The Mel Robbins Podcast - Add 10 Years to Your Life With 3 Simple Habits: Advice From the #1 Longevity Doctor
Episode Date: May 1, 2025Today’s episode could change (or save) your life. It’s a must-listen. You’ll hear from the world’s leading longevity doctor about the simple, proven changes that will help you live longer, fe...el better, and prevent diseases like cancer, heart disease, and dementia. Today, Mel sits down with one of the world’s most respected scientists, Dr. Eric Topol — a pioneering cardiologist, longevity researcher, and one of the top 10 most cited medical researchers alive today — to reveal the real, evidence-based approach to longevity. This is the science and art of living better, longer. Forget the trendy anti-aging supplements, infusions, and miracle cures: Dr. Topol is here to give you the truth on exactly what the science says about how to reverse the biological age of your organs, add up to a decade of healthy years to your life, and avoid the biggest killers we all fear. You’ll learn: -The #1 free intervention proven to slow aging -The three everyday habits that are aging you faster (and how to fix them) -How to exercise and eat for optimal health and longevity -The truth about supplements, IV drips, and anti-aging clinics -Why loneliness is as dangerous to your health as smoking -How exercise can be more effective than antidepressants -The breakthrough blood tests and tools that could predict — and prevent — diseases decades before they happen This conversation is full of science and hope, because as Dr. Topol says: “It has never been a more exciting time in medicine.” Whether you want to prevent disease, feel better, or just live a longer, healthier life, this episode will give you the real plan for how to do it. If you love someone, send them this episode. It could save their life. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode. If you liked this episode, and you’ll love listening to this one next: Look, Feel, & Stay Young Forever: #1 Orthopedic Surgeon’s Proven ProtocolConnect with Mel: Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Today, you are going to meet one of the most respected scientists in the entire world.
His work in genomics, longevity, cardiology, precision medicine, and AI is so important
that other researchers have cited him in more than 365,000 papers.
He's actually one of the top 10
most cited medical researchers alive today.
And you've probably never heard of him
because he's so busy working his lab,
he's not on social media.
I am personally honored by the fact
that he jumped on a plane and flew here
from the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego
to launch his new mega best-selling book, Superagers,
an evidence-based approach to longevity.
This book is so important
that five Nobel laureates have endorsed it.
And you and I are the very first people
to sit down with Dr. Eric Topol
and hear him explain why he is enthralled
by the science of aging.
Now, he's going to teach you exactly what you need to know
about the science of aging
and how you can add years, even decades, to your life.
Today, he's also here to call out the junk science
and the people that are trying to sell you supplements
and drugs and intravenous drips as the key to longevity.
He's going to be very blunt
because he says there isn't a pill you can take,
there is not a drug you can take, there is
not a drug anyone can prescribe that will reverse aging. But there is one thing based on research
that costs nothing, that can reverse the biological age of your organs, and he's going to tell you
what that is today. You're also going to learn based on the research about the three things that
you're doing right now that are aging you faster,
and a simple protocol that he calls Lifestyle Plus
that can add years to your life and prevent you
from ever having cancer, heart disease, or dementia,
which are the three biggest killers in the world today.
I cannot wait for you and for me to sit down
and learn from Dr. Eric Topol
as he unpacks his life's greatest work and shares with you
why it's the most exciting time
for discovery in medicine right now.
This is gonna be one of those conversations
that you're gonna want everybody that you love to hear.
Because the reality is, if you could add years
or even a decade to your life,
if you could prevent yourself or someone you love from having cancer, dementia, or heart
disease in the future, why wouldn't you?
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
I am so excited that you're here. I'm excited that I'm here and I am really excited that our guest Dr. Eric Topol is here today.
It's always such an honor to spend time with you and to be together. And if you're a new listener,
I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
I'm glad you're here. And because you made the time to listen to this particular episode,
here's what I know about you.
I know that you're the kind of person who not only values your time,
but you value your health and you're interested in longevity.
And you could not have picked a better conversation to spend your time on.
Because this is going to be one of the most valuable things
you could ever listen to on longevity,
on the science of aging, because you're going to be learning from one of the most respected
living medical researchers and scientists alive today.
And if you're listening right now, because somebody in your life shared this with you,
I want to point something out.
That's really cool, because it means you have people in your life that care about you and
that care about your health, and they wanted you to have the opportunity to learn from one of the top researchers in the world
about simple things that you can do based on the evidence to live longer, to be healthier,
and to have a better life. Because that's exactly what you and I are going to talk about today with
the extraordinary Dr. Eric Topol. Dr. Topol is a pioneering physician scientist. He's a cardiologist who practiced for almost four decades
and is one of the most renowned researchers in the world.
He is the founder and director of the world-renowned
Scripps Research Translational Institute,
where he currently serves as the executive vice president
and professor of molecular medicine.
Previously, Dr. Topol was the chairman of cardiovascular medicine
at Cleveland Clinic,
one of the top hospitals in the world.
And it was ranked number one in heart care for over a decade during Dr. Topol's tenure.
And if you're thinking, what else could this guy possibly do?
Well, he's also among the top 10 most cited researchers in medicine in the world.
He's published over 1,370 peer-reviewed articles,
which is an enormous number,
and his research is so respected
that it's been cited by other researchers
more than 365,000 times.
I mean, just to put that into perspective,
that's more than 99.99% of all scientists globally.
He's also the author of several bestselling books,
including his newest mega bestseller, Superagers,
an evidence-based approach to longevity,
which has already been endorsed by, check this out,
five Nobel laureates and several
of the world's top medical researchers.
I am absolutely honored that he chose
the Mel Robbins podcast and a conversation with you and me
as the very first interview that he granted
for his new book, Dr. Eric Topol.
Thank you so much for getting on a plane,
flying across the country and being here
on the Mel Robbins podcast.
I'm absolutely thrilled to unpack Superagers with you,
your brand new book.
Oh, thanks so much Mel, it's great to be with you.
Well, here's where I'd like to start
because you are one of the most credentialed and cited
experts. The book, of course, is an evidence-based approach to longevity. I would love to have you
start by talking directly to the person who's listening and tell them what they might experience
that will be different about their life or the life of somebody that they care about
if they take everything to heart that you're about to teach us today?
Well, there's a lot of things that we can do about our lifestyle that are more than just the diet,
sleep, exercise stuff that people have been hearing about for decades.
But also the three major diseases, cancer, cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative,
like dementia, Alzheimer's, those three diseases take more than 20 years to take hold.
