I like to see more creative solutions (with an attention to cost-effectiveness) in biohacking, rather than just throwing a ton of money at it…

Gadgets are strategically positioned throughout their seven-bedroom, eight-bathroom space which they believe will help them achieve peak health and wellness. In the guts of their house are ultraviolet light systems for air and water purification. Their kitchen has a machine that adds hydrogen to their drinking water, providing hydration that Ari Rastegar says is “infinitely more powerful than normal water.” Their bedroom has a mattress pad cooled to 64 degrees Fahrenheit for him and 72 degrees for her. Their gym is outfitted with a machine that pumps extra oxygen into their bodies during training.

There are expensive devices, like a $65,000 light-therapy bed purported to provide training recovery and a $16,990 BioCharger machine that uses light, frequencies and harmonics, voltage and pulsed electromagnetic field technology to, its makers claim, promote cellular rejuvenation, enhance cellular health and revitalize the body. There are inexpensive tools—everything from a $350 inversion table for spinal decompression to $65 toe spacers for improved toe splay and alignment. All in, the Rastegars have spent roughly $135,000 biohacking their house, which they’ve lived in with their three children since 2021. “We’ve never owned our family home, ever,” says Ari Rastegar, noting that he doesn’t know where life is going to take his family. “I want to be able to move at the end of my lease if I want to.”

全文:https://archive.ph/FLTuz

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Thanks, I spent a couple grand and a few days on my light setup and felt a little stupid about it. Though I am happy with how it works.

This makes me feel a little better.

They’re throwing a bunch of money down the toilet on speculative nonsense. The vanity and waste is excessive.

I’d rather see someone like Ernestine Shepherd pass 120 years. She’s living very modestly and working very hard at it.

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Realistically, if it works it is worth spending a good proportion of an individuals assets (rather than income) on it. That is why there are quite a few con artists in the space.

The fact is, however, that people on this forum are using pretty good science behind their biohacking. Any getting testable results. However, it is not free.

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Interesting that you phrase it that way since there are those that say our supplement use is doing nothing more than making expensive urine.

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Are the people mentioned here our forum members? I mean come on:

The Biohacking Devotees Spending Hundreds of Thousands—Even Millions—to Enhance Their Homes

Light-therapy beds. Infrared saunas. Ozone generators. These homeowners have infused health and wellness into their properties, and then some.

Real-estate investors Ari and Kellie Rastegar are devotees of biohacking, a wellness lifestyle aimed at optimizing physical and mental performance. He takes 150 custom vitamins and supplements per day; she takes 23. They eat a diet specifically tailored to their genes. They workout with a trainer almost daily. They take posture management classes. They practice Transcendental Meditation. They say affirmations.

But their biohacking isn’t limited to their bodies. They’ve also biohacked their house, an 8,200-square-foot, $22,500-per-month rental in West Lake Hills, Texas, 6 miles from downtown Austin. “Biohacking is part of our life,” says Kellie Rastegar, 37. “You’d have to go out of your way to not biohack in our home.”

Gadgets are strategically positioned throughout their seven-bedroom, eight-bathroom space which they believe will help them achieve peak health and wellness. In the guts of their house are ultraviolet light systems for air and water purification. Their kitchen has a machine that adds hydrogen to their drinking water, providing hydration that Ari Rastegar says is “infinitely more powerful than normal water.” Their bedroom has a mattress pad cooled to 64 degrees Fahrenheit for him and 72 degrees for her. Their gym is outfitted with a machine that pumps extra oxygen into their bodies during training.

There are expensive devices, like a $65,000 light-therapy bed purported to provide training recovery and a $16,990 BioCharger machine that uses light, frequencies and harmonics, voltage and pulsed electromagnetic field technology to, its makers claim, promote cellular rejuvenation, enhance cellular health and revitalize the body. There are inexpensive tools—everything from a $350 inversion table for spinal decompression to $65 toe spacers for improved toe splay and alignment. All in, the Rastegars have spent roughly $135,000 biohacking their house, which they’ve lived in with their three children since 2021. “We’ve never owned our family home, ever,” says Ari Rastegar, noting that he doesn’t know where life is going to take his family. “I want to be able to move at the end of my lease if I want to.”

