The School of Greatness - 904 Live a Longer Life and Reverse Aging with Dr. David Sinclair
Episode Date: January 20, 2020Aging is a disease.Everyone gets old. But did you ever think of the symptoms of aging as a disease that can be cured?I'd heard about Dr. David Sinclair and his ground-breaking longevity research, and ...I knew he would be a fascinating person to interview about this idea.We ended up going really deep into the science of why we age, how to reverse it, and what is actually in our control.David told stories he'd never shared before, and I kept asking questions because I was so interested in what he was telling me.David Sinclair is a professor in the Department of Genetics and co-director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Aging at Harvard Medical School. He is an inventor on 35 patents and has received more than 35 awards and honors. In 2014, he was on Time Magazine’s list of the “100 Most Influential People in the World,” and listed as Time's Top 50 in healthcare in 2018.In this conversation, we discussed all of my top questions on why we age, how much of it is reversible, and all of the ways I've heard to increase your longevity and health.David is a wealth of wisdom on all these topics, and he also shared some of the hardest times of his life, including watching his mother die of lung cancer and why that impacted his work so much.If you are committed to improving your health and living a long and healthy life, this conversation is a must-listen in Episode 904.Is it possible to reverse death? (7:42)What are the main ways to turn on the longevity genes? (9:30)How do you say no to all the food offers around you? (17:30)How did you get fascinated by longevity and anti-aging? (19:15)How did you recover from a major career setback? (37:06)What was the biggest lesson you learned from a year of being homeless? (49:28)How important are heat and cold therapy to anti-aging? (59:38)What is the ideal way to use fasting to improve your health? (1:05:42)How old do you think you’ll be able to live? (1:14:15)How much does inflammation play into the longevity of your life? (1:20:44)How our body’s built-in defenses against aging work (1:12)Why 3 meals a day is too much food for most people (10:09)The main benefits of a plant-based diet for longevity (13:13)Why it’s important to remember that there will always be another meal (15:10)Why death is so shocking to us even though it happens all the time (21:01)The molecule that has been proven to protect against a variety of diseases (29:34)The story that David has never told of how he was homeless after college (44:45)How cells lose their ability to stay young (55:32)Lewis’ experience doing a cold-exposure intensive in Poland with Wim Hof (1:08:45)Plus much more...If you enjoyed this episode, check out the video, show notes and more at http://www.lewishowes.com/904 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes
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This is episode number 904 with New York Times best-selling author and one of the 100 most influential people in the world
Dr. David Sinclair
Welcome to the school of greatness
My name is Lewis Howes a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur and each week
We bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock
your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Buddha said, to keep the body in good health is a duty.
Otherwise, we shall not be able to keep our mind strong and clear.
I am super pumped about this one.
For whatever reason, I have been researching more and more about health and nutrition and about aging over the last few years.
I think once I hit 30 years old, something in me started to say, I'm not a teen.
I'm not a 20-something anymore.
I can't just destroy my body and eat, I'm not a teen. I'm not a 20 something anymore. I can't just
destroy my body and eat whatever I want and look good. I've got to actually put in the right
nutrients in my system. I've got to take care of my sleep. I've got to weight train. I've got to
do all these things to help me not only look good, but most importantly, feel good and help me live
a longer, healthier life. And Dr. David Sinclair is a professor in the Department of Genetics and co-director of
the Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Aging at Harvard Medical School.
He's one of the best in the world at what he does.
Now, he has suggested that aging is a disease and that we may soon have the tools to put it into remission.
Pretty crazy, I know.
And he has called for greater international attention to the social, economic, and political
risks and benefits of a world in which billions of people can live much longer and much healthier
lives.
He is an inventor on 35 patents and has received more than 35 awards and
honors. In 2014, he was on Time Magazine's list as the 100 most influential people in the world
and listed as Time's top 50 in healthcare in 2018. He's truly doing incredible science and research to figure out how to reverse aging and to
eliminate the disease of aging.
Now, in this episode, we get into it.
We go really deep.
I ask a lot of curious questions.
I have no clue about a lot of things with scientists, what they do, how they practice,
how they research, what happens in their labs.
So I go in deep and ask him about that.
I think you're going to laugh at some of these moments of my just curious questioning.
We talk about the methods on how anyone can add more years to their life instantly with
a few simple decisions that you can make.
The benefits of putting your body under stressful situations like extreme cold and fasting to
reverse aging. The importance of
sticking to what you believe, even if you're surrounded by critics, a story of hustle and
homelessness that Dr. David has never shared before, and what you can start doing right now
today to improve not only your health, but the health of your family. This will literally save
and transform your life if you listen to this
fully and if you start to apply the science, the research, proven facts that have extended human
life already. Please dive in. If you have friends that you want to have live a long, healthy life,
you can save someone's life by sharing this link, lewishouse.com slash 904. Just send a friend a link, send someone a
link who you know maybe is struggling with their health, maybe someone who wants to improve their
health, and someone you deeply care about. If you want to help people save their lives,
you can send them this link, lewishouse.com slash 904. And without further ado, I'm super
pumped about this. Let's live a healthier, happier, longer life with the one and only Dr. David Sinclair.
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Readiness podcast.
We have the iconic Dr. David Sinclair in the house.
Thank you so much for being here.
Very excited about this.
You are the master on talking about lifespan,
talking about how to reverse aging,
talking about how to extend our life, our health, and everything.
And something you said before we got on here and that I read in your book
is that aging is a disease.
Is that right?
Well, that's what I think, yeah.
That's what you think it is.
Would that mean death is a disease as well?
Well, death is the end product of aging.
Okay.
So, we've cured just about every other major disease.
So, you don't die from an infection.
You typically don't die in childbirth if you're a woman.
So, now what's left is aging.
And while we're whacking each of these diseases, cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer's, trying to whack them on the head like a whack-a-mole game, we forget
that the main reason all these diseases occur is that our bodies are aging.
If you don't get old, you don't get those diseases.
Is that because your immune system is strong and so that it fights against disease,
essentially?
Well, yes, it's similar, but it's not the immune system that you're thinking of.
We actually have inbuilt defenses.
We call them longevity genes
that we can activate in our daily lives
by doing certain things.
Longevity genes?
Yes, that's what we call them.
How many genes do we have?
Oh, we've got about 23, 24,000 of them.
23 or 24,000 genes.
Right, but there's only about 50 really important ones for longevity.
Okay, and what are the, what is the longevity gene? Well, the ones we study are called Sirtuins,
and there are seven of those, and they're in all parts of the body, and they do all
really crazy good stuff for us. Okay, and where do telomeres come into play? Well,
they're part of it. Okay. Yeah, there are seven hallmarks or eight,
depending. These are causes of aging. So telomeres are one of those hallmarks. Other things are like
the battery packs winding down, those mitochondria in our cells. We lose stem cells, all this other
stuff. But here's the important point. We think, A, that there's a unified cause, a whole upstream cause of all of those things.
We can talk about that.
But also, these sirtuins, they defend against all of those.
So while we used to think we'd have to develop eight different drugs to slow down aging,
if you just tap into these longevity genes, they take care of everything.
Really?
They continue to regenerate good cells.
They continue to fight against disease or stress or whatever it may be. They do. They're really smart. They make proteins
that act like traffic cops telling the body how to fend against adversity. And they've been with us
on the planet since life first arose. And it's seven of them? Well, the ones I studied,
there are seven. There are others.
There are seven sirtuins and there are three classes of longevity gene.
The ones I study, those seven, and there's a couple of others that you can turn on.
Why don't you study the others?
Are they not credible enough?
We do, we do, but we scientists, we like to specialize.
Gotcha, gotcha.
But in truth, even though 10 years ago we used to fight with each other,
my longevity gene is more important than your longevity gene.
It was ridiculous.
My worm's living longer than your worm.
It was really silly.
But now we've realized, most of us admit that all these genes are talking to each other.
And if you tweak one set, the others will be tweaked too.
Right, okay.
So these genes, when you say you study them
What does that actually mean? You're pulling like?
Blood out of different humans and you're putting them in a tube and you're researching and you're what's actually happening to study these
Yeah, I'm a non scientist. I have no clue what that actually means, right? Is it like rats?
Is it humans is it it, you know?
You've got to come to the lab.
You've got to see what's going on because it's crazy stuff.
We do anything we can to answer a question.
You're cloning humans in there.
You're doing all sorts of stuff, right?
It's crazy stuff.
So we're driven by the question, not by the technology.
So most labs will say, okay, I'm an expert in rats.
I don't give a rat's about a rat.
I care about answering a question.
And our question is, why do we age and what can we do about it? And will that transform medicine?
And so what we do, if you came to the lab, you'd see we've got jellyfish growing, we've got mice
that are living longer and running on little treadmills. Up in the lab, we have stem cells
that we're growing and actually turning them back in time. We can reverse the aging of these stem cells
Yeah, so what does that mean you take a cell from a human?
Like yeah, I guess sample like a skin sample like skin brain cells growing the really yeah
Yeah, what brain cells growing the dish? Yeah, so like you take it from like a living human
Yes, you take a little piece of brain, you put it in a dish,
and you reverse the age of the brain.
Correct.
Wow.
Yeah, that's what we do.
Now we can actually grow little brains in the dish, too.
From scratch?
Well, you start with a network of cells, and then you coax them into forming these networks.
And it's like a mini brain, yeah.
Okay.
And we can age them forwards, make them older.
No way.
Because we think we understand
what's driving the aging process.
Really?
And then we reset.
And then reverse it.
Right.
So you can create a brain from nothing,
a bunch of little cells that come together
and create a thinking brain.
Well, I don't know how much it thinks,
but it'll respond to stimuli.
It'll fire, yeah.
And then you can make it older, like Benjamin Button, and then reverse its aging.
Right.
Wow.
I'm telling you, it's crazy.
But when I'm in the lab and with my students, for us, it's just every day.
It's like going to work.
It's just like, ah, there's a brain.
It's getting older.
It's getting younger.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
But now that I'm talking about it with you, it does sound bizarre.
It's fascinating for a non-scientist.
Yeah.
The other thing that's weird about this profession, anyone who wants to go into it,
is that essentially you're an apprentice under me, and you work in the lab,
and you spend a few years learning how to do all this stuff.
It's not easy.
The first two years, basically, you screw up.
Yeah.
But it's weird that, to think about it, you get a bench in a lab and some chemicals,
and you have to make
the chemicals yourself usually. And then your job is to discover something nobody else has
discovered.
New, something new.