So if we plan enough in advance, we can prevent those diseases from ever occurring, and particularly
those people who are at high risk.
So it's an exciting opportunity that we're only realizing now that we have ways to prevent
age-related diseases.
Well, one of the things that I loved about reading Superagers is, first of all, not only
do I feel smarter now, but I also could feel the passion and your optimism.
That there are simple things that absolutely anybody can do starting today that will not
only make you healthier, but more importantly, based on the science of aging, it will actually
extend your life.
Ultimately, if you do all the things that we're talking about that's been study after study,
this extends healthy aging by seven to ten years. Wow. People keep talking about longevity.
What we want to do is improve our health span, that is our years of healthy living. And so we
can do that now if only we pay attention to the hard evidence that exists today.
We don't need a magic pill or a potion.
We can just work with what we have right now.
And that, you know, to have seven to ten years more of healthy life, wow.
And is that true for anyone, Dr. Topol?
Like if the person listening is, you know, kind of one of the, one of the things that I always find when I'm listening to somebody who is as smart
as you are and has done the research and you're like,
here are the simple things to do.
And you go, oh my God, I really screwed up.
And now it's too late.
Like does the science of aging show that even if you're starting from a baseline
where you have not taken care of yourself, you're not getting sleep,
you haven't been moving your body,
you've basically been living out of a box or a bag of chips
for most of your life.
Do these interventions also help you start to reclaim
your health in terms of extending your life?
It's never too late.
So it's also never too early.
I mean, if you start doing this when you're in your 20s and you do it your whole life,
you get even more years.
But you could start this at age 70, 80, and you still will benefit.
So the whole point here is that all of us, if we had the real extraordinary attention
to these lifestyle factors, which are much more diverse and extensive than we have previously accepted
because they involve our environment, they involve being in nature, they involve many
other things that if we really tuned into all this, no matter what age, all the data
supports promotion of healthy aging.
You're basically saying there is a huge difference between what somebody like me and the person
listening is seeing out in the media about anti-aging and the anti-aging craze versus
what you're here to teach us about the science of aging and simple changes that you can make
that not only will help you live a longer and healthier life, but these same
changes also help prevent the big three diseases of cancer, heart disease, and neurodegenerative
issues like dementia.
Exactly.
So these diseases are related to particular organs in the body.
And only now do we have these things called organ clocks, where these proteins
in our body can tell us that a particular organ in a particular person is aging faster
than it should. So not only can we tell people they are at particularly high risk, but which
is the organ, which is the condition that is off kilter, that you know, out of whack.
And that's when that prevention can really kick in to be targeted against that condition
or organ that's affected.
So we have, from the tools of science of aging, we have new metrics now that we never had
before that's going to help us to make a huge dent in preventing age-related diseases in
the future.
You know, one of the things that I was surprised by Dr. Topol when I was reading
your best-selling book, Superagers, is that literally a third of this book is dedicated to diseases.
It never even occurred to me that one way to live a longer, healthier life is to actually avoid having a chronic disease.
Right.
And there's so much hope and science that you have in this.
So how important is avoiding or not getting one of
these chronic diseases to the science of aging and longevity?
Now that we realize there's just the big three,
cancer, cardiovascular, neurodegenerative,
which is mainly Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
The exciting future, which is beginning now, is that we can say, you are at risk for this
particular of the three and using the things that we know prevent that condition.
That's what's so extraordinary right now is that we're at a cusp of being able to say
this individualized or a lot of people call precision medicine, that we're
going to be able to say the only thing that you're at risk for is this disease and we're
going to get all over it so you'll never really have to worry about getting it or if you do
get it, it will be 10 or 15 years beyond when you would have had it otherwise.
First of all, when I read the statistic that for Americans age 60 and older, 95% of Americans, 60-year-old,
have some sort of chronic disease.
That was jaw-dropping.
But what I find encouraging is that all of this extensive research that you lay out in
this book basically is the prescription, the lifestyle plus modifications that you're talking about
when it comes to sleep and loneliness and exercise and lowering the amount of processed
foods that we have that all of these are actual interventions that help you fight these chronic
diseases and may also help you never even get one.
Is that, am I stating that accurately?
No, again, you really have this right
because what you're talking about is today,
people 65 and older are just riddled with chronic diseases.
If those same people had started at age 50
with what we're talking about today,
they would unlikely to have those chronic diseases.
Or they might've had it when they were 75 or 80
rather than when they're 60.
So the data supporting adopting lifestyle factors
with these diseases,
this is what I think most people don't understand.
You've got 20 years to develop one of these diseases.
Cancer doesn't just strike and all of a sudden,
you don't have a heart attack or a stroke all of a sudden.
You have 20 plus years while this is working in your body, developing, incubating, if you
will.
And so, if you started to do these things earlier in life, and again, as we reviewed
earlier today, it's never too late, but these diseases could be avoided.
The problem is, most people who are 65 and have these chronic diseases have not followed
these lifestyle plus factors,
not taking advantage of what we know today.
And just to be clear,
because I'm sure somebody will push back on that,
there are all kinds of cancers and diseases
that hit people when they're little
or when they are in their 20s
that are not determined by lifestyle.
What you're saying is based on the science of aging, that the big three diseases that
kill people, that you said over and over, heart disease, cancer, and the neurodegenerative
things like dementia, that people develop later in life, that by and large, the research
shows that these lifestyle plus interventions not only make these help
you treat the diseases but if you were to implement what you're talking about
based on the research you might never get these diseases in the first place.
Diseases that young people get we're not talking about that. We're talking about
the ones that are clearly there's certain types of cancer most of them in
fact and obviously the neurodegenerative
and cardiovascular.
These are the principal age-related diseases.
And that's what I think a lot of people don't understand is aging increases the risk.
But we have ways to change that whole pace, that clock, if you will.
And that's what is exciting now. Well, you write about this on page 125,
chapter 6. By 2050, the number of people dying from cancer, age-related cancers, projected to
nearly double. But we have not yet incorporated over half a century of extraordinary breakthroughs
in the understanding and use of certain biological mechanisms that can stop cancer from killing us now.
What do you want the person listening, what's the most important thing that they could do
in order to put to use these extraordinary breakthroughs in the science of aging
and use biologic mechanism to stop cancer? Yeah, this is an area that's so ripe to reboot, which is how we address cancer.
So for example, the way we do cancer screening
is unbelievable.
It's by an age.
So if you're age 50, you're supposed to have mammograms
or 40 even now, or you have colonoscopies.
