What made her story even more remarkable was how little she slowed down with age. Calment continued riding her bicycle well into her 90s. On her 100th birthday, she famously walked around Arles to personally thank residents who had sent her birthday wishes. She remained physically active, mentally alert, and socially engaged long after most people would have retreated from public life.
Her lifestyle, however, often surprises people. She did not follow a strict or “clean” diet. Calment reportedly ate nearly two pounds of chocolate each week, enjoyed dessert with every meal, and drank port wine in moderation. Even more shocking by modern health standards, she smoked cigarettes from the age of 21 until she was 117. Despite these habits, she appeared largely unaffected by the chronic illnesses typically associated with such behaviors.
On her 120th birthday, she addressed reporters with characteristic dry humor, saying:
“I see badly, I hear badly, I can’t feel anything, but everything’s fine.”
Her wit never faded. She once joked that she had “only one wrinkle—and she was sitting on it,” a line that perfectly captured her ability to laugh at aging rather than fear it.
After her death, interest in Calment’s longevity only grew. Many assumed her secret must lie in genetics or diet, but medical researchers have pointed to something far less tangible. Jean-Marie Robin, a medical researcher who worked closely with Calment’s physician while collaborating on her biography, suggested that her emotional makeup played a crucial role.
Speaking to The New York Times, Robin explained:
“I think she was someone who, constitutionally and biologically speaking, was immune to stress.”
Calment herself summed up this philosophy in simple terms, once saying:
“If you can’t do anything about it, don’t worry about it.”
According to researchers, this extraordinary resistance to stress—combined with staying active, maintaining social connections, and keeping a sharp sense of humor—may have been just as important as any biological advantage. While not everyone can expect to live to 122, her life offers a powerful reminder that mental resilience and emotional calm can profoundly shape how we age.
Jeanne Calment didn’t just live a long life—she lived it with curiosity, humor, and remarkable composure. In an age defined by constant pressure and anxiety, her example feels more relevant than ever. If nothing else, her story invites us to pause, breathe, and perhaps worry a little less about the things we cannot control.
What habits or outlooks do you believe help people stay healthy as they age? Share your thoughts in the Facebook comments and keep the conversation going.