It's got to be not just slightly new, radically new. Because I'm at Harvard, they
don't give prizes for discovering something obvious.
Wow.
It's got to be shocking. And if it's not shocking, it's not worth studying.
And haven't you discovered like tens or like 30 something, 35 awards for new discoveries or something?
Or 35 patents?
What do you have?
Something crazy.
Some numbers like that.
You've discovered a lot of new things.
Well, yeah, yeah.
If I didn't, I wouldn't have a job.
There's motivation to always be doing cutting edge stuff.
But what drives us and the reason I think we've been successful
is that we're driven by the question, not by the technology. And the technology comes second.
So what I'll do is I'll say, okay, here's a question. We want to figure out why does cold
improve health or why does fasting, not eating, improve health? How do you figure that out? Well,
then you got to pull together teams of people, molecular biologists, biochemists,
mathematicians, computer software people, and we get in a room and we figure it out.
Really?
So what would you say, your questions are why do we age and how do we reverse it?
Is that the two questions you're focused on the most right now?
Yeah, that's pretty good, yeah.
Why do we age and how do we reverse aging?
Right.
Do you think, and so to reverse aging? Right. Do you
think, and so you say aging is a disease, is death a disease as well then in your mind? Is it like
that just leads into, and can we reverse death? Is that a possibility? No, not yet. Okay. Not yet.
So anyone who's had their head frozen, there's nothing I can do for you right now. But we can
turn back the clock
radically. Just in the last couple of years, we've figured out that there's a backup hard drive of
youthfulness in the cell that we can access to reset it. So usually, the earlier you start
in turning on your longevity genes, the better. We've learned from studying mice and now humans
for many years that if you're in your 20s 30s 40s
You want to start turn it on now do it now because don't wait till you're 80 and then say how do I go be 60?
Again, most people do they wait too long. Hi
well, cuz they're in denial that they're mortal and
And we used to think that aging was was a one-way street. You couldn't do anything about it. We now know from studying twins
that 80% of your health in old age is up to you,
how you live your life.
Right, your community, your positivity, your thinking,
your food, the sleep you have, like all those things, right?
Yeah, and the reason that they work, we discovered,
is because they turn on the longevity genes.
That's the breakthrough. Okay. So now we're artificially tweaking these longevity genes genetically or with
supplements or hopefully medicine soon. Got you. But you could do it in more natural or organic
ways is what I'm hearing. Well, right now, that's what we've got. And even if you just do the five
obvious things, things like skip meals and don't smoke and exercise, that'll get you an extra 14 years
on average. Really? It's that big. That's not even using high tech. There's no technology,
just like living a good life. Right. So what are the main things to turning on the longevity that
anyone can do without technology, without money, you know, science? Yeah. Well, okay. So we've,
first of all, don't smoke. Yeah. That'll damage. So we first of all don't smoke
Yeah, that'll damage your DNA that'll accelerate the aging process. Does that include like e-cigarettes and all these other?
Vaping does that also?
I'm a big
Advocate for for putting nothing artificial in your body including vapinging. My mother died from lung cancer,
so I'm pretty militant about it. I don't think vaping is as bad in terms of the number of
chemicals getting into your body, but we've seen recently it's probably not healthy anyway.
Okay. So no smoking. That's one.
That's one. Next one is don't eat so much. Eat less often. So not malnutrition, of course.
You don't want to get too thin
but this three meals a day plus snacks is ridiculous in the future you're great i need
to get rid of that yeah well you're also working it out but someone like me who's not an athlete
yeah the most exercise i do during the day typically is typing uh three meals a day is
too much actually one meal is enough for someone like me.
Wow.
Yeah, I'm now 50, so my metabolism is way down.
50? You look like you're 37.
Oh, thanks.
That's great, man.
You might need glasses.
I thought you, like, 100, and you look at 37.
You probably reversed the aging.
Well, I'm glad I don't look 80,
because that would really be bad for my message.
Okay, so we got some no smoking
Eating less. Yeah
Next one would be the obvious high-intensity interval training
Lose your breath once in a while lose your breath. What do you mean? I'm just by like working out like yeah become hypoxic
Tell your body that you're being chased by a saber-toothed tiger or something like that
The reason all of this stuff works in terms of the diet and exercise,
it's not that your blood flows more or that being hungry is just healthy for the body.
It's actually that your longevity genes get turned on by these things.
And why does that happen?
Why does it happen in humans, in mice, even in yeast cells for bread and beer?
The reason is that the body senses adversity and says, crap, we got to fight back.
We might die next week without food and we're running away from tigers and lions.
That's what this survival network,
this longevity gene.
So it turns it on when it feels like
it's in survival mode.
That's it.
We want to be in survival mode
and we spend our whole lives
trying to reduce
our adversity right being comfortable right don't be hungry yeah don't be puffed don't walk
you know valet your car right roll your suitcase don't carry it for goodness sakes
we've done the worst no wonder we're getting sicker and sicker we're in a world of convenience
right and it's the worst thing we could we're getting sicker and sicker. We're in a world of convenience.
Right.
And it's the worst thing we could do for our bodies in terms of longevity.
So those three things.
Okay.
The other two, let's see, what else is there?
Oh, the type of food you eat is important.
There's a big debate, of course. They say plant-based is going to extend the telomeres, right?
If you're eating leafy greens, that's what I've heard.
Right. Well, among other things, it's also going to have a couple of really important types of molecules. One are the monounsaturated fats, fatty acids. You get that
from olive oil and avocados. Those are great. And we've just learned that that's a really important
trigger for a certain longevity. Olive oil.
Yeah.
I think when I had Gundry on, he was like, I drink a cup of olive oil a day or
something like teaspoons of olive oil.
He's just eating it.
He's like, I'm trying to get as much in as I can, putting it on everything.
Yeah.
Well, let's get back to that because there's a new discovery as of a week ago that
says we think we understand how that works.
But in olive oil, there's also what are called, the other important component of a plant-based
diet are polyphenols, which are the molecules that plants make when they're under adversity,
when they're stressed. And I believe that we've evolved to sense when our food is running out.
So we get that signal when our plants are stressed. So you don't want to eat plants that are like this white liquid lettuce you can buy, Californian lettuce.
You want these colored vegetables that have been a little bit stressed, a little bit dried out.
Wine is a perfect example. It's full of polyphenols, one called resveratrol that we've
worked on for 20 years. And it activates these longevity pathways really well. So stress your food,
organic. I am for a plant-based diet, but I do eat meat occasionally. It tastes pretty good.
But it's very clear, Dan Butner's right, where you go to the longest lived places in the world.
The blue zones, right? Sardinia, right? The Okinawa Island in Japan. They're not eating all
meat. And actually, we know that if you eat a lot of meat, you shut down some of these longevity pathways.
Really?
Yeah.
So you actually, you might look good and grow muscle.
And that's great when you're young.
You want to find a mate.
You want to look good.
You want to feel good.
But in the long run, I don't think that's healthy.
Really?
So cutting down less and less meat, at least, having more plants is the way to go.
Yeah, that's what I've done.
I was on an Okinawa diet in my 20s and 30s.
Which is what?
There's rice and leaves?
It's a bit of rice.
You've got to watch out for white rice because it'll spike your sugar.
Yeah, it's a lot.
But it's a lot of tofu, miso soup, green leafy vegetables, dark greens for these phytochemicals.
And then what else was it?
There was a bit of fish.
Okay.
Yeah.
But also what's important is not a lot of food.
I mean, these days I'm stopping eating when I'm about 60%, 70% full.
And I'm trying to skip breakfast and lunch.
I just never feel full until I'm like eating so much,
and then I'm like, okay, I'm full.
Well, you're a young, active, hungry man.
Well, here's one of the things.
I think, one, when you eat slower, you start to get fuller you start to feel it and I've I'm the
youngest of four and so as a kid we didn't have a lot of money growing up in a small town in Ohio
and there wasn't that much food so I learned to like grab and just shove it in my mouth and that
became a habit that I've kind of stuck with and I'm not starving anymore like the
food's available at any time I can afford it and I have it all the time but I think it's
reconditioning my mind or a habit or a routine of like you know I'm not scarfing my face down
right now but you know it's that mindset of what if I'm gonna go hungry for sure we all suffer from
that well not all of us but those of us who grew up in regular families, we were told to finish our meals.
Right.
Don't leave anything on the plate.
There's hungry kids everywhere.
And it's got problems.
Brothers and sisters, right?
They're stealing your food.
My wife grew up in a very poor family.
And even when she was a student, she could barely afford food.
She would scrounge and buy potatoes.
And at the dinner table, she'll kill me for this,
but she will eat like it's gonna all go away tomorrow but I have to remind her and everybody
everyone should know this there's always gonna be another meal there will be
another meal don't worry but we're conditioned to eat food when it's in
front of us I think it's a mental conditioning and it's also like you've
in your body's tricking you or it's your brain or it's a mental conditioning, and it's also like either your body's tricking you,
or it's your brain, or it's your gut, or something is tricking you, like, I'm still hungry.
Even though you've had 2,000 calories in 10 minutes, you're still like, oh, there's food.
It's like turning something on where you're like, I want to eat that.
I don't know why that is.
Well, yeah.
I mean, it's the reason that we're here.
Our ancestors put on fat, and they survived the famine.
We don't have famines anymore.
Thank goodness.
But we've descended from those people.
So we've got the genes in our brain that say, eat, eat, eat.
And it turns that gene off.
Well, you can take certain types of food.
I drink a lot of tea and coffee, hot water even, just to fill up my stomach.
That works really well.
Okay.
Hot water, not cold water. I just like the feeling of hot water even, just to fill up my stomach. That works really well. Okay. Hot water, not cold water.
I just like the feeling of hot water.
Cold water isn't as...
Actually, it might be something about the heat.
I've never thought about it, but for me, that's what works.
So when I get a little bit hungry at lunchtime,
I'll just...
I'm basically drinking tea.
Warm water tea.
Yeah, you put it like some...
Interesting.
But it's a fight all the time.
You know, I fly a lot and people are bringing nuts.
Nuts and cookies and ice cream.
And you got to fight it.
And it's really hard to fight all the time.
How do you say no?
Well, I do.
You do.
But how do I do that?
So I've trained myself to fight it.
And the best thing that I do besides saying, can I have a cup of tea, is what do I want
to look like next week? What do I want to look like next week?
What do I want to look like a year from now?
What do I want to look like when I'm 80?
So you tell yourself that.
You ask yourself the question.
I think it's also how do you want to feel
tonight, tomorrow, next week when you're 80?