And these screening procedures do very little
to diagnose cancer.
Most cancers are not diagnosed through screening.
And by the way, for breast cancer, for women, 88, almost 89% will never have breast cancer in their lives.
So why are we putting women through frequent mammograms and other related procedures
on a basis where they're never going to have the risk of breast cancer?
Why don't we screen people, which we can, for their genetic risk, so that we can say,
you know what, you might have a mammogram every 10 years.
You might never need one, or you should have a frequent one, and maybe not only with the
mammogram, but perhaps other imaging modalities.
So we don't particularize the person's risk and we treat everybody like we're all
the same. So that's one issue. The key is finding out who is at increased risk and then
putting those people under surveillance. So we have this really great test now we never
had before, which is called multi-cancer early detection. And so from a blood test, we could
say there's a microscopic cancer.
The problem is we're using it completely wrong now.
How should we be using it?
Because as I was reading this book, you know what my husband did?
He literally, as I was getting ready to report, he ordered a cancer screening test online.
It's like $700.
You probably know what it's called, the something test.
Yeah, the grail test. Yeah. The grail test.
Yes, the grail test. Because we've had a couple friends that have done it that are like, oh
my gosh, I'm at risk for this. And so should I not be doing it?
Well, the problem is it's being marketed for people age 50 and older. That's wrong because
most people age 50 are not at risk for cancer. And so they're going to get a test that is either a false positive or false negative.
So it has little value unless you know you're at increased risk.
Okay.
And so another one that's being used totally improperly
is a total body MRI scan.
Oh, I want to sign up for one of those.
You're saying I shouldn't?
No, no.
Why not?
You don't want to do that because what happens with these,
it's never been validated that
it helps people to get accurate diagnosis of cancer.
Again, it might be okay if you're at significant increased risk.
What I would say is if you had a genetic and protein and other family history and multiple
dimensions of your data.
Got it.
So you have somebody that died early of pancreatic cancer, and it runs in your family,
so you're like, I'm at increased risk.
That is something that if you can afford to do it,
puts your mind at ease.
Because I do have friends that have done those,
which of course, they find stage one pancreatic cancer
and it saves their life, and then you go,
I could have that too.
And then you're shelling out money to go get the screening and you're saying unless you
have risk factors, it's not worth it.
The problem with the blood test that your husband ordered is that maybe four or five
per thousand will have an abnormal reading of a microscopic cancer.
And out of those, half of the five per thousand will have already advanced cancer.
The problem with the MRI is false positives.
If you did the MRI after you had an abnormal blood test, that might be okay, sure.
But you don't go ahead and have a total body MRI just because you're going on a fishing
expedition, because you could wind up having all sorts of biopsies.
Well, you know, I'm glad you said this,
because you hear about all these people going to Concierge
Medicine and getting a workup done at Mayo,
and they go every year for all the markers,
and they spend all this time.
And I start to think, is that what we're all supposed to do?
And most people can't afford it.
Are there tests that accurately show your risk for cancer?
So there's a thing called a polygenic risk score
for each type of cancer.
Breast, colon, prostate, lung.
And these are very inexpensive.
You know, you could get these for about $50 or so.
Wait, you're polygenic, what am I asking for?
Polygenic risk score.
Yeah, they basically would tell you
your risk for a particular cancer and there's about 10 different
companies that offer these now.
And they can even be done through saliva.
You don't even have to have a blood test.
So that's a good way to know about your risk in your lifetime.
But again, you don't want to just rely on one layer of data.
You'd like to have other layers of data backing that up.
And so that's where you can learn even more.
And as you mentioned, like if you're family history, maybe you have a trend going on and
some routine blood tests going in the wrong direction.
This is where when we have AI analyze all your data and point to say, you know what,
this is your risk in your life.
This is the one for you to be on guard about.
But right now we have some rudimentary data
to help us understand who's at risk and what for.
And so if somebody offered me an MRI total body for free,
I wouldn't have it, because it's a recipe for trouble.
It's a recipe for finding things
that you wouldn't want to find
because then you have to chase them down
and you could have complications.
As I've had patients who then they had a liver biopsy and they bled many units. They had all
sorts of things and it was benign of course. Unfortunately, we have celebrities and doctors
who are advocating these total body MRIs and there's nothing, there's no proof. They say they're
going to do a trial, but they haven't done it and we're not going to know for years. And until then, it's just anecdotes.
Wow.
Well, you just saved me $2,500 because I'm not going to go do it now because I could
see how I would go on literally down the rabbit hole.
Yes.
And if, though, somebody is listening to you and they're like, okay, polygenic risk score,
there's a test that I could do if I look back through my history
and I have some things that are concerning to me.
If you are concerned,
what test should you ask your doctor for?
Or what would you ask your doctor about?
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
Here we are in Boston,
and the Mass General Brigham
is supplying the polygenic risk score to their patients.
They're the first health system to do that.
And so they're getting
a readout for their risk of the various types of cancer and heart disease. And of course,
soon it'll also be Alzheimer's disease too, that they will get that composite risk as
part of their care, not like they get charged extra. All the health systems should be doing
that. And again, they should be adding these other layers of data so that you know about
yourself what to be on guard about
and also to take action.
And this is a really critical point
is that generally people might not be motivated
to do all these positive things,
but when they find out they have this specific risk,
the chances of them going after it is so much greater.
We've learned that from studies as well. So-
Wait, now hold on.
So basically we're not motivated when we're healthy
to stay healthy.
Absolutely.
And, you know, just to mention,
there was a big Finnish study where they took people
and they gave them their polygenic risks for heart disease.
And the people who got the high risk,
they changed their lives.
I mean, they did everything we're talking about today.
So it wasn't that they were gonna do it
when they're healthy, only when they got something
to tangible evidence for them, for those individuals,
that's when action was taken.
What are the top three things, Dr. Topol,
that most people are doing
that are actually aging them faster?
The problem now is the things that they're not doing. Okay.
And so what we're talking about is poor diet with too much ultra-processed foods, for example,
not nearly enough exercise, and that's both aerobic as well as resistance type exercise.
And then of course getting enough sleep, particularly deep sleep.
Sleep is so much bigger than we had thought years ago,
and having sleep health, particularly promoting deep sleep,
is really important, as we'll get to for brain health,
that brain clock.
So these are factors that not enough are paying attention to,
that we can do a lot today, and they're just the beginning
of what I call this lifestyle plus,
because there's so many dimensions. It's not just the beginning of what I call this lifestyle plus, because
there's so many dimensions. It's not just the three that we've been hearing about for
so long.
