyfried, Megan Fox, & More Celebrities Who Have OCD 18 Baking Soda-Free Natural Deodorants That Won't Irritate Your Sensitive Pits 24 Celebrities Living With Autoimmune Disorders Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan opened up about dealing with PTSD in 2025. 'I don't ever want my family to experience being chased by the paparazzi the way I was. They were terrifying moments I had in my life—I have PTSD to the extreme from those things,' she said to The Times about her early days of fame. 'The most invasive situations. Really scary. And I pray stuff like that never comes back. It's not safe. It's not fair.' Lady Gaga In a candid 2020 interview with Oprah Winfrey, Lady Gaga opened up about her harrowing experience with PTSD. She first revealed her diagnosis in 2016. 'I […] developed PTSD as a result of being raped [at 19] and also not processing that trauma,' the Chromatica songstress told Winfrey, per Healthline. 'I all of a sudden became a star and was traveling the world going from hotel room to garage to limo to stage, and I never dealt with it, and then all of a sudden I started to experience this incredible intense pain throughout my entire body that mimicked the illness I felt after I was raped.' Gaga has since sought treatment for her symptoms. She's also used her platform to raise awareness about PTSD and dispel misconceptions about the disorder. 'Traditionally, many associate PTSD as a condition faced by brave men and women that serve countries all over the world,' she wrote in a 2016 letter for The Born This Way Foundation, her mental health nonprofit. 'While this is true, I seek to raise awareness that this mental illness affects all kinds of people, including our youth.' Travis Barker Travis Barker survived a deadly plane crash in 2008, but the experience still left him physically and emotionally scarred. The Blink-182 drummer spent weeks in the hospital afterward dealing with third-degree burns and intense survivor's guilt. For years, Barker harbored an intense fear of flying. However, he's been able to overcome it more recently with the support of his wife, Kourtney Kardashian. 'She's been everywhere beautiful in the world… [places] that I've never even heard of,' he told GQ in 2022. 'I was like, 'If you ever want me to fly with you, just tell me 8 to 10 hours before.'' Kardashian took him up on the offer — and when he 'tried to get out of it,' she held him through it. 'She just knew, and she stuck by me and toughed it out,' Barker added. 'And it was the best flight. And I wasn't scared once.' Whoopi Goldberg Whoopi Goldberg is best known as a hilarious comedian, actress, and TV personality, but her plane-related PTSD is no laughing matter. In the '70s, she witnessed a midair collision between two planes that left her traumatized and scared of flying for decades. She has since sought therapy. Come 2009, Goldberg also partnered with Virgin Atlantic to overcome her fear of airplane travel once and for all. The airline offered a program called Flying Without Fear, which uses education, practical experience, and therapeutic techniques to help people face their plane-related phobias or traumas. The experience was incredibly intense, she recalled in an episode of The View: 'I am sweating a lot. My mind is doing bad stuff to me….I am not a good flyer. I don't like it. I don't wanna do it.' Ariana Grande After a 2017 terrorist attack at one of her concerts that claimed the lives of 22 people, Ariana Grande was left completely traumatized. In 2018, she told British Vogue that she wasn't sure if she'd ever be able to talk about the horrific incident 'and not cry.' 'I know those families and my fans, and everyone there experienced a tremendous amount of [PTSD] as well,' Grande said at the time. 'I feel like I shouldn't even be talking about my own experience — like I shouldn't even say anything.' A year later, the singer also shared photos of her brain scans to Instagram Stories. According to Grande, the scans indicate the extent of her PTSD. '[It's] not a joke,' she captioned the photo. Kathy Griffin Kathy Griffin developed complex PTSD after a controversial 2017 tweet derailed her career. The comedian opened up about her experience with the condition on Tiktok earlier this year. 'Since I've been talking on here about PTSD, I had a freaking eight-hour attack yesterday,' she shared. 'Eight hours of freaking writhing in pain in the bed.' 'Sometimes they last a few hours, or more typically, they last at least a full day, if not multiple days in a row,' Griffin continued. 'I feel silly even telling you this, because I always thought PTSD was just for veterans and stuff.' She went on to explain how strategies like walking during her panic attacks and assuring herself that they 'won't last forever' have helped her cope. Alanis Morissette Although Alanis Morissette became a household name thanks to her 1995 album Jagged Little Pill, those years of her life weren't all positive. 'Fame became a great tool. But I still have PTSD from the Jagged Little Pill era,' the singer-songwriter told The Guardian in 2012. 'It was a profound violation. It felt like every millisecond I was attempting to set a boundary and say no, and people were breaking into my hotel rooms and going through my suitcase and pulling my hair and jumping on my car.' Over the years, Morissette has also opened up about her struggles with addiction and postpartum suicidal ideation. 'Without therapy,' she said in a 2020 interview, 'I don't think I'd still be here.' Barbra Streisand Barbra Streisand developed severe stagefright and PTSD in the late 1960s after she forgot the words to three of her songs while performing at Central Park. The legendary actress and singer opened up about her struggle between songs in a concert during her 2000 farewell tour. 'I was so traumatized, I couldn't perform in front of a paying audience for close to 30 years,' she told the audience, per ABC News. Luckily for Babs and her fans, she clearly worked through her stage fright since she was able to perform live again. Monica Seles Tennis star Monica Seles developed PTSD after she was stabbed by another player at a tournament in Germany in 1993. She was just 19 years old at the time. 'I had a lot of emotions,' Seles recalled in a 1995 interview with the Los Angeles Times. 'When I stepped on the court, that's when I'd get angry. Tennis never did anything bad to me. The tennis court was my place. … I felt the safest there. All my worries were gone. I didn't have to think about anything when I was there. Suddenly, that was taken away.' Seles was able to work through her trauma and return to the sport she loved after being treated for PTSD by a psychotherapist. 'You have to admit pain or that you have a problem with something. It's part of any recovery,' she said of her healing journey. Darrell Hammond Saturday Night Live veteran Darrell Hammond has complex PTSD as a result of his traumatic childhood in an abusive home. However, it took years for the actor and comedian to get an accurate diagnosis for the mental health issues he was experiencing. 'I became sold on the idea that the way I was behaving was best described as a mental injury rather than a mental illness,' he told The New York Post in 2018. 'That's the 'Hallelujah' chorus of my whole life.' Hammond uses cognitive therapy and a 12-step program to help manage his CPTSD. He also chronicled his healing journey in his 2018 documentary Cracked Up. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store