After 70, the body stops operating on the same rules it followed at 40 or 50. Sleep grows lighter because melatonin drops and the internal clock becomes fragile, waking more easily to noise and light. Temperature shifts feel harsher because blood vessels and sweat responses slow down. Digestion no longer “handles anything,” and once-effortless meals can now cause fullness, constipation, or nutrient gaps that drain energy. None of this means the body is giving up—it means it needs different support.
This is the age where prevention becomes daily practice, not a slogan. Gentle strength work and balance exercises protect independence. Protein spaced through the day feeds muscles that would otherwise quietly fade. Morning sunlight, steady routines, layers of clothing, and water within reach turn small habits into powerful defenses. You cannot stop these age-related shifts, but you can shape how they feel—and how fully you keep living through them.