You know, I'm bombarded with supplements. I'm bombarded with the ads about the miracle
cure and slowing down aging and looking younger and all this stuff. You keep referring to
this lifestyle plus. What does plus mean?
So plus means, first of all, that the devil
and the details about nutrition and exercise and sleep,
and then beyond that, things like social isolation,
the environmental factors like air pollution,
microplastics, forever chemicals, being out in nature, outdoors.
So these factors are not just, you know, what we're eating and our exercise, those are paramount.
All these things have been associated with healthy aging.
And so the woman in the book who's featured, Mrs. L.R., here she is, she's 98,
and she's the picture of health, cognitively crisp, she's doing her jigsaw puzzles and
oil paintings, you know, she's amazing, and she is vibrant with her social group. Her
kids have died already, and her parents died in their 50s.
So it isn't the genes.
And that's one of the things that I think a lot of people feel they're doomed because
they have bad genes.
But it isn't.
It's so much of this is our lifestyle that can override or, independent of any genes
that we have, be associated with a healthy aging process.
Well, and what I love about the picture
that you're painting and as you write about in your book
is that getting older and aging is inevitable,
but actually getting frail and weak is not.
Exactly.
Dr. Topol, I have so much that I wanna dig into with you,
but let's take a quick pause
so we can give our sponsors a chance to say a few words.
And as you're listening to our sponsors,
be generous with this.
Absolutely everybody that you care about and love
deserves this information,
and they would love a chance to learn
from the extraordinary Dr. Eric Topol.
And don't go anywhere,
because we have more from his new book,
Superagers,
when we return, so stay with us.
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins,
and today you and I have the honor
of getting to spend time with and learn from
one of the most respected scientists
in the world. His name is Dr. Eric Topol and he is here unpacking his evidence-based approach to
longevity and all of this extraordinary research in his new book, Superagers. So Dr. Topol, I want
to read to you from your book because you got some strong words about the anti-aging industry. And I'm reading from chapter 12, and it is page 277.
I just want to remind you as you're listening,
this is a scientist and doctor whose work has been cited 365,000 times.
And here are his thoughts and words about anti-aging.
Have you visited the longevity lifespan circus lately?
There are over 800 longevity clinics in the United States.
Some charge up to $50,000 per week.
Fitness centers now have intravenous anti-aging drips.
There are carnival barker scientists
making false claims and hawking supplements.
These entrepreneurial companies and investments aren't likely to settle down anytime soon
because we are seeing some real progress in understanding the science of the aging process.
Unfortunately though, that has led to irrational exuberance in many dimensions.
I'm hoping to set the record straight on what we know,
what we don't know, and how likely it is
that we'll be able to modulate the aging process
to some extent one day.
So Dr. Topol, those are strong words.
What do you want to say about the anti-aging craze
and all the marketing around it?
There is nothing that's been proven in people to promote the slowing or reversing of aging,
whether they're pills or compounds or infusions, transfusions.
None of that is proven to have an anti-aging effect in human beings.
There's a lot of that that's been looked really good in mice or rats, but not in people.
So we'll start with rapamycin.
A lot of people are taking this drug.
It suppresses our immune system.
That could be very risky to do that, and unfortunately, too many people are advocating that.
There's nicotinamide, NAD+, a supplement.
There are no data to show that it improves healthy aging in people.
There's this epigenetic reprogramming, very elegant.
It could cause cancer.
It isn't in people yet, but it's certainly a risk.
There's senolytic drugs that take out our senescent cells.
They're indiscriminate. They could take out bad cells out of our body,
these drugs that do that.
There's plasmapheresis taking young people's plasma and infusing it into
old people's plasma to promote healthy aging and better cognition. There are clinics doing that.
There are no data to support it. There's all kinds of infusions of kind of multivitamins,
and there's just no data to support any of it. And it's really unfortunate because people that believe this stuff are the prey. Not only are they expensive, but they're posing significant risk. It could
be cancer, it could be immunosuppression. These are not things you want to play around
with.
You actually warned about the dangers and this obsession of trying to stop or reverse aging. Could you explain, Dr. Topol,
the problem with stopping or reversing aging? Well, so one of the most elegant approaches,
which caught a lot of interest in the biomedical community, was the idea of giving genes to an old
animal, in this case a mouse, and now extended to other species.
And these are known as Yamanaka factors because they have the ability to reprogram the organism,
the cells of an organism.
Okay, so you're taking genes from a younger animal and then you're injecting them into
the older animal with the presumption that the genes of the younger animal can then
infiltrate and reprogram older genes, thereby making you younger?
Close.
These genes don't come from a younger animal.
They just are known to turn the clock backwards.
And so the whole idea was, okay, we're going to inject these four into the animal and we're
going to take an older animal and it's going to affect all their cells and they're going to get young.
And it happened. Say, wow, this is amazing, right?
Well, how do you tell if it looks young? Like, when you say that to me,
it's like I'm just like a normal person, so I'm like,
okay, you're going to inject me with genes.
It's going to make me turn young.
I feel like my wrinkles disappear.
You know, I'm not sagging in places I wish I weren't sagging.
My skin's a little fur... You know what I'm saying?
Like, is that what you know what I'm saying?
Like, is that what you mean by you look young?
It's actually pretty deep.
So it wasn't just that their gray hair went away, you know, but also the fact that at
the organ level, they had, for example, their glucose regulation turned back to normal.
Many of their organs show young look rather than having all the things that you would
associate with, you know, a
very old organism.
So it looks great.
You say, wow, couldn't we just all take these Yamanaka factors and we would just get young?
The problem is that when they were doing this, and this is now in multiple species, tumors
would develop.
And that's because when you turn back these cells into younger cells, you also are
potentialing the risk of cancer.
And this, Mel, is the problem with many of these anti-aging body-wide interventions,
is they introduce new risk, particularly cancer, because there's a very close overlap
between the hallmarks of aging and the hallmarks of cancer.
What's the connection?
Yeah, so in the case that we were just talking about, the fancy term for it is
partial epigenetic reprogramming. Sounds pretty big, right?
It's way too big for me to say.
Yeah, but the whole idea is that when you make cells younger, a group of these cells to just take
off, develop a clone of cancer, and then just spread. So the problem is that when you're kind of trying to re-rig the body's aging process,
you introduce new problems.
Well, it makes sense.