It's like look like and feel.
Combination is powerful.
Right, because your mind is saying
now is important
and you've got to train yourself to say
Tomorrow and the next year is just my life. Yeah, right and that's more important
Okay, so was that the fourth thing or the fifth thing the thing I didn't mention
There are a couple of things. Let's divide it up. One is get good night's sleep sleep is everything
Yeah, and then surround yourself by friends and people who take care of you. Yeah
That's like the Blue Zone way too, right?
It's like be around a good community, get lots of rest and naps, move a little bit,
eat healthy, right?
Well, these are things that most people should know, but they don't do.
So you and I are here to motivate people to do that.
Exactly.
But the research that I discuss in the book is how to take that to a new level, how to optimize those things and add some science in there.
To reverse it.
Or getting there.
I like this.
Okay, before you share that stuff, how did you get into this fascination or curiosity of reversing aging in the first place?
Was there someone that inspired you?
Was there a moment?
Was there an event did something
happen uh yeah it was an event that i think we've all gone through what we just forgot about
we learned that there's such thing as death we don't live in a disney movie right and all happily
ever after it's not it's shocking when we're four or five we're told this and we realize it
and we're in denial you know oh, that's not going to happen.
But for me, I haven't been able to get that out of my mind.
Really?
It's cruel, don't you think, that we're sentient beings that know that this is all going to
end.
We fall in love with, we love people, they take care of us and then they're gone.
Yeah.
And I don't want to live forever.
I would just like to leave the world a better place.
Yeah.
And I think one of the big things that we're missing in medicine is that aging is driving
a lot of our sickness.
And when we treat diseases, we're treating them far too late.
Once you've got...
Well, I won't say which disease, but take my mother, for example.
Let's use her lung cancer as an example.
She could have not smoked.
She could have done all the things we've talked about.
She could have perhaps taken some molecules that we work on and not had lung cancer.
By the time she had a tumor that was the size of a grapefruit in her lung, it's game over.
She couldn't do anything.
Right.
But we've put billions of dollars trying to cure lung cancer, not prevent it.
If we just prevented it, we wouldn't have to worry about it.
Prevention is easier.
Prevention's very easy.
Yeah.
Right?
So how old were you
when your mom passed away
from lung cancer?
I was 25.
Okay.
And,
no, let me take that back.
She was diagnosed
when she was 25.
When she was 25.
When I was 25.
When you were 25.
And she went on
another 20 years.
Really?
Yeah.
But it wasn't,
wasn't really an enjoyable life.
It was a...
They took out her left lung.
So was she breathing from a tube or was it like...
She could breathe, but she wasn't...
She was always short of breath.
There were times when she thought she was just going to suffocate in front of us.
Eventually she did, by the way.
That was not pleasant.
Oh, my gosh.
That's not something anybody wants.
Yeah. And no one tells you what it's like
to see your mother die or your parents die.
It's horrific.
Wow.
I've never experienced another death, just this one,
but it was not pleasant.
And we don't talk about it.
We deny it, you know,
oh, they're gonna drift off into sleep.
That's not what happened to my mom.
It's suffering.
It's pain, it's agony, it's suffering, right?
Yeah, my mother was turned into a writhing lizard
in front of me, and all I could do was whisper into her ear,
thanks for being the best mom I could ever hope for.
Oh my gosh.
And that was it.
A couple of minutes later, she's turned blue and choking.
No way, you can't do anything for her.
Right, that's it, you're helpless.
You're helpless.
Anyone who smokes, please,
please work to give it up. It's just not a good ending. Wow. Were you with her alone? Were you
with family? Was it friends? Yeah, my father and my brother and I. I was also in denial because I
flew from America to Australia to be with her. You're like, gosh, she's going to get through
this. Yeah. You tell yourself she's always recovered.
Last 20 years, she'll pull through.
And the doctor pulled us aside and said,
we've x-rayed her lung.
There's barely any lung left
that's working. Oh my gosh.
You better say goodbye. And I said, what are you talking about?
She's laughing in the bed. She's fine.
And 10 minutes later,
she starts choking
and fluids building up in her lungs and
You know if you've ever seen somebody have something stuck in their throat
That's what it was like. Oh, you can't get it out. Can't get it out. You can't she's drowning like maneuver
You can't CPR you can't try that. Well, I'm running around saying help me help me and all the nurses like it's nothing we can do
Wow Help me, help me." And all the nurses are like, it's nothing we can do. Wow.
So, that's traumatic.
So please, let's try to prevent these diseases as long as possible.
How old was your mom when she passed?
So, she was my age when she was diagnosed with lung cancer, and then she lived till
70.
Wow.
But she could have, hypothetically, if she didn't get hit by a bus or something, she
could have lived a much longer life if she didn't have the cancer.
Oh, absolutely.
And through my teenage years, I would shout at her, stop smoking.
You're going to die.
When you're in hospital, I'm not going to come visit you.
Oh, my gosh.
You're only given one life.
Because I'm pro-life.
Everything about me is we are so lucky to be alive.
One in a trillion sperm from your parent, from your dad, and it's you. What's the chance?
It's a gift.
It is. Don't throw it away. And she was the opposite. She's like,
drinking and smoking, and I've lived a good life. Don't bother me. And she paid the consequence.
Oh, my gosh. Not only did she pay it, but you and your family had to go through it also.
Yeah. Well, I did go and visit her in hospital when your mom's sick. Everything's out the window. Of course. But my father's the opposite. He's taking good
care of himself. Really? And, uh, you know, now he's 80, uh, perfect health, no, no aches,
no pains running around the world, like a 25 year old. Wow. So that, that's the dichotomy there.
If you do the right things, it's a very different ending. Now, were you already into anti-aging when she was diagnosed?
Or was it way before that?
Was it shortly after that?
Or when did you become kind of obsessed with being the master of anti-aging?
Well, I've got an obsessive personality.
I think anyone who's become at the top of their profession has to be obsessed with something.
They're not normal people.
We're not normal.
At age four, I became obsessed with it, actually.
Four?
Yeah, four.
My first memory is four.
I don't even know.
Well, this is my first memory.
Really?
What was it?
Seeing your mom smoke and be like, I don't want to die.
Well, there was that.
Yeah, in the 70s, early 70s when I was a kid, the smoke was everywhere, I couldn't stand it.
But that was not really my motivation.
It was that my grandmother, who helped raise me,
told me, everybody's gonna die, and so are you,
and so is your cat.
And my grandmother was brutal.
She didn't lie, she told it as it was.
But she said, now that I've told you that,
you know, I am I crying.
My cat's going to die. Santa Claus isn't real. My cat's going to die. It was my cat that was the problem. You love this cat. Yeah. Cause she said, oh, your cat's going to die before you're
20 or whatever. She said, now that you've realized that, here's the lesson. Make the most of life.
Do your best to make humanity the best it can be.
And don't waste a second. And that was it for me. Okay, I'm going to go for it.
But when did you actually start researching? Okay, now, maybe you had this positive mindset,
I'm going to make the most of every moment. I'm going to enjoy my life. I'm going to
learn quickly and not be stuck in these painful moments. What was it like middle school high school? You're like, oh
mitochondria and telomeres and you know
So I was a pretty average kid. I like to have a lot of fun and I didn't really take care of myself
Actually, you'd be surprised. I was I was pretty chubby as a kid really
Yeah, but I got to college and two things happened one was where we in school
I was in Sydney and sitting so I went to there aren't that happened. One was I decided- Where were you in school? I was in Sydney.
In Sydney, okay.
So I went to, there aren't that many choices in Sydney.
I went to, it's called the University of New South Wales,
like the MIT of Boston.
So I was there and I wanted to get a degree
in what we used to call genetic engineering.
And I thought, that's a cool thing.
Everyone's going into computing, I'll do something.
Because I've got also the personality that I don't like to be told what to do, and I like to be
different. You'd be unique, one of a kind. Yeah, I do. Me too. I was a big dumb jock who never drank
a sip of alcohol in college, who learned salsa dancing and guitar, who was in choir in the
musical. Whatever you thought I was going to be, I was like, I'm going to do the opposite so we have that in common yeah probably your parents learned they had to tell
you the opposite of what they wanted to do exactly so i went i went to college and i realized two
things one was if i'm uh chubby i'm not going to get a girlfriend right so i started working survival
survival mode i ate carrots for a month and shed um 15 kilos whatever that is in pounds
uh got a best body i would have dreamed of it's long gone that was one thing so i became healthy
yeah and i've i've been this weight ever since basically haven't changed it takes effort yeah
and the second thing i realized was that i think I could make a difference in the world.
And I was playing cards with friends.
We did a lot of drinking.
They did a lot of smoking.
Typical college life.
And there was a moment where somebody was talking about old age and laughing at old age and making fun of old people, which we do sometimes as kids.
We're young. Yeah. How old they are. And I had an epiphany. I think I was 18 years old and I said,
do you realize everybody? Hold it. No cards. Shut the up. I've got something to tell you.
I've just realized that we are probably the last generation of humans to live a normal lifespan
because there's going gonna be a breakthrough
and we're gonna miss out by one generation.
Out of the, how many hundred thousand generations
leading up to us of primates,
we're the last ones, we're pathetic.
We're gonna die at 100 or 80 or whatever.
Right, and our kids are gonna live to 130, who knows what.
And their kids are gonna be 160.
Yeah, so then I thought, hey, that's what I want to do.
I want to make that future be a reality in my lifetime.
Wow.
Isn't it sad?
Just give us another 50 years to be born.
How much farther you could extend life, right?
Yeah.
I didn't realize how quickly the science would go.
I thought that I'd probably be lucky to see a little bit of change in my lifetime.
Like 5, 10, 20 years, maybe more?
Well, we already got 14 just on what we talked about.
Right.
But the kind of breakthroughs that we've made now, you know, I get criticized for looking
too far into the future because I'm supposed to be a Harvard scientist.
But I think another 5, 10 years is easy.
Look at my dad.
He's doing all the right things.
Also taking some molecules that we've
worked on in my lab. They're not doing any harm. I hope that he makes it past 100. It's not a
clinical trial, clearly, with one subject. But he's a role model for what life can be and should
be like. Right. So now, is this molecule the same molecule that you worked on 10 years ago that got a
lot of credibility and then was debunked, I guess, by some researchers and then now
in the last week has come back to be verified as true?
One of them, yeah.
So resveratrol is the red wine molecule.
It's one of these polyphenols that plants make when they're stressed out. And that we found, at least we thought, that when you take this molecule over many decades
or as a supplement, you'll be protected against a whole variety of diseases, including obesity.
