How Your Photo Albums Affect Longevity

How long will you live? Just flip through your photo albums or your Facebook pictures for a clue.

Do you see lots of pictures of yourself with a big, toothy, happy-go-lucky smile? That's good. A study suggests that a smile-prone personality may be tightly linked to longevity.

Smile Stats

In the study, researchers looked through the photographs of several hundred professional baseball players who had begun their major league careers before 1950. Then, they compared their snapshots with health records. And it turned out that players who smiled the most in their pictures had mostly outlived their more straight-faced peers. In fact, players with the biggest, brightest grins were only half as likely to have died during any given year of the study period.

What Smiles Say

How smiles—or a lack thereof—may affect health status isn't totally clear. But we know that how you feel on the inside often shows on the outside. And happiness and emotional well-being have hundreds of health benefits.

Take the first steps to growing younger and healthier with the RealAge Test.

More On

Longevity, purpose, and Harry Belafonte

video

Longevity, purpose, and Harry Belafonte
At the age of 96, Harry Belafonte has passed due to congestive heart failure.
Should You Say “Yes” to Happy Hour?

article

Should You Say “Yes” to Happy Hour?
Discover how drinking responsibly in the company of good friends might add years to your life.
11 Easy Ways to Eat Less Meat

slideshow

11 Easy Ways to Eat Less Meat
Going meatless may help your waistline and lower your risk of diabetes, cancer and heart disease.
Purpose, longevity, and Queen Elizabeth II

video

Purpose, longevity, and Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth II was the longest-reigning monarch in British history and is often cited as an example of purpose and longevity.
100 to 100: Start the New Year Right

video

100 to 100: Start the New Year Right
Your journey to live to 100 starts with making simple changes each day! Join Sharecare's 100 Days to 100 Years and live the youngest, healthiest you.