Like, if you put it in the other direction, if chemo is basically killing everything to
the point where you're now just going to have to rebuild all your cells, if you reverse
the clock, what you're saying is some of the science suggests that, holy cow, you're actually expediting the ability of bad cells to
multiply. Exactly right. So, Dr. Tobol, to you, what's the most exciting development in anti-aging
technology and research that you think is going to revolutionize the way that we do age. Yeah, so I think where we're headed is that each of us will have, without added costs
or very nominal costs, we will have all our data, it's assembled, it'll analyze by what
we call multimodal AI, generative AI, and it'll tell us this is your risk.
This is what you need to be on the lookout for and you're
going to do these things and also we may be treating you like for example with an
anti-inflammatory drug or you know we can talk at some of the specifics but
we've had breakthroughs now like for example Alzheimer's there's a blood test
now called p-tau-217. It's as good as having a PET scan for telling us, are we going to have a risk for Alzheimer's?
So if you get that test, again, if you have Alzheimer's in your family, it's not good
enough to know, oh, I'm at risk for Alzheimer's, but I may only crop up when I'm 95.
That's not really important.
What we're going to have with multimodal AI is going to say you're at risk for Alzheimer's,
and if you don't do anything about it, at age 66 is when you're going to see mild cognitive
impairment. So you can actually pinpoint the person and the time.
Well, what's exciting about that too is if the research also proves that when somebody
gets a diagnosis, they are very motivated to save their life.
If this technology allows you to get the diagnosis 20 years early, now hopefully you have the
same motivation to prevent that from happening by making the lifestyle plus or other interventions
happen now.
You got it.
I mean, this is why we have the benefits of that long time to work with before
the person gets the condition, and we have the layers of data, which we didn't have before,
or the ability to analyze that. And then the surveillance tools, whether it's scans or
whether it's further blood tests, clocks, like, you know what, if I have an organ clock
that says that my heart is accelerated aging,
and then I do these things, and I prove, oh, wow, I changed it, it's now going in the other
direction, wow!
And it reinforces that you're on the right track.
So this is where we're headed now.
The science of aging has given us these metrics, whether it's this body-wide aging, epigenetic
clock, organ aging.
This is the most amazing thing.
All these years of practicing medicine, we keep talking about prevention, and we have nothing that we're
preventing. It's secondary prevention. Oh, you had a heart attack, now we're going to do,
put you on this and that. We are talking now about primary prevention. That's the new thing here,
that we can prevent a disease that was going to occur before it happens.
And that's the real deal, prevention.
I have so much that I wanna dig into with you,
but let's take a quick pause
so we can give our sponsors a chance to say a few words.
And Dr. Tobler has so much more to share with you,
so don't go anywhere.
We'll be waiting for you after a short break. Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
And today you and I are learning from one of the most extraordinary and respected medical
researchers alive today.
His name is Dr. Eric Topol.
We have the honor of having him here in our Boston studios. So Dr. Topol, I want to call something out because I found it absolutely
fascinating on page 19 through 20. You talk a lot about diet and the impact that diet
has on the aging process. And you write that based on the research, 22% of all deaths are linked
to someone's diet.
That means one in five.
How can that be true, Dr. Topol?
Yeah, no, it's amazing.
So the global burden of disease comes out of University of Washington.
They've studied this globally.
And what we've learned is that overnutrition, which is really bad, having, you know, carrying
–
That's a nice way to say what?
What's overnutrition?
Being obese or significantly overweight.
Undernutrition or malnutrition.
And then poor nutrition, which is, as we talked about, the unprocessed foods, for example.
Those three categories collectively account for, they have shown
in their work, one in five deaths.
Yes, nutrition is fundamental.
And you write a lot about ultra-processed foods.
And you write in particular on page 21 that eating ultra-processed food likely involves the disruption of the gut brain signals
that unprocessed food conveys to the brain,
and that this has a direct connection
to a markedly heightened risk of cardiovascular
and metabolic diseases.
Can you talk a little bit about ultra-processed food?
So, you know, I think about ultra-process processed as anything that's in a box or a bag and that I can't
read the ingredients on the back of the label.
But you say that you believe that ultra processed foods in the big food industry, particularly
here in the United States, at some point we're going to wake the hell up and realize that this is just like a modern day cigarette in terms of how
it's killing us.
What do you mean by that, Dr. Topol?
Yeah, I'm glad you brought that out because this is a serious matter.
We have the big food industry that markets this.
Basically, because of the gut-brain axis, you eat these ultra-processed foods and you
want to eat more.
We've seen very careful studies that it promotes overeating.
So that's bad enough in itself, but what it also does, it promotes inflammation in the
body.
And so when you have that, that's when you have your glucose dysregulation and you can
move on to type 2 diabetes.
It also then increases the risk of atherosclerosis, heart disease.
What is that? Oh, that's a fancy word for heart disease. What is that called?
Yeah, basically accumulating cholesterol plaque in your arteries, which you can get heart
attacks or strokes. And it also, of course, has effects at the level of the brain promoting
inflammation the less than we want there and the risk of cancer. And so all the data on ultra-processed foods,
which it's not just that you can't read
because of all these ingredients,
it's just that when you do read them,
you don't recognize them because they're all foreign things
that would never be found in your kitchen.
Everything about these suggests
that they're inducing a lot of harm,
they're promoting aging.
And one of the stories in the book I reviewed is, there's a fellow named Scientist Physician they're inducing a lot of harm, they're promoting aging.
And one of the stories in the book I reviewed is,
there's a fellow named scientist physician in the UK,
Chris Van Teeliken, and he wrote a book called
Ultra Process People.
And so he actually, remember that Super Size Me thing
that I did, went to McDonald's every day for?
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, it was a documentary
where he ate it for 40 days.
Yeah, so this is what Chris did for 30 days.
And he gained like 10 kilos, but he did brain scans before and after in 30 days, and he
did all these other inflammatory markers.
And he showed that everything went off the track.
I mean, in just 30 days, high ultra-processed foods.
So all of us, we can't
eradicate ultra processed food, but we can bring it down. It shouldn't be as it is now,
60% or even 70% of our diet.
I want to make sure that as you're listening to Dr. Topol, that you really took away a
number of things that you said. And so please stop me Dr. Topol, if I got this wrong, because there was a lot of life-saving
and important information that you said.
And I wanna just remind us,
we're talking about the science of aging
and how to use that rich science to extend our lives
and to live a healthier and more fulfilling life.
And one of the things that we're talking about right now
is ultra processed food.
