New York Daily News

105 yrs. young

Qns. woman’s secret: Eat pasta & help people

- BY LAURA DIMON and LEONARD GREENE

ON HER 105th birthday Wednesday, in the presence of family, friends and a woman playing the harp, Frances Abbracciam­ento shared the secret to long life.

She says it’s kindness, gratitude and a good amount of pasta.

“I don’t look over my shoulder,” Abbracciam­ento said, dispensing the wisdom that comes with more than 10 decades of living.

“I always feel nobody is better than me and I’m not better than anybody else. You have to give and you have to be responsibl­e for who you are.”

What Abbracciam­ento gave on her birthday was a real good party, complete with music, a ton of stories and enough cake to open a bakery.

With the sun shining brightly on her tiara and the deck of her Breezy Point home, Abbracciam­ento reminisced about a full life that included raising four kids, running three restaurant­s and meeting the President of the United States.

“I lived through World War I, World War II, Vietnam,” she said, noting that she once met President Dwight Eisenhower. “At this time in my life I’ve never seen the condition our country is in.”

While she doesn’t blame any one person, Abbracciam­ento said America has gotten away from its creed.

“Help the people and don’t be so egotistica­l,” she said of today’s politician­s. “The United States was not built that way. It hurts my heart. It really does.”

What advice would she give in these troubling times?

“All you have to do is be honest and never fear life,” Abbracciam­ento explained. “The truth will always lead you. If you’re not going to live and do the right thing, then you don’t belong in this world.”

Abbracciam­ento still belongs, and she doesn’t plan on going anywhere soon. Not with two great grandchild­ren on the way.

“We’re a close family,” said Abbracciam­ento, whose husband died when she was 50-years-old. She never remarried.

“We’re 38 all together. I’m so blessed,” she said. “I’m so excited for those two new babies coming into my life.” She’ll stay busy until then. “I read all day. I text. I do puzzles,” Abbracciam­ento said. “I read my iPad at night. I read novels, I read history. Anything that's interestin­g to me I can read. And I'm an opera lover.”

 ??  ?? Frances Abbracciam­ento celebrates her 105th birthday at her home in Breezy Point, Queens, Wednesday.
Frances Abbracciam­ento celebrates her 105th birthday at her home in Breezy Point, Queens, Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States