My name is Margarita, and I am ninety years old. When people hear my age, they often expect a long list of medications, aches, and limitations. Instead, they usually find something that surprises them. I wake up early each morning without needing an alarm. I prepare my own breakfast, take a walk outside, read the newspaper, and still enjoy long conversations with my grandchildren. I do not take pills in the morning or at night, and I have not spent decades moving from one medical problem to another. I do not claim to have discovered a miracle, and I certainly do not believe I am immune to the natural process of aging.
But when people ask how I have managed to remain so active and independent for so long, I tell them the same simple truth: I learned to take care of what I put on my plate. Over many years I realized that food is not just something that fills the stomach; it is something that quietly shapes the body day after day. Every meal either supports the body’s balance or slowly works against it. When I was younger, I watched friends begin to rely on medications earlier and earlier in life.