Dr. Really?
Yeah.
Dr. Is that why everyone says, like, drink a glass of wine every night or something?
It's going to make you live longer.
Well, that's basically because of me, But there's other research, of course.
Other people have studied red wine and found that people who drink red wine tend to live longer.
Live longer.
Gotcha.
Dan Butner will tell you all about the blue zones.
Right.
So this molecule, is it something you discovered 10 years ago or you started researching 10 years ago?
Well, so remember these longevity genes.
They make proteins that tell the cell how to survive.
Remember these longevity genes, they make proteins that tell the cell how to survive. And we can turn on the production of these proteins by being hungry and exercising and
being out of breath.
But we wanted to do it artificially because if you're an older person in a wheelchair
or you're like my mom and she...
You're not doing HIIT workouts at 90.
Yeah.
You need a drug.
You can't just expect them to run marathons or go hungry.
So we wanted to
figure out how does fasting, how does exercise work? That's another important question,
couple of questions. And we found that this sirtuin, number one, there are seven, number one
was very important in mice. If we turned it on, we can make mice with extra genes, by the way,
in the lab. You can make them? We make mice. From scratch?
Well, from stem cells.
From a cell, you can turn it into a moving mouse.
Yeah, that's easy.
That thinks and breathes and has a heartbeat. Come to my lab.
You can make a mouse.
What?
We can make them glow green if we want.
It's not that hard.
You can take cells, and they just kind of form together and turn into a mouse?
Well, we need another mouse to gestate it, but it's pretty easy these days.
Okay, this is crazy. I'm coming.
I want to check it out.
You can take a skin cell of a mouse, turn it into a stem cell, make a sperm, make
an egg, fertilize itself, and make a mouse out of it.
What?
This is nuts.
Anything's possible these days.
Wow.
So we engineered a mouse to have more of this two-in-one gene, and it was protected
against a whole variety of diseases.
Really?
Were you injecting with disease to test that or just natural environment diseases?
So we have a lab where we-
It's like other mice have the disease.
We let them age.
And that's the main thing.
We have a lot of old mice and we test them if they're frail.
We look at their strength, put them on treadmills, test their memory. We've got this whole floor in the building of mouse testing
machines. How many mice are in the lab? Thousands? Well, I don't want anyone to be upset because we
do have a large number of mice, but our goal is to make them healthy. Gotcha. Unlike a lot of other labs.
You're not trying to kill them like most labs.
No, no, no.
You're trying to say, how can we keep them as healthy and a little longer?
And our mice live longer.
So we're one of the few labs where we do that.
But yeah, so there's sort of two-in-one gene.
It makes a protein that helps the cell.
So we found this red wine molecule just coincidentally turns it on.
So if you put the ends,
we can put in the little test tubes,
where these little test tubes,
and we put in the protein,
and we can test whether it's more active or not
by how much it glows or fluoresces.
And then we tested thousands of molecules.
And the one that worked the best
was this one from red wine.
It made it glow really brightly, fluoresce.
And that was the beginning of this story where we found a molecule from red wine, it made it glow really brightly, fluoresce. And that was the beginning of this story where we found a molecule from red wine that turned
on our body's defensive enzyme.
And that was great.
We put it onto yeast cells.
They lived longer.
I did that experiment in my dining room, actually.
You can make yeast cells live longer.
Imagine that.
Oh, my gosh.
Crazy.
We fed it to mice, and they were much healthier.
They were resistant to obesity and diabetes and cardiovascular problems.
It basically made mice immune to a high-fat Western diet.
Wow.
They can eat whatever and it wouldn't affect them.
And they just burn it.
Just as long as those that were-
They burn the fat quicker.
Well, they were actually still fat.
That was the crazy thing.
But fat didn't hurt them.
They were immune to the effects of being fat.
Wow. That's amazing. Okay.
Yeah. But then, and this is the one that my father started taking about a decade
ago, same as me. But here was what happened. That was 2003 to 2006. Things were great.
We started making better molecules. We made thousands of them. They went into human clinical trials, put it on the skin of patients with psoriasis.
Actually, it was a pill, and the psoriasis got better.
No way.
Yeah.
We're on track to having a medicine for aging and diseases that are related to aging and inflammation.
Wow.
But then everything fell apart.
Why?
So in 2010, a couple of companies published scientific papers that said it's
all wrong, that this molecule resveratrol does not activate this enzyme.
This fluorescence that we're looking at in this test tube was just an artifact.
It was fluorescing for other reasons.
It wasn't real.
Really?
And yeah, my world fell apart.
The company stopped working on it, and it apart. The company stopped working on it.
And it was hell.
You stopped working on it?
Well, we didn't.
Well, for about two weeks, I stayed in bed.
It was horrific.
I went into mild depression.
My lab, I didn't know what to do.
I had friends calling me, well, ex-friends,
who called me and said, you know, I'm really sorry
and didn't hear from them again.
It was a tough time.
And this is what I built my career on.
I was known in the world for this.
And then it went away.
Wow.
And if you're a scientist and you lose your reputation, you're screwed.
Because you're relying on grants and your colleagues' opinion of you to give you money,
to give you those grants.
Their endorsements, their recommendations, things like that.
Right, right.
So if no one's recommending you anymore no one's
giving you money yeah grants dried up I had 20 people vibrant lab world-leading
science top of the world gonna make this medicine BAM most people left no money
for people tiny little lab even people in my lab said, I'm out of here.
This is crazy.
You're full of it.
And there was one student who I had.
His name is Basil Hubbard.
And he said, you know what?
There's something to this.
I'm not going to give up.
Wow.
But the other people in the lab, one guy in particular was really mean.
He just said, you're working on this BS stuff. Wow. This resveratrol stuff.
But he figured it out.
It took him three years to figure out that this-
The intern.
He was a PhD student.
Okay, I got you.
Basil.
And just through grit and stubbornness and genius,
he figured out that it was real.
And we published in 2013, three years later,
that there was good evidence that we were not wrong.
So, okay, take a deep breath.
I'm swimming.
I'm not drowning anymore.
This is three years of like depression or just figuring out how am I going to get to my life, my career, everything back on track.
Right.
Right.
I was so mad with the world.
I'm sure.
I said it.
Screw everyone.
I can't trust anyone anymore. Well, it was that because I the world. I'm sure. I said it. Screw everyone, I can't trust anyone anymore.
Well, it was that because I devoted my whole life to this.
I'd barely taken a weekend off in my life.
And to have that happen, it was like,
oh, you know, I could have retired at that point.
How did you recover?
Well, so the problem was I didn't want to die not knowing the answer.
Wow.
Needed to figure this out.
Yeah.
And knowing that I was wrong was still better than not knowing at all.
So we tried to figure it out.
Because it's better to be like, okay, I'm actually wrong.
Here's the proof.
Here's the science.
You can live with that is what you're saying.
Right.
Knowing the truth.
And then, okay, how do we solve it? What's the new solution, right? Where do I go next? the science you can live with that is what you're saying right knowing the truth and then okay how
do we solve it what's the new solution right where do i go next yeah and we actually had evidence
that we weren't we weren't wrong so that's why i got out of bed went back to the lab wow and uh
said let's figure this out let's do some key tests that'll tell us either way, if we're right or
we're wrong. And it turns out we weren't wrong. And there was this study you referred to that
came out a week ago that said, you know what, that mechanism that you discovered actually is
really important for being activated when you're fasting, when you're hungry. What happens is when you deplete fat, let's say you're hungry, you haven't eaten breakfast,
you'll melt away some of the fat and you'll generate what are called free fatty acids.
And some of them we can get from plants, from olive oil, monounsaturated fatty acids, the good
ones. A lab discovered that the way resveratrol works is actually just mimicking those unsaturated fatty acids, the good ones, a lab discovered that the way resveratrol works
is actually just mimicking those unsaturated fatty acids that we already know are good for you.
And Dan Buettner in the Blue Zones would tell you, from the Blue Zones would tell you that these are
what leads to long life. And so it turns out resveratrol, if this is true, is basically mimicking
Without resveratrol, if this is true, it's basically mimicking gobs of olive oil, but without all the calories.
My father and I, maybe we've been doing the right thing.
Your father's been doing this for 10 years.
Even though people try to say this isn't true, this is stupid, it's not actually doing anything,
but he's been taking it consistently.
Right.
Well, he's a scientist too.
Everyone in my family is a scientist,
including my wife.
And people say,
oh, are you testing this on your father?
No, he's a scientist.
He can read this stuff for himself.
And he's the one that made the decision
that he believed in it.
And yeah, I'm glad that he did
because so far so good.
Wow.
Okay.
So that just happened last week.
So 10 years,
you've been waiting for this
to be like proven again.
Right. And we've always predicted, I've always said resveratrol isn't the big, big story. The
big story is A, can we make a medicine, which we're still trying, but B, what we call it the
endogenous activator. What's in our own bodies that resveratrol is mimicking. And it's these
monounsaturated fatty acids that come from when we're hungry or if we
eat these healthy plants.
Wow.
Okay.
That's pretty exciting.
It's damn exciting.
But it's not as exciting as I thought it would be.
Because in life, it's always an anticlimax, right?
You think, I can't wait until this in my life happens.
And then it happens, you think, yeah, but tomorrow I've got something else to figure out.
So really, maybe that's just my personality.
Are you like that?
I'm very much like that.
I remember my whole life,
I wanted to be an all American athlete.
This is one of my first memories,
is watching a football game on TV with my dad,
and him continuing talking about these few guys
on the Ohio State football team who are
All-Americans. And you know, you want your dad's approval and he's talking about a few guys on the
team. And I'm like, I want to be an All-American athlete. You know, if these are the best of the
best, that's what I want to be. And all I did was obsess about being the best athlete I could be
and becoming an All-American. And I remember I was in the Decathlon National Championships
2005. And there's 16 athletes that go to the National Championships per each event.
But the top eight are All-Americans. So you got to be in the top eight to qualify as an All-American.
And the Decathlon is a two-day event. First day, I have
a pretty good day. Second day, I struggle a little bit and it gets down to the last event, which is
the 1500. And my coach is like, okay, you need to beat these two people. And if you get in front of
them, you're going to make it. And I literally crossed the line with like one of the guy next
to me that I needed to beat. It was like neck and neck. And I didn't know who, who went in front of the other. And so I'm,
I'm waiting for like 30 minutes for the final results. And they make the announcements of the
final eight and I got eighth place. And I remember feeling like this, so much excitement. I'm on the
podium. I'm like holding the trophy. I'm like, I did it, my childhood dream came true and then probably 20 minutes later I was angry, I was negative, we're all having
dinner celebrating and I'm like, I don't want to be around anyone and I didn't know why
that was.
