POTSDAM, MINN.
Anna Stoehr has absolutely no explanation for how she got to be 111 1/2.
"For goodness sake, I don't have an answer to a question like that. I did nothing," Stoehr said as she sat in her farmhouse kitchen, her arthritic hands punctuating the air with emphasis. "And it's not luck, either. It's all in the Lord's hands."
Born of German immigrant parents in Iowa and living on farms her entire life, Stoehr is the world's 40th-oldest person and 15th-oldest in the United States, according to the Gerontology Research Group. And she may be the oldest woman in the world who lives alone.
She laughs often, asks probing questions, moves through the house with her cane when she remembers it, cooks, bakes, quilts and plays 500, checkers and Scrabble with frequent visitors to the house, 15 miles north of Rochester.
"Sometimes people say, 'Well, you're working too hard.' It's not work if you like it. I like keeping busy, doing things," she said. "People can waste a lot of time fretting about things that are best left to the Lord."
Last year, when a researcher called her and pressed for an answer to her long life, "I told him it was probably all those lard sandwiches I ate growing up. It took him a while to realize I was pulling his leg -- although I did eat them, and I still like bacon and eggs. And potatoes, lots of potatoes."
Although her hearing is good, her eyesight is not as sharp, so she uses a magnifying glass to read books and the daily Rochester Post-Bulletin.