And we have had expert after expert,
medical expert scientists come on this show
and talk about how ultra processed food is engineered
to make you want more, just like cigarettes are.
And so it's super important to understand
that if you're kind of sitting there listening
to Dr. Topol and 60 to 70% of your diet is fast food, or it is coming out of a box, or you're recognizing
I didn't realize that this was a thing, it's not your fault because the food is engineered
to disrupt the way that you crave food.
That's number one.
Number two, what was really interesting about what you just said is because there's so many
chemicals and modified stuff in there that doesn't belong in your kitchen, it's also not naturally
belonging in your body, so it's disrupting the way that your body and
organs and everything is communicating to one another, which is also not your
fault. But when it gets interrupted, you said that big word, inflammation. And when
inflammation and swelling and all that stuff starts to happen through no fault of your own because you're eating these ultra
processed foods that are designed to be addictive, that is now speeding up the
aging process and that is impacting the quality of your life. And you're here to
say that by just dialing it down, by paying attention, I call this the
grandparent diet.
Just eat what your grandparents ate.
You know, if you get like, get one ingredient on the plate kind of situation,
that that has a meaningful impact on not only how you age,
but also how you feel as you age.
Is that correct, Dr. Topol?
No question. Couldn't agree with you more.
So you also have a section in your book
where you list food groups and break down
what the most up-to-date science says
about their effects on lifespan.
And I'd love to go through these rapid fire
and understand what does the science say
about each one of these types of things, these foods, I don't even know if you would call it a food,
but these things that we eat. First one is sugar, Dr. Topol. How does sugar impact our lifespan?
We want to cut down on refined sugar, particularly things like sugar sweetened beverages. They also promote inflammation.
If you see high fructose, you know, run away. We just don't
want this, we don't want to be taking this stuff in.
Okay. What about salt?
Yeah, salt is something that, you know, we have a very easy
solution which is a salt substitute which is using potassium instead of
sodium chloride. So we should not be, you know, adding salt ideally to what
we're eating.
Wait, why? I love salt.
Why?
Are you telling me I can't put salt on my food?
Why do I not want salt on my food?
If you're at risk for high blood pressure, which most of us are as we get older, that's
not going to help you.
If you use potassium chloride, it'll taste the same.
I don't know what potassium chloride.
You buy this at the grocery store?
Yeah.
What? Yeah. No, potassium chloride, the salt substitute, and that's all, there's nothing else in it,
is perfectly healthy and avoids the problem of the sodium intake. And it's a lot healthier
for you.
Well, I'm going to try it, but I also just kind of had this epiphany, which is this is
particularly problematic if you have 60% of your diet
being ultra processed.
If you're somebody that is eating from the farmer's market
and eating what your grandparents did
and you're occasionally putting salt on your food,
that's not what you're actually concerned about.
You're concerned about all the salt that is in fast food,
it's in ultra processed food,
and then adding more salt makes it worse.
You're spot on with that summary.
Okay.
And so again, you've pointed out
that in the ultra processed food category,
salt is often a common culprit
that is part of that reward circuit.
You know, it's part of, oh, have more,
lot of fat and salt and chemicals and emulsifiers, yeah.
You know, I didn't ask you about the sugar substitutes,
like, you know, all of the equals and the thing.
I don't know all the name brands,
but you know all the ones that people use
to not use just grain sugar.
What about those?
We don't have a free pass on those, unfortunately.
As I reviewed, you know, there's uncertainties about them.
So if you can avoid the sugar substitutes, that's probably better.
But unfortunately, they're not as healthy as we had been led to believe.
What about caffeine when it comes to what the science says about how it impacts your
lifespan?
Well, here's some good news for coffee lovers.
Talk to me.
Please.
Dr. Topol.
This is the one that is the rare exception where, you know, we love it and it actually
is healthy.
Really?
I mean, this is actually kind of shocking.
So, you know, I reviewed all the studies and there are a lot of them.
And what is striking about this, it shouldn't be that, you know, you should change your
life to drink more coffee, but you shouldn't at all worry if you're having two, three,
even up to four cups of coffee a day.
Dr. Topol, what?
Yeah.
It's actually pretty remarkable.
It's associated with significantly less of chronic diseases, less inflammation.
Everything about it points to something positive.
On page 42 of your bestselling book book, Super Agers, you write,
despite their popularity and heavy marketing, there's little to no hard evidence
for the benefit of taking any vitamins or supplements,
especially in those who are following a healthy diet.
Dr. Topol, what does the science say about supplements?
Yeah, this couldn't be more clear.
When you really review, take a hard look at every study that is cited and they're marginal
about this supplement or that or this vitamin.
This is just nothing there.
These are small studies with lack of meaningful endpoints.
So again, it's really important to look at this hard evidence and it's void.
There's just nothing to support these.
And unfortunately, so many people are spending so much money and taking so many different
supplements and there's no proof.
And as I reviewed this, some would have potential adverse effects unknowingly.
So you just want to avoid these.
And you know, I've had many patients, they come in with this long list of supplements.
In fact, some of them are afraid to show the list of things they're taking and I said
well you know really these are the only thing they're enriching is your urine you know and
they say well I really feel like they're making me feel better.
I can't argue with that you know if they're feel like they're okay but they should know
I try to inform them that there's just nothing to support
why they're feeling better. It's like the placebo, you know, the pill that there's nothing in it.
It's inert. They feel like they're helping them okay, but just so you know, the science doesn't
support it. You know, you mentioned earlier, we were starting to talk about Lifestyle Plus and the impact of diet on the
aging process and living a long life, you talked about protein.
What do you want to say, Dr. Topol, to us about the importance of protein and the science
of aging?
So as we get older, we lose muscle mass. And the recommendations from the government,
the US and abroad, are 0.8 grams per kilogram.
Now, for the-
What does that mean?
Yeah, so how much protein you should have in your diet.
And so let's say for a 70 kilogram person,
you know, we multiply that by 2.2 to get to pounds.
You're already losing it.
It's like 150 pounds.
I don't know what the hell is going on.
It's about 150 pounds.
So 150 pounds, what am I eating?
You should be taking 70 grams of protein.
And now the point is, if you start to look at how much protein, especially as you get
older, you'll say, hmm, I'm not getting 70.
And by the way, as you get older, maybe you should take one per kilogram
or 1.2 grams per kilogram.
So as you get older, you need more protein?
You need more protein.
Why?