But that's like with every accomplishment I had in my teens and 20s, I kind of had that
same nature where I was just like, well, it's not good enough.
I need to go after the, become a professional athlete.
I need to do it twice. I need to go after the, become a professional athlete. I need to do it twice.
I need to, I don't know why that is.
Well, that's why you and I are sitting here.
I think we never rest.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So anyways, but we have a lot in common.
I'm like a scientist.
I'm going to train you.
Yeah, exactly.
We're going to build a rat from scratch.
It'd be amazing.
Um, okay.
So, so this paper came out or this finding came
out a week ago you had a nice moment but then you were like well on to the next right right i don't
know why i i think it's because i i was hangry at the time on a plane drinking tea but when you read
it or you just found it or well actually so the the guy that trained me, so I went to MIT after Australia.
Lenny Guarente, he taught me how to be a world-class scientist.
And he and I have been good friends,
but frenemies kind of, butting heads scientifically,
but we're very close.
Anyway, like all mentors, I look up to him.
His opinion of me matters.
And it was he who wrote an email
to me last week. And the subject line was, wow, exclamation point. And in there was this paper
saying, you were right. Yeah. But he didn't write anything. That was it. Wow. Those three letters.
And the paper. And the paper. That's it. And you knew what it meant. Yeah. That was it.
Was he on your side after the whole paper came out
seven years ago or eight years ago, I guess?
Yeah, I got to give him credit.
He never gave up on me.
He stayed with you.
Yeah, but he's been through hell too.
This feels really tough.
Isn't that interesting?
The people that have gone through the most crap,
ups and downs,
they're usually the ones that stick with you
when you've got some type of public shaming.
Yeah.
I noticed that as well.
That's crazy. So that's good. So you had a few people that kind that stick with you when you've got some type of public shaming. Yeah. I noticed that as well. That's crazy.
So that's good.
So you had a few people that kind of stuck with you and said, hey, listen, like, this
is going to hurt for a few years, but eventually you're going to do something else and then
people are going to forget or they're going to move on.
Yeah.
Well, he's not that touchy feely, but he was very supportive.
And, you know, we're both the two guys that drove this field of sirtuins, these longevity genes.
So we're comrades.
Got you.
You're frenemies, but you're like, we need each other to push it forward and validate our research.
Right.
Your enemy is my enemy.
Right.
Okay.
It's interesting.
Now, you told me the story before we got on about how you were homeless for a year in the UK.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Can you tell me, how did this happen?
You're in Sydney in school,
and then you move to the UK,
and you're, what, sleeping on the streets,
eating rats that you made from scratch or something,
or what?
Kind of, without the rats,
but basically that kind of food.
Yeah, this is a story I haven't ever told anybody.
Why not?
It just doesn't come up.
I don't know.
I'm not the kind of guy that boasts about this kind of stuff.
So my accent is a little bit Australian and a little bit UK.
And so I spent a year and a bit in Wales, in Cardiff, in the middle of winter.
So Cardiff in the middle of winter.
My ancestors are from Wales.
Are they?
Yeah.
Do you know any Welsh?
No, I don't.
Crazy language.
Crazy.
Tried to learn a bit.
But they sing their sentences.
So that's why my voice is a bit more like that.
Anyway, that's not important.
What's important is that I like to take a lot of risks, especially when you're young.
You've got to take a lot of risks in your 20s, 30s.
Go for it.
So when I was 23, I said, I'm going to go to the UK and do some of my PhD research.
And there was one guy in Cardiff that knew how to do some stuff.
So I said, I'm going to come and work for you.
He said, great.
I got no money.
And I said, that's great.
I got no money either, but I'll figure it out.
But I had a few thousand dollars, like, you know, from delivering pizzas. Sure. And so I bought a ticket, flew over there, stayed in his house for a few weeks. But he said, you can't live here. I've got my own family to deal with. He was a bit of a grumpy guy anyway, and I didn't want to live with him.
So what I figured out was if I go to the bar, the pub we'd call them, at night and play games.
So they used to have these little consoles where you'd play Trivial Pursuit and you'd make friends.
And after they were drunk, I'd say, have you got a place? And they'd say, we don't have a bed, but we've got this bean bag if you want to come around.
So I'd do that and I'd stay there for a week or two and then I'd have
to go find another place. Wow. Usually. And I was eating these cans, these tins of tuna. Tuna.
Yeah. Bumblebee tuna. Staple. Ramen. So for a year you did this? Yeah. So you had no, you weren't
paying rent anywhere for almost a year. Were you making money as well? Like a little side money or?
I think I still got, it was $15,000 a year, but you making money as well, like a little side money? I think I still got,
it was $15,000 a year,
but the problem was that the pound
versus the Australian dollar was twofold.
So my dollar was half the value.
So it wasn't enough to pay rent.
You were just like,
okay, I gotta eat food,
I gotta get the bus,
I gotta do whatever, yeah.
You know what's funny?
Gosh, we have a lot in common.
The one time that I almost slept in
the streets, I was in Philadelphia. I had no money. I went to a conference and I met someone
from LinkedIn who was like, you got to come to this event. You're going to meet some great people.
I was probably 22, 23. I just got done playing professional football, trying to figure out
how to get a job, how to find some connections. And this guy I met named Ben Sterner was like,
come to Philadelphia for this conference. You can stay with me on the couch. So he ends up, um, I stay
on a, in a hostel for two nights. And he's like, can you stay with me the last night on the couch?
Cause I only had enough for two nights in this hostel was $14. And I took a Greyhound bus to
get there. It took like 30 hours. It should have been like six.
And the last night I'm like, okay, tell me the address.
Let me know. I'll meet you at your place and I'll crash on the couch.
And he, his phone dies.
So I never get his address.
I never get a hold of him.
And I'm in the hostel.
I didn't have the money for the hostel.
And they wouldn't give me a bed.
So I'm walking around the streets of Philadelphia with my suitcase and a jacket on. And it's like 3 a.m., 3.30. And I'm like, what am I
going to do? There's like benches. Maybe I'll sleep on a bench because my Greyhound bus was leaving
like later that next day. And I don't drink, right? But I was like, for some reason, I feel like if I
go into a bar, I'm going to meet someone and I'm going to build a relationship and maybe they've got some couch or something and i did exactly what you said
you did i met some people they're playing darts i went in there and i was like let me play some
darts with you and um i just like built a relationship after 30 minutes i said hey
i don't place a crash do you guys have like a couch or something and they had a futon that
had been coming there i let myself out in the morning and that was it but that's how how you sleep, not on the streets, and you meet friends at bars.
Yeah, it's a tip to everybody who's watching.
That's it.
That's how you survive.
That's how you survive.
Go to the bars.
Yeah.
So Benjamin Franklin said he slept on the floor
and knew that he could survive.
If you can get through that,
then the rest of your life is easy.
Just sleep on the floor.
Yeah.
No pillows, no sheets, sir.
Yeah, and that's how I've lived my life,
at least up until fairly recently, which is I know
what it's like to be poor and not have anything.
So I'm going to go for it because the worst that can happen is I just go back to that.
What was the biggest lesson you learned about yourself with a year being homeless?
Being homeless isn't so bad.
It's a lot of fun. but also that i i have grit you know i grew up
in a pretty easy family i was in the suburbs of sydney my parents weren't wealthy but they
certainly weren't starving um i didn't know if i had what it took to survive so that was my real
test you needed that experience yeah yeah and everything after that was easy. Yeah.
Well, except for being debunked, fake debunked by your researchers and peers.
Physically, I can handle anything.
Mentally, I'm not that strong.
Really?
Well, I try.
Do you think this made you more emotionally, mentally strong, going through this worst-case
scenario for your career?
I like to think so.
But I still get beaten up.
Even, you know, in my 50s now.
Really?
We just had, I just had 10 years of work
with 15 labs collaborating with me guiding them.
And it's 55 scientists.
We submitted this research. We wrote it up. It took a year to write. We've sent it to 55 scientists. We submitted this research.
We wrote it up.
It took a year to write.
We've sent it to a journal.
And as a scientist, your work gets reviewed by your peers anonymously.
So they can write whatever they want.
Put their name on it, yeah.
So what happened just before the holiday break was there were four people who wrote comments about our work.
Three of them said, this is paradigm shifting, brilliant, got to be published, will change
the world kind of stuff.
And you didn't know who those names were?
I didn't.
There was one that wrote, this isn't exciting.
We already knew this, which is not true.
And the journal said, we're going to side with the one naysayer.
Oh, that's the worst.
That really was a blow.
Isn't it crazy?
I felt like someone hit me in the head with a baseball bat.
Isn't it crazy? But we also focus on the one negative when there's thousands of positive
reviews of a book or something and you see one negative and you're like, why?
Well, I got rejected. So that's 10 years of work.
Oh my gosh. With 15 different labs working on this
Is that right?
It was everything and I had had this in my mind that we're gonna get it into this world-class journal
And I talked to the journal and they said we're right. We're waiting for it. Let's do this
and that was the future was supposed to be this and nothing else and then to have it rejected and
Editors us usually they go with the majority, majority rules.
Why would they go with one?
I still don't know.
That's what, it doesn't make any sense.
Is there a way to resubmit?
We're going to challenge it.
So I'm writing up a defensive letter, an appeal as we call it.
Gosh.
But yeah, I thought I was resilient and nothing could get to me, but that did.
It's kind of like being an Olympic gymnast.
It's like you could have your best performance,
but if one judge didn't like the way you pointed your toes
and they gave you a 9.2 as opposed to a 9.9,
you could lose based on an opinion of one person.
Yeah.
I don't like that.
That's not like, I thought science is like black and white.
Oh boy, there's a lot of politics
Really, but it's like if you've got here's the proof 15 labs indicate independent case studies and I
Triple checking. I don't know. That's how it's supposed to work That's why this was such a blow because everything I thought about how science worked was thrown out the window in this case
Why don't we even have science?
It'll get published, don't worry.
But I mean, if you can't prove something through science,
why do we even do it then?
It seems like deflating to me. Well, we can prove it.
It'll come out.
Well, what'll happen is either we'll get this appeal
and that'll be great, hopefully.
Cross your fingers.
But we're going to have to rewrite it potentially
for other journals, which will take us a long
time.
