“Will your life measure up?”

Ponce de Leon never found the Fountain of Youth. Can current-day billionaires achieve what he couldn’t?

Lately, I’ve been fascinated with reports about billionaires devoting themselves and their fortunes to the quest of a longer life. An article in the August 11 New Yorker talks about the moves these men are making to realize their dreams of encountering a personal Fountain of Youth.

Leading or engaging with groups with such titles as Don’t Die, Healthspan, and Fountain Life. the objective of these men is not just to stick around for a very long time, but to live in a body that’s escaping arthritis, cancer, and other impediments to comfortable longevity. The goal for some is to at least double the current average lifespan, which is now seventy-seven for men. These articles don’t mention women, who’s average lifespan is eighty-one, except in the context of needing to replace them with ones able to provide the old men a chance to enjoy their great, great, great, great great grandchildren. In other words, “Bye Bye Baby.”

Despite the billionaires’ enthusiasm and determination to quickly solve the problem of natural death, the obstacles are great. Given our forty trillion cells, in many situations one problem is solved while another is created. Quoting from several New Yorker paragraphs, “For biohackers”*, an antibiotic called Rapamycin inhibits the senescent cells that cause inflammation, but having too few senescent cells is dangerous because these block tumors.” Research is unclear about many things. And some of the products being sold sound like the work of snake oil salesmen.

What’s most interesting is that some of the men are devoting their days to every imaginable protective treatment so they can live longer. They take huge quantities of supplements, fill their veins with “young” blood, engage in different therapies, act as guinea pigs with various elixirs, and cut calories significantly, in one case to 1977 a day. (Google says “Most adult men require between 2,000 and 3,200 calories daily.) They’re also measuring their internal organs to determine whether the ages of different organs match their chronological ages.

Maybe the billionaires are right that in time humans will live much longer and their research will show the way, but I have many questions about this new frontier. For this blog, I’ll just stick to one. Is spending one’s life doing daily monitoring of every aspect of one’s body considered living?

*playing with genetic research material free from concerns about ethics

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About stillalife

I retired June 30, 2010 after working for 40 years in the field of education and most recently doing school public relations/community outreach in a mid-size urban school district. I wrote for superintendents and school board members. Now I'm writing for me and I hope for you. In this blog, I offer my own views coupled with the latest research on how to preserve our physical and mental health as we age, delve into issues most of us over 50 can relate to like noticing wrinkles and forgetting where we left our keys, discuss the pros and cons of different ways to engage our minds and bodies after we leave the workplace, and throw in an occasional book review, all peppered with a touch of humor, irony, and just plain silliness. Also, I'm on the third draft of my second novel since retirement.
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3 Responses to “Will your life measure up?”

  1. kawaii40fc3db66c's avatar kawaii40fc3db66c says:

    Great post! Very interesting topic and approach.
    I clicked on the link to like it, and it makes me create a WordPress account.

  2. marilynped's avatar marilynped says:

    Sigh…

    Note to self absorbed billionaires, take your bloated head out of your derrières and look at the natural world. Aging and dying are part of the circle of life. What are you doing to make the world a better place? How would you like to be remembered?

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