Because you have to counter that propensity for muscle mass loss. You don't want to waste
just because of your diet. So you're talking about for the average person, you know, 70,
80, 90 grams of protein, not 150, 160.
If you're listening to Dr. Topol, you know, you can see him on YouTube, but I really believe
you and not just because of all of the papers that you've written and the fact that you
are one of the top 10 most cited scientists and researchers in the world right now, but also
because you look like Harrison Ford's younger brother. You're 70 years old. You look like
you're probably late 50s. Like, I kid you not. Has anyone ever told you that?
That's so funny. Yes. This Harrison Ford thing keeps coming up. It's so funny. Yeah. Wild.
Yeah. Well, he looks a lot like you.
We should say Harrison Ford looks like Dr. Topol.
So clearly the things he's recommending
not only work because of the science,
but you literally look like you could go run
an ultra marathon right now and star in a movie.
So you talk a little bit about exercise
because the research that you present in this book,
it's honestly astonishing.
It's astonishing.
You say, Dr. Topol,
that the single most effective medical intervention
that we know of that's even more effective
than an antidepressant for treating depression,
you write about this on page 263
in your bestselling book, Superagers,
the findings are further strengthened
by a meta-analysis of 41 randomized
controlled trials of exercise for a major depressive disorder that markedly reduce symptoms
of depression. Can you talk to us about exercise and the benefits when it comes to the science
of aging and longevity?
Yeah, this is actually amazing, and it's so much more profound than we had generally accepted.
We've been hearing about it for years.
But now, talking about those clocks of aging
and what we've learned from the science of aging,
there's a thing called an epigenetic clock, which
is these methyl groups on our DNA, the side chains.
And they can predict your biological age.
So not your chronological age,
but instead of let's say you're 70
and your epigenetic age is 60,
like wow, you hit the jackpot.
Turns out that exercise is the only thing we know
that lowers our biological age, okay?
So the gap between your real age
and your biological age is widened.
Now, it's not just aerobic exercise.
So, as a cardiologist, I've been saying you've got to get on walks or treadmill, bicycle, elliptical, whatever,
30 minutes a day, five days a week.
I've been pushing that and then I didn't realize the data that's so striking regarding resistance training.
So, you need that just as much much a couple of few times a week.
And that data has now become very solid.
And it isn't just about getting stronger, it's having better balance.
It's essential.
There's nothing that we can talk about that exceeds exercise for decreasing our aging
process, our body-wide aging process. And again, we wouldn't have known about this
if it hadn't been all the science of aging.
So let's just say, Dr. Chobol,
that I'm sitting in your office
and I've brought along my husband
and he has not been taking good care of himself.
And I have a feeling that you are often finding yourself
being both a marriage therapist and a medical doctor
with your patients. And I also have a feeling that there are a large number of people around
the world who are going to not only be excited about what you're sharing for themselves,
but they're going to share this with somebody that they care about. And so what would you
prescribe as one of the most respected and cited researchers and medical
doctors in the world in the science of aging?
What is your prescription for the minimum, the minimum amount that we should be doing
every week?
What would you say?
As long as you are getting at least 30 minutes of constant motion, getting your heart rate
up, taking your body out on the highway, if you will.
At least 30 minutes, five times a week.
Ideally every day, if you can do that,
but if you're getting five days a week,
typically when I talk to my patients,
I'll say, all right, when are we gonna do this?
What time of day works for you?
You're not a morning person, you're not gonna,
also, how are we gonna do this?
Are you gonna go to the gym?
Do you have some equipment at home?
Or can you go outside and walk or whatever?
To fit that in, figure that out, not just the aerobic side, but then things like bands
to increase resistance, they're very inexpensive and they can be so much of a plus for promoting
muscle strength.
And things like standing on one leg for a minute,
alternating, of course, on each of it. I mean, these are free, you know.
Yes.
But work on strength, work on balance, posture, and of course, this aerobic exercise is also
critical. So, get that as part of your life. And you'll notice quickly as you do this for weeks that, wow, I am more fit than I've been in
a long time. I have better posture. I have, you know, better balance. My golf swing is better.
Everything. Everything. And so we just can't do enough of this. And of course, the byproduct of
this is we get that lesser biologic age, which is going to be helpful across the board for the major
age-related diseases.
So you heard it from Dr. Topal. If somebody's been nagging you, and they also sent you this episode,
first of all, thank you for listening this far in. And exercise and literally 30 minutes,
five times a day, just a simple walk is what Dr. Topol is saying, can start to lower the biological marker of your age
because exercise is the most powerful intervention
that you have, seriously?
That's right.
That's incredible.
And it decreases inflammation.
That's another bonus factor.
Oh yeah.
And talk to us about that study related to depression
and the impact that exercise had
on people struggling with depression.
Yeah, this was astounding. This report kind of rocked me because, you know, the number of people who are taking
anti-depressant drugs, these SSRIs, it's huge. And so they compared that in a large cohort with all these different
activities from dancing, yoga, rowing, walking, anything. Exercise just was so much better of improving mental health than were the medications.
Who would have guessed that?
Because all these years we've been relying on so many people take them.
That's why we had this Prozac Nation and everything else.
So this was a real awakening and I think the study is quite impressive.
It should reset our need for, at least in some people, for SSRIs if
they're not exercising enough and substituting exercise, or if they haven't been put on one
of these drugs, try the route of exercise. You'll never be disappointed. And I think
that's really what we're not doing enough of. If there's one thing we should be paying
more attention to, this is it. You know, you say to live longer, we do need to address our mental health.
Why does your mental health affect the process of aging, which impacts your lifespan?
Yeah, so this is something that, again, a lot of physicians don't buy into this, but
the data is really strong. The relationship of stress and bad health outcomes, like cancer, like heart disease,
heart attacks, and even the neurodegenerative diseases.
So what we want to do is have adaptive stress.
Like, for example, if stress makes you exercise more, that's really good.
But also, you know, we've learned things that, again, I wasn't aware of all the data.
Being out in nature is remarkable. Music, things that we can do more of that are good for our mental
health. There's this interaction between our physical and mental health, which is deep,
much more intertwined than we have accepted. And so, if we're going to have a positive outlook,
it's taking advantage of these things that we've learned from.
And so, you know, being outdoors, you can't spend enough time doing that,
and it is really good for mental health.
These are things that add in that whole category of lifestyle factors,
but social isolation is critical.
So, people that are lonely and hermits that just are living in a cave,
that's having an ill effect on mental health and physical health.