So the world won't find out about this for a while.
Man.
Can you just write it yourself and publish it on your website and say, this isn't published
in a journal yet, but here's all the research, here's all the proof, here's the studies.
You can.
It's just not looked at as credible.
Right.
No one will give you credit for it.
Now, there are what are called pre-publications. So now we can put our work online.
And in fact, you can go online and see this work.
If you go to a place called BioArchiveRxiv and type in my name, you'll see that the work is publicly available.
But most people don't see it and the press can't comment on it.
But I mean, how many of these journals
have published things that people said,
yes, this is true, but it wasn't true?
You know what I mean?
Yeah, quite a lot.
Probably a third of what's published
turns out to be wrong,
but that's true for all science.
Why do they publish it?
I mean, it's like...
Well, we do our best, right?
We can always be wrong you
know even even newton was wrong even einstein was wrong until quantum mechanics overturned it all
we're all wrong all science is wrong right until we're wrong we are but but those steps along the
way are stepping stones to more knowledge But science goes forward and backwards in little steps,
but overall it's forward.
This is exhausting.
Gosh, I just want to hang out with the rats.
Yeah, it is.
I mean, you try not to make a mistake.
You try not to conclude things that are wrong
because that will damage your reputation.
Fortunately, so far in my career, that hasn't happened.
That's why it takes so long to do the research, right?
It's why it takes so many trials, so many rechecking, years and years.
Well, most labs don't spend 10 years on a project.
You'd spend maybe two or three.
Right.
This was the big one for me.
Oh, my gosh.
This is sad.
This was figuring out why we age.
Oh, my gosh.
Oh, that's not important.
Was there anything new in there that you discovered in the last year that hasn't been out yet, that hasn't been talked about?
Yeah.
Well, it's in my book.
But other than that, that might be why the journal's angry that some of it ended up in the book.
But maybe I jumped the gun.
Got it. So what we think we've discovered here is that cells lose their ability to stay young
because they lose information.
Because they lose information.
Yeah.
So there are two types of information in our cells.
One is the genetic information that we get from our parents, of course, DNA.
But there's another level of information that's just as important, but we just don't talk
about it.
It's called the epigenome, which is the instructions to tell the cell which of those 25,000, 23,000 genes to read.
And if you read the right ones at the right time, you'll be a nerve cell or a skin cell.
Because you don't want to read all 23,000 at once.
So that doesn't work.
Doesn't work.
So the epigenome is like the pianist that plays the piano.
And what we think we've figured out is that aging is that the pianist becomes demented.
Demented.
Just can't play the tune right anymore.
Interesting.
The wrong genes come on.
What is that called? The pianist? What's that called?
The demented pianist?
What's it called?
The epigenome.
The epigenome. Okay, so the epigenome becomes demented.
Yes.
Loses function in some way. What's it called? The epigenome. The epigenome. Okay, so the epigenome becomes demented. Yes.
Loses function in some way.
Right, and we can cause that to happen.
One of the main reasons that it happens, we think, is chromosomes break every day, a trillion
times in our body every day.
And in the process of having to open up the DNA and fix it and put it back together, the
epigenome gets messed up
and we lose the ability to read the right genes.
So how do we stop it from breaking?
Well, you can't always prevent it.
Start by not smoking.
Start by not getting burnt by the sun.
Really?
Yeah.
Don't be in the sun for too long?
No.
I mean, we know that ages your skin.
Any Australian will tell you that.
What about like,
what's the amount of time
we should be in the sun without aging?
Or does it always have sunscreen on at all times?
Isn't that chemicals that affect the skin?
I mean.
Yeah.
There are some people who will tell you
that zero is the best.
Zero sun?
Well, that's what some people say.
Isn't vitamin D supposed to help you live longer too?
Well, yeah.
They would say to take a supplement instead.
But I'm not that. This is human nature, right? Like. Sun for me, it makes you feel good, a bit of UV,
but you don't want to overload the body. It's very easy to overdo it. So 10, 20 minutes. When
your skin is starting to tingle, don't get red. But in Australia, we used to pull pieces of skin
off our. Blisters, right? Yeah.
Yeah.
So I've only been burnt maybe once or twice in my adult life for good reason. So don't stay in this town too long.
Right.
Right.
Unfortunately, it ends up, you know, you look white and pasty, but for Caucasians anyway.
Right.
But that's the price you pay.
For Caucasians anyway.
Right.
But that's the price you pay.
If you sun tan a lot in your 20s, by the time you're 40 or 50, you will look about 5, 10 years older.
Okay.
Now, it's not all about vanity, but skin cancer is also an issue.
Yeah, yeah.
In Australia, we learn a lot about that.
Wow.
So you can be in the sun, just put protection on is what I'm hearing.
That's right.
Or just stay inside all day. Yeah. No, put protection on is what I'm hearing. That's right. It's like, or just stay inside all day.
Yeah, no, put protection on.
I mean, it's like enjoy mother nature.
You can go to the beach.
You can go on hikes.
Just wear a hat, put sunscreen on your face, your arms, your hands, right?
Right.
Okay.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, you got to go outside for sure.
I mean, otherwise, what's life? What's life, yeah.
Okay.
Now,
I just did this trip
to Poland with Wim Hof.
We're with a group of guys
where we did this intensive
breathing and ice therapy training
where we were in the ice
for 10 minutes
up to our neck
breathing
and exposing ourselves
to the cold.
We also hiked
four hours on a mountain
that was about
50 miles an hour,
wind at the top, minus 22 Celsius, with no clothes on, just shorts, hats, gloves, and shoes.
So exposing our legs and our chest and our face to the wind and the cold and pelting us with
hail, essentially, at the top. How important is heat therapy and cold therapy to aging or anti-aging?
I want to hear all about this story.
This sounds fascinating.
Definitely tell us more about that.
But yeah, so when I started writing the book, my editor said, you got to talk about this
cryotherapy and also sauna.
That's not science.
It can't be real.
So I looked into it, and we'd also actually, I must admit, we'd done some work on cold
already.
One of these sirtuin protective genes, not number one that I talked about, but number
three responds to cold and actually turns on healthy production of what's called brown
fat.
So the more I looked into it and the more I can ponder my own research I thought maybe being cold does help your health
and so I write about it but I think that the data it's not as strong as as
fasting and exercise but it's believable that what you're doing when you're cold
or actually when you're hot is turning on those protective longevity gel.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, not internally.
You're not going to freeze internally and be cold.
But on your skin, you're going to...and just under your skin, you're going to have what's
called brown fat, which is full of energy-producing and heat-producing mitochondria, the battery
packs of cells.
And those mitochondria are really dense, and it's one of the reasons that they're brown, not white fat. And the brown fat, it's not like normal fat where
you're just storing energy. It's actually metabolically active, so it's burning energy.
But it's also seemed to be healthy because it's secreting these little proteins that
tell the body to stay young. We don't know what they all are, but there's a lot of evidence
that having it... Dr. Stay young. We don't know what they all are, but there's a lot of evidence that having it...
Stay young.
Well, yeah.
So brown fat is found
mainly in babies.
Wow.
Because they can't shiver.
Little babies.
Did you know they can't shiver?
Why can they shiver, though?
I don't know.
It's weird, isn't it?
How old do you become
until you can shiver
for the first time?
I don't know.
I'd have to guess.
But newborns don't shiver.
And they have to use
this brown fat.
They're full of it
But as we get older we lose it. In fact it when I was
You know 20 years ago when I was just starting out people thought there was no such thing as brown fat in adults
And then they did
PET PET scans and found that this brown fat it was
Mostly in people who were cold. Mm-hmm and experiencing cold and found across the back mainly.
So you can recreate brown fat as an adult.
Yes.
Or beige fat.
You can turn your white fat into brownish fat by being cold.
Do we know how much cold therapy you need to do?
Is it once a month?
Is it once a week?
Is it daily?
Is it for a certain amount of time?
Well, we're still figuring that out.
Okay.
But it seems like the more the better, unfortunately.
So what you were doing sounds perfect.
So like every day doing a cold shower
or an ice plunge for a couple of minutes a day
or just something like that helps generate brown fat,
which is a layer of mitochondria,
dense mitochondria under the skin,
which helps you burn more fat.
Yeah. Is that what it is?
That's a good way to put it.
It's designed to keep you put it okay it's designed
to keep you warm but it also is telling the body hey times are tough we could we
could freeze to death mmm adversity right what doesn't kill you makes you
live longer well that's a good one so put your body through pain throughout
your life as consistently as possible like controlled pain, right?
Going in a sauna for 15 minutes and pushing an extra minute like that feeling of adversity going in cold
Working out hard doing something where it's a you're not gonna kill yourself or hurt or break a leg, but it's like discomfort
Is that what I'm hearing? That's the most important lesson
We call it hormesis and it's it's basically your body will be complacent if you don't tell it to work hard.
The problem with our society is everything is designed to be comfortable.
That's what we strive for.
I was coming here flying out and I'm looking at all the roller bags and thinking, I'm carrying
my two bags here and I'm thinking, should I put it down? No, I'm going to walk with my bag because that's what people used to
do. But you know, these days everything is all about comfort, constant food, don't exercise,
don't be cold ever. It's crazy. We're killing ourselves. We're accelerating our aging process.
So you've got to get out of that comfort zone we're killing ourselves by being comfortable right so is there too much like if i'm cold therapy and
hot and fasting and doing a hit workout is there such thing as too much discomfort in your life
that will start to age you i don't think so so i could fast be in the cold and the heat
So I could fast, be in the cold and the heat,
two minutes of sun, like do all these things in a day, do it consistently, carry my bags everywhere,
and you think it'll make me younger.
I think your rate of aging will be slowed down dramatically.
Wow.
Skip a meal or two a day.
Yeah. As much as you can.
Yeah, I mean, there's no question in my mind
that this would work.
Give you an extra, at least 15 years, maybe 25.
Wow.
Dr. It's not rocket science.
If you do that to a rat, if you give it cold or you actually give it less food-
It starts to-
Dr. If you come to my lab, you'll see mice.
We've got mice that are on a regular diet, they can eat whenever they want.
Food just laying around, just eat as much as you want. Dr. And those are not fat mice because they are on a regular diet that can eat whenever they want. Food, just laying around, just eat as much as you want.
Dr. And those are not fat mice because they're on a lean diet.
The ones we give the high-fat diet, they die 30% faster anyway.
They age rapidly.
But let's say even if you're lean like you are and eating well, but you're eating a lot,
right?
Constantly.
If we do that to a mouse, they will age at what we call the normal rate. So they'll be two years old. They're getting frail. They get gray hair
They're looking old and then they'll die about six months later on average
The mice that are on this calorie restricted diet that either get less food in total or only eat for a few hours a day
They're running around the cage. No hair they're super active they stay young
so don't eat well you gotta eat it's fasting it's it's what do you like intermittent fasting
you do like the 24-hour fast do you like uh three-day fast what do you think is ideal for
most people well yeah scientifically i think going for three days is great. Scientifically.
Peter Atiyah, hats off to him.
That's his profession.
He can do that.
What's the prologue or what's the diet?
What's this guy?
Peter Atiyah?
Yeah.
I don't know what his diet is called.
Does he have a diet?
Does he have a program for this or no?
I don't think so.
He's a doctor who's experimenting on his body in severe ways.
And three days is like what he does. Well, he goes for a week without food he just drinks water wow and uh skin and bones though
right yeah it's probably not the best for high performance of life no no if you're an athlete
forget it so what if you're an athlete if you want to work out and do hit training yeah what what do
you think is scientifically right like one day fast and then intermittent fasting and skipping meals
well, so I get asked this every day and the simple answer is
Do as much as you can and the more the better
In general without losing your energy
But the other fact is that nobody knows the true answer anyone who who says this is the way to do it is BSing you.
Because everyone's different.
We all have different needs.
Different bacteria in the gut, different energy levels, different genes, different lifestyles, different professions.
And so for someone like me, I'll tell you what works for me is, so I'm often sitting probably for half the day.
I got a standing desk.
That's a start.
Right.
You're not working out.
No.
I work out once a week for a few hours.
That's about it.
That's it.
As much as I can do.
So for me, what I do is I very rarely eat breakfast.
I'm not hungry in the morning anyway.
I try to skip lunch with my cups of tea.
I would say I'm about hungry in the morning anyway. I try to skip lunch with my cups of tea.
I would say I'm about 70% successful.
I might have a little nibble of something in the afternoon because I can't focus well.
But then I have a normal dinner. I go out to dinner and I'm living normally.
That works for me.
And I think for an athlete, at least skipping one meal would be good.
Would be good.
And then maybe one day a month not eating or something, right?
Yeah, that sounds reasonable.
Going for a whole week, though.
Yeah, 24-hour fast could be good once a month.
Yeah, one thing, though, about that three-day fast.
I've never done it myself.
But what happens, we know, is that it kicks in what's called the the super cleansing
Autophagy pathway which kills the bad cells and gets rid of the bad proteins that have accumulated three days
You need to go for three days to really get the deep ones. Unfortunately, you've never done it though, huh?
She'll need it. You look like you're 30. So you're fine. Maybe I could be 20, you know
Yeah, I'm like I'm just a schmo. I'm not as well. I don't have the willpower that you guys, I couldn't go hiking in the snow. Right. I think you could. It's a mindset. You could do it.
Really? Well, tell us about that. How did that feel?
Life changing. Like to know that I could hike practically naked. The only thing is at the top,
like when I took my gloves off to take a video,
like then I started to really freeze.
So I think the extremities need to be covered
and I think you should have supervision
if you're gonna try this.
I wouldn't try this by yourself.
But since I had warm gloves on,
I think I was able to do it.
But I remember hiking the last 20 minutes,
it was like a cliff coming off the side the wind was
whistling, you know 50 60 miles an hour and
Can't see much and it's really cold
Like it was cold going up most amounts into the first three and a half hours the last 30 minutes
It's just like there was no trees to protect you from the wind yeah it was a lot
cold are you shivering i was sweating still i was sweating so i had sweat coming down from the hat
cold like you know you're generating heat and um it just it wasn't fun at the top like it
it started to hurt and you lose feeling in certain parts of your body yeah like my chest is like stinging and cold
but i think i got enough brown fat underneath me that i was like generating heat i had a good layer
of fat in my stomach so i think that helped but you know i went with a group of guys so it was like
this bonding experience we're all in this together i think if i did it alone i probably would have
stopped at one point where there was like a lodge at the top and then there was another 30 minutes
I think it would have stopped and be like I did enough like I proved it. I did three and a half hours
I got close to the top
but we were on a mission to reach the
summit and
Doing it together. I think a positive mindset in general
Maybe this isn't scientific
But I think having a positive attitude can get you through a lot of adversity. And what you speak out of your mouth can dictate the
direction that you go in your life. And again, this probably isn't scientific or research, but
if I say to myself, as I'm getting to the top, I'm cold, I'm tired, I don't know if I can make it,
this is stupid, what was I thinking? I'm probably going to convince my body to start getting colder and shutting down and
looking backwards.
But because we were like, man, it's sunny out.
Like we were just saying, we're warm.
It's hot.
It's sunny.
This is a great, nice hike.
Like we just kept speaking like these positive words and whatever.
We convinced ourselves. we believed it our bodies
started to believe it whatever we did we were doing it together and we got to the top and i
think what we say dictates a lot of our our energy and our actions so i don't know if that's proven
science or if that's just well yeah you probably have to do that a few times to live longer.
But psychologically, it's changed your life?
Absolutely.
I was trying to think, like it was a five-day trip.
And I was like, are there other weeks in my life that were better than this week?
We, you know, going to the national championships to become an All-American was a big dream of mine. And every day leading up to it but I was still in class I was in school it
wasn't all fun you know playoffs and college football were like great weeks
leading up to these games right but this was like every day we were taking on new
challenges with a group of people I don't know something about it was
really special and Wim Hof was like this crazy character who's also helping a lot of
people. Yeah, he's great. And he's getting people to get uncomfortable, which is going to help them
fight disease, live longer, all these things that you talk about. Whether he knows the science 100%
or not, he's doing things to get people to get uncomfortable on a consistent basis.
And I think that helps people in general. Right, physically and mentally. Physically and mentally.
We're doing breathing exercises every day.
As you know, most people are very shallow breathers.
And that probably affects, I don't know, if you're shallow breathing your whole life,
I don't think that can help you live longer.
I'm assuming.
I don't know the science.
But just taking deep, full breaths all the time and allowing the body to relax.
It was so peaceful.
I didn't look at my email once in a week
i didn't think about social media i was just present breathing going through hard challenges
and it felt so peaceful and relaxing i mean it was discomfort and then like peace and discomfort and
then like ah right well you need to experience adversity to be able to have the calm. Like we have in our lives, we know what suffering is.
So that's why, you know, even on a bad day, it's still a pretty good day.
Yeah, that's true.
I get home and my wife, who's wonderful, she'll say, how was today?
And after my mother died, I now say, even though it's a bit morbid, nobody died today.
It was a great day.
And that's my cutoff. If someone dies, it's not the best day.
Right. And if you've been through that, then all the other stuff is just minor.
Average. Average pain. Yeah. So the lesson here is push yourself. Do things that you don't think
you're capable of doing. Experience adversity. It'll help you physically, but even more so mentally.
Yeah.
How old do you think you can get to live personally with all the research you've done now and
with potentially in the next 20, 30 years of science that you're going to discover?
If nothing happens physically with a bus or something, how long do you think you personally
can live
if you optimized everything?
What's possible?
Not what's gonna happen, but what's possible.
Right, right, right.
Well, before I tell you that,
I'm not doing this to live longer.
Right, you don't wanna live forever.
I wouldn't mind.
I'm not looking forward to a horrible death,
but that's not my goal here. It's not that I'm worried forward to a horrible death, but that's not my goal here.
It's not that I'm worried about myself.
I do want to leave this planet having done something meaningful.
That's what drives me mainly.
But I'm also a scientist.
I'm experimenting.
I want to know stuff.
Remember, I told my friends we're the last generation.
So I'm trying to accelerate knowledge at Harvard and at home.
So I do these things to myself.
I measure myself, glucose levels, a whole bunch of parameters to see what's going on,
not as proof, but as indicators of what other people may test.
And so I know from my own body that I'm still pretty young.
I still need to do the definitive age test.
We can now look at exactly how old
we are. Really? Like a ring of a tree? It is. It's called the Horvath clock. It's
the pianist. You can measure how old the pianist is within a few percent. So you can actually
predict when you're going to die now. Shut up. Really? Have you predicted it? I've got to do it.
I've got to do it. I've done a primitive form of that, which is, in full disclosure, it's a company that
I own a little bit of.
So this company takes blood tests.
Can I say the name?
Sure.
It's called InsideTracker.
I mention it because people are going to write to you about it.
Sure, sure.
So InsideTracker does blood tests, and they measure a bunch of things.
And I've been doing that for about 12 years.
So I know I'm tracking myself and everything's staying young.
And they can estimate your age.
It's a rough estimate.
So-
You can estimate your age by taking a blood sample.
Right.
And measuring things in there that go up and down with-
And it's probably like a three year swing either side or something or it's pretty close.
Yeah.
It's an indicator of how well you're doing with your body.
And I actually took a test a few years ago, many years ago, and they came out as 58.
I freaked out.
Because it made you older than what you are.
I was older than I was.
I was 48 at the time.
Oh.
What did you change?
Well, I upped some doses of molecules, took a couple more, and stopped eating badly.
The next test came out at 31.
What?
Shut up.
What do you mean stop eating badly?
Like sugars and candies and cakes or is this like-
Well, I wasn't strictly intermittent fasting.
I'd eat lunches.
I had more fat than I do now.
I'd eat pizza and things like that. I love pizza. Gosh. But I've turned lunches. I had more fat than I do now. I'd eat pizza and things like that.
I love pizza.
Yeah. But I've turned it around. I've never been unhealthy, but this was a real-
That was a wake up call.
I have terrible genes. My father's side, we all died in our 70s usually.
So what does it say that you could live to? You don't know yet.
Well, so I haven't answered your question.'t that says that I've probably got another 20 years
Extra right extra than the average lifespan. Well based on that blood test. We'll see. Yeah, but what could we live to?
so here's the good news is that
If we just continue on the trend that we've been on for 200 years and it's been perfectly linear
So you can keep stretching it out.
A child born today in the US can expect, not hope, but expect 50% of them to live to 104
and in Japan 107 if we keep going up.
Now that's not going to happen by accident.
That's going to take researchers like me to figure it out and a lot of medical research.
And them doing the work and people actually not eating horrible and smoking and doing the things that help.
Hopefully, that'll help too.
That's why I wrote the book is to help people live longer.
But just 100 years is their lifespan now.
Well, yeah, that's the predicted trajectory.
That's without any radical breakthrough.
Wow.