So, it's really important that, you know, get together with friends, make friends,
find ways to have social interactions because they're rich
and they help reduce the toll of a burden of anxiety and depression.
Well, you write about this in Superagers, and I'm actually looking at a graph on page
264 that is adapted from who Americans spend their time with by age.
And you can see that as people get older, the amount of time that they spend alone,
without a partner, without family, without kids,
without their coworkers, spikes pretty dramatically.
And I would also think, we probably don't have the data,
but coming out of the pandemic, I would think that
you're gonna see a lot of that even for younger age groups
because of hybrid work.
And I'd love to have you connect the dots
between the aging process and longevity and time spent
alone and why that is a massive stressor that ages the body.
Yes.
Well, I'm glad you pointed to that graph because it's also very striking.
The more rich interactions we have with other people, the essentiality of being human, the more we see
evidence that it is associated with healthy aging health outcomes that are favorable.
And unfortunately, we're going in the wrong direction.
But there's something magical about the human-human bond.
And in this world of AI, which is some of the aspects of the book, you know, we're going
to rely on AI to do analytics for us to know
if we're at high risk. But here, this is something AI will never replace, which is the human
bond, whether it's a patient and doctor, but more importantly, in your own life, seeking
out and fostering social interaction because they inevitably will be associated with better
health outcomes.
And so, rather than turning inward, we need to turn outward.
I would love to also just, for the person listening, really connect the dots between
mental, lonely, stress.
Because I think when you hear the word mental health, you tend to just think about your
thoughts.
But there's something much deeper going on because you mentioned stress.
And medically speaking, when you're stressed out
or burnt out or on edge or just kind of feeling like,
when is the next shoe gonna drop?
And I think there's recent research that shows
that one of the biggest groups of people
that are impacted by this right now are caregivers.
We think about first responders,
but we don't think about caregivers and parents.
And that being in a state of stress actually means
that your body is running on overdrive
and you're in fight or flight oftentimes.
And does that state age you faster
if you're living in a state of stress?
Yeah, this is a really big issue that you're bringing up because the stress, when it's
chronic and when it's accentuated, you see more body inflammation.
And so what you're getting is your immune system is losing some of its integrity, it's
aging faster.
And if there's one system that is kind of governing our whole aging, it's our immune
system, which of course, as you know, that interacts with inflammation.
When your immune system gets off track, these cells start to release these proteins that
rev up inflammation.
So stress in our immune system and inflammation is a very tight interdependence.
And so what we want to do is have adaptive responses to stress so we don't have this
chronic inflammation.
If we want to get chronic inflammation, you get accelerated aging.
And so here again, the science of aging is teaching us about these processes.
It's not teaching us about this magical pill, but it's teaching us about how do we connect
the dots between what's going on in our stress and
our daily lives and what's going on in our body.
And you know what I love is if we go back to the very beginning where you talked about
the three things that age us the fastest, these are also the same three things that
help us actually slow down the aging and that would be getting better sleep, moving your
body even though you got a lot of other things going on, and changes to your diet, so you bring down the amount of ultra-processed food.
Is there anything else that you prescribe to your patients that are going through a period
of their life, or maybe they're caring for aging parents, or something crazy stressful is going on
at work, or they've had a big life change, spouse has died, divorce, some job change,
where they're in that state of stress?
Is there something that you recommend that people do, Dr. Topol?
It still comes down to a person's lifestyle, and typically a caregiver is so much absorbed
by caring that they don't care for themselves.
And so being able to say, look, we got to map this out.
How are we going to get you to view your body as a temple?
Otherwise, you're going to need a caregiver, right?
Right.
And this is where you have to get into the details
with the person.
Like, what time of day are you not providing care
for this elder person?
You have to come up with a practical pathway.
Well, I think the other thing that you're providing to us
today is the science and the
evidence and the pragmatism and the passion around this.
Because when I understand the deeper reason why and that research bears this out, I feel
more encouraged to try it.
Dr. Topol, if the person listening to this conversation takes just one action today from absolutely
everything that you shared, what would be the one thing that you would want them to
do?
If you really do a dedication to lifestyle plus factors, you're going to get years more
of healthy aging.
And you can ignore all the false anti-aging supplements and drugs and interventions that
exist today because
they have no data.
They're fact-free, if you will.
So this is the thing is that it's right here now.
We have more solid evidence for the lifestyle story than we've ever had before.
And as we have been reviewing, it's not just the big three of diet, exercise, and sleep. It's a lot of details within each of them and then several other layers of the lifestyle
story that we need to be paying attention to.
What are your parting words, Dr. Topol?
We are in a time of medicine that I've been dreaming about.
As a practicing cardiologist now heading into a fourth decade, I've been thinking, you know, why am I seeing these people,
you know, after they've had a heart attack or after they've already had a stent?
And to think that we are going to be able to prevent this better than we've ever had before,
and along with that, the other two major diseases.
So, for me, the idea that we have capabilities
we've never had before is enthralling.
And I think that whereas a lot of things
are sobering these days in the world,
if you pay attention to what's going on
in life science and medicine,
it's never been more exciting as it is right now.
Well, you wanna know what else is enthralling?
You. Oh, thank you. know what else is enthralling? You.
Oh, thank you.
And your incredible bestselling new book,
Superagers, Dr. Topol, thank you, thank you, thank you
for all the work that you do.
Thank you for writing this book.
Thank you for showing up, flying across the country,
spending time today, not only teaching,
but really infusing the message with so much passion.
I just cannot tell you how much I appreciate you.
Oh, you're really kind. I so much appreciate it, Mel.
Thank you. And I also want to thank you. Thank you for taking the time to listen to something
that will not only make your life better, it'll actually help you and the people that you love
live longer. I can't recommend Superagers more more and I also want to be sure to tell you
in case no one else does, I love you and I believe in you and I believe in your ability to create a
better life and Dr. Topol just gave you a roadmap that based on science and evidence will do it.
Alrighty, I'll see you in a few days. I'll be waiting in the very next episode to welcome
you in the moment you hit play.
And I had never stopped to think about how... Oh, do you want me to stop? Okay. What is that? Is it garbage day?
Okay. I'm good. Okay. Terrific. You did great. Oh, thank you. You're dynamite. It's fun.
Oh, thank you. You're dynamite.
It's fun.
Dr. Joe Ball.
You're so good.
No, no, no.
You made it easy.
Dr. Joe Ball did great everybody.
Just act one.
You look really good.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician,
professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see
you in the next episode. Stitcher.