Without, you know, fixing the pianist.
Now, if we can fix the pianist and truly reverse aging, like a reset switch, then who knows?
We could live to 120, maybe longer.
It's hard to say.
Maybe you or people born today.
Well, I'm going as fast as I can.
And we've had a big breakthrough in the last year that we found the reset switch, we think, in the cells to reset the age.
So what's the next step?
It's like you guys are researching this for the next five, ten years, figuring out how to do that, reset it.
Well, we know how to do it in a mouse pretty easily.
That worked first time.
That was easy.
Okay. worked first time. That was easy. And one of my students, another brilliant student,
he decided to reverse the eye, the age of the eye. So he took old mice that were basically blind
and made their eyes young again so they could see just like they were young again. Yeah.
So you could do that with people too?
Well, that's the next step. That's a few years away, but we're working. I'm an entrepreneur,
as you know. So I'm trying to push this out of the lab as fast as possible.
But if it works on the eye, what else could it work on?
Probably everything, I think.
Now is it safe?
We think it is.
We've given it to mice for a year and no problem.
No cancer showing up or anything.
But you don't want to push it too far.
You don't want to go back to being an embryo.
You'll be the world's biggest tumor. Right, right.
Wow.
So what do you think you could live to personally?
Yeah.
You know, I'm trying to avoid the question because my peers, my colleagues hate it because it's unproven.
It's unsanitary.
Got you, got you.
But just like, you know, obviously it's not proven, but just, and if all goes well, you know,
don't get sick and all these things don't happen. All right. So, so no traumatic events.
People are going to rewind this video when I die, aren't they? So I'm on a trajectory
to live well beyond 80 because I'm healthy. Yeah. My father's an example. He's 80. He's 80.
And you should live at least 10 years beyond that. Right. So at least that.
Minimum.
I should be healthy into my 90s.
Be nice to break 100.
With the technologies and some of the medicines that I'm working on and one of them that I'm
actually taking, maybe beyond 100, that would be nice.
In a healthy way, playing tennis.
In a healthy way, beyond 100?
A lot of people do that. It's not for everybody, but you do see people in their hundreds that are still working and happy.
How much does inflammation play into the longevity of your life?
Oh, it's huge.
It's huge.
It's one of these hallmarks that if inflammation is going up too fast, that's basically your clock is accelerated.
So how do we get rid of inflammation?
Well, there are a number of ways.
One is do these things and turn on your longevity genes, which are anti-inflammatory.
Other ways, I'm still taking a little aspirin every day.
The data still looks pretty good for that.
Taking an aspirin?
Yeah, 81 milligrams a day.
That just takes away inflammation?
Yeah, mostly in your blood vessels.
Wow.
But you need to take it for a long time, of course,
I think, to stop that.
Resveratrol is anti-inflammatory.
And remember how I said those mice
have beautiful arteries, no fat on them.
Really?
So that's good.
Huh.
Yeah, but basically it's that.
But overeating and being obese is going to massively turn up inflammation.
Wow.
Yeah.
Within a few weeks, you'll do it.
Just eating bad food for a few weeks will turn it up.
And fasting will kill inflammation.
Exactly.
Wow.
But you might say, well, if your immune system isn't overactive, what about getting sick?
It turns out your immune system gets heightened, but inflammation, chronic inflammation, gets dampened. So when you talk to a centenarian
and say, did you used to get sick? They say, can't remember, last time I got sick.
In my- Centenarian?
Centenarian, people who live over 100. Okay.
So that's a hallmark of longevity. They don't remember when they got sick.
They don't get sick. They rarely get even a sniffle or a cold
How is it possible? Well, they have massive immune systems
So even if someone sneezes on them that viruses is attacked and killed
But here's the thing since I've been eating and living the right way over the last few years
Since that terrible scary test. I haven't got sick. No sickness
No, no cold flu. No, and I'm on planes people are sneezing on me
I've got we've got three kids. They're always sick
What if you got like it what if you ate something that had like food poisoning that would fight against that too?
Or is that kind of harder the question? I don't know
No, but I haven't chicken or something, you know, it's like I haven't had food poisoning recently
But it might just be that I can afford better food now. That's good.
I like that.
Wow.
This is all fascinating stuff.
And I know you've got more in your book, Lifespan, Why We Age and Why We Don't Have To.
Make sure you guys get this book.
Really powerful research and science.
I got a couple of questions left for you.
This is called The Three Truths.
I ask everyone at the end of my interviews.
So I want you to imagine it's your last day on earth and you're 150, 200 or however old you want to be.
And you've done tons of research.
You've written every book you want to write.
You've answered every question that you can think of
while you're alive.
You publish all this information.
But for whatever reason,
you've got to take your work with you.
So no one has access to your work anymore,
your research.
All your content is gone.
It's going with you to another world.
That sounds like hell.
Okay.
Just imagine.
But you get to leave behind three lessons
or three things you know to be true
from everything that you've learned in your life.
You can write it down on a piece of paper.
Everyone would have access to these three truths.
And this is the only three things you could share
that they would have access to.
What would you say are your three truths?
All right.
All right, the first one that I live by
is all about maximizing human potential.
I believe that we're way underutilized.
But for the individual,
what you have to think every day is do something that's worth writing
about or write something that's worth reading.
So have an impact.
That's my lesson is don't settle for mediocrity.
Do something spectacular and don't listen to the naysayers.
Okay. Is that one? That's one. Mediocrity do something spectacular and don't listen to the naysayers
That one that's one yeah, the next one would be
Do something that scares you every day
Send off any email that you wouldn't be you'd be afraid to do
And along with that when you're young take risks like like did. You can fail. That's okay. You will fail. But it'll make you, it'll open you up to more opportunities. But also
you'll be a stronger adult, stronger 40, 50-year-old.
Okay. There's two.
Ah, gee, the third one. I haven't pre-prepared this.
But this one's from the heart.
I've described to you what it was like to see my mother pass away.
And I spent my life arguing with my mother.
I regret that.
So as a parent now myself, let me tell the younger people.
Tell your parents how much you appreciate what they've done for you
Tell them that you love them assuming that you do if they're good people because there will be a day most likely when
They'll be gone and you won't have a chance to hug them anymore or see them anymore because they're gone and when they're gone
You think how is that possible that somebody can be there
and not there within a matter of two minutes?
That happens.
And yeah, I just wish that I'd told my mom more
about how much I appreciated her.
So I've dedicated the book to her
because she cared more about herself than her kids.
Wow, that's special.
Those are good three truths.
I love those.
I wanna acknowledge you, David,
for a moment for being obsessed about helping people. And I think your commitment and dedication to
doing, I mean, I don't know what I've done for 10 years consistently, but doing research for 10
years on one thing and trying to get the most out of it and writing these books and taking the time
to come on my show and just being obsessed about helping people to leave this world a better place.
I think it's really admirable and I appreciate you.
I acknowledge you for just showing up every single day and doing the work even when your
peers criticize you and even when the media does this.
I know how not easy that is when you're shamed publicly.
It's not easy to keep going.
But I acknowledge you for pushing through any
insecurities or emotional traumas that you faced to try to help people like me and everyone watching
to live better. So thank you for all that you do. And I want to make sure people get the book.
Lifespan, where can we connect with you online? Well, I have a website called lifespanbook.com.
Okay. I have a newsletter. So that's keeping things up to date.
New stuff I write about every few weeks.
And I'm on social media.
Instagram and Twitter, Facebook.
Where do you hang out the most personally?
On social media?
Instagram and Twitter.
Okay, cool.
What's your Instagram?
It's davidsinclairphd.
Okay, cool.
So we'll connect with you there.
Make sure you guys send them some messages over on Instagram.
Uh, this is my final question.
It's what's your definition of greatness?
Uh, again, off the cuff.
So I would say, um, I would have, if you asked me a few years ago, I probably would have said something a little bit self-centered, which is greatness is somebody who is recognized internationally for something important.
But I don't think that anymore.
has a PhD from MIT in genetics who could have been a superstar scientist, but instead chose to do nonprofit work and raise a family and put up with me. That's greatness. So it doesn't,
you don't have to be internationally recognized. You just need to make a difference in people's
lives. Wow. I love it. David, thanks, man. Appreciate this. Thanks, Lewis. Thanks for what you do too. Thank you.
My friend, I'm so happy that you listened to this episode.
I'm telling you, if you apply just two or three of these things that Dr. David Sinclair has mentioned,
it's going to help you live a happier, healthier, longer life.
It's going to allow you to be able to experience more beautiful moments
with your loved ones, with your family,
with your friends. It's going to allow you to extend time so you can pursue your dreams and
experience more life experiences. That's what this is all about. We're here for a limited amount of
time, but what if we could extend that time? And I want you to have all the tools available
right here with Dr. David Sinclair's information. And make sure to check out his book. I was going through some of the chapters in his book,
and he really breaks it down and details the exact things to eat,
the supplements, all the different stuff you need.
So make sure to check out his book as well.
Hey, guys, I've got this movie also.
I've been working on it for a couple years.
I'm super passionate about it.
It's called Chasing Greatness.
It's kind of like the secret on steroids.
And it's all about how to achieve greatness in your life.
We've got some incredible people featured in this documentary movie.
And I want you to get access to it.
Go to greatness.com right now.
You can watch the trailer.
You can see what it's all about.
See who's in the movie and opt in.
We're going to be giving it away for free before we're selling it online later. But you can live an incredible life. Ups and downs every week, every day, every month, every year. There are seasons of life that are beautiful, that are expansive, and there are seasons of life that teach us our biggest lessons.
And this podcast is your place to feel safe, to feel at home, where you can always come back to.
Whether you're going through some of your darkest challenges right now, or you are exceeding at your highest level of greatness right now,
and you're using these tools to further that success,
this is your home.
This is a place for you to feel safe.
I want you to know I've always got your back.
I'm always thinking of you.
Every time I get pitched all the time by people,
and I'm always thinking, will they serve you at the highest level? Is the
information they have valuable enough for what you are going through specifically? And I'm always
doing my best to give you the best in the world. I hope you know that. I hope you feel my love.
I hope you know I'm proud of you. If someone hasn't told you lately that they love you,
that they're proud of you, that they're glad you're on this earth. I am, and I'm super grateful that you spend some time with me
every single week on the School of Greatness podcast.
So if this is your first time here, welcome.
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You know, the reason we've crossed
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I love you so very much.
The Buddhist said,
to keep the body in good health is a duty.
Otherwise,
we shall not be able to keep our mind strong and clear.
As always,
you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great.