Ari Rastegar, 41, started biohacking around the time he and his wife co-founded Rastegar Property Company, in 2015. He said that his late-night-working, fast-food-eating lifestyle of his 20s and early 30s had caught up with him in the form of thinning hair, dark under-eye circles, weight issues and anxiety. An encounter with neurosurgeon Dr. Jacob Rosenstein changed his course: Rosenstein calibrated the Rastegars’ vitamins, minerals, diet and hormones, which began the couple’s biohacking journey.

Rastegar says adapting his house to support his biology is a necessary response to living in today’s world. “This is about giving myself an extra edge to show up for my kids, my wife, my clients and my staff,” says Rastegar, whose company owns, renovates, manages and develops commercial and residential properties across the U.S. “Does my skin end up looking better or whatever, too? Absolutely. But this is not an exercise in vanity. As an investor, shouldn’t I be asking: ‘How do I remodel me?’ ”

Biohacking became a buzzword around the time Silicon Valley entrepreneur Dave Asprey’s Bulletproof coffee, a.k.a. butter coffee, morphed into an energy-boosting lifestyle in the 2010s. Between then and now, biohacking has become an eclectic umbrella term encompassing everything from sleep journaling to hyperbaric oxygen therapy to human augmentation via device implantation. At the core of all biohacking, however, is one pursuit: Optimization.

“Biohackers are looking to perform better physically or mentally using hacks,” says biohacking educator Lauren Berlingeri, co-founder of HigherDOSE, which creates at-home, self-care products that support biohacking, including wellness technology like infrared sauna blankets and red-light face masks. Her co-founder, Katie Kaps, describes a hack as receiving a disproportionate gain versus the effort put in. A straight-forward example of a hack, Kaps says, is relieving a bad hangover in 30-minutes with an IV drip.

It is difficult for medical doctors to assess biohacking’s scientific merits and safety due to biohacking’s extremely wide spectrum of tools and interventions. “The bottom line here is that someone familiar with your medical history is best equipped to advise you on whether something is safe for you,” says Dr. Jaclyn Tolentino, a Los Angeles-based senior doctor at the primary care practice Parsley Health. Dr. Tolentino appreciates that biohacking enables self-discovery. “But healthy is a relative term,” she says, noting that whether biohacking starts to veer into unhealthy territory is for each individual and their doctor to decide.

Technology entrepreneur Bryan Johnson, also known as Zero, has a team of doctors overseeing his pursuit as a “professional rejuvenation athlete.” Johnson, 45, through a project he calls Blueprint, is spending $2 million a year experimenting on himself with efforts to slow and reverse aging. He says his five-bedroom, five-bathroom Los Angeles-area home is set up to support his quest, housing such medical-grade devices as an ultrasound system, skin-therapy devices, skin-measurement systems and infrastructure to collect blood. He also converted the garage into a gym. “It’s a good base camp for building something,” he says of his house, where 25% of his Blueprint experimentation happens; the other 75% takes place at medical facilities.

In north Scottsdale, Ariz., Brian Culhane, 48, and Kristi Culhane, 46, spent $3.5 million building a five-bedroom, six-bathroom house with 10,000 square feet of climate-controlled space. They’ve invested roughly $250,000 on at-home biohacking accouterments, including a pool, spa, cold plunge, sauna with Himalayan salt, steam room with aromatherapy and light therapy, heated floors, a PEMF bed, an infrared machine and compression boots. Add the indoor basketball court into the tally, and the total biohacking expenditure pushes closer to $1 million.

“We spend quite a bit of money on biohacking, but we have to,” says Brian Culhane, who is the founding agent of cloud-based real-estate brokerage eXp Realty. “It’s keeping me alive. That’s how we look at it.”

In 2011, Culhane broke his hip in a bicycling accident. Thus began a long, circuitous and still-ongoing hip rehabilitation nightmare, which, in 2018, led him to start training with Troy Casey, a longevity guru based in Scottsdale, Ariz. Culhane says he inspired him to fully delve into biohacking. Culhane began traveling the world—at first by himself, and later with his wife—meeting with biohacking experts and visiting spas, until he had a realization. “I wanted to build a house into a huge training center and bring everyone and everything to me,” he says.

The Culhanes were sitting on a 1.1-acre land parcel they bought in 2018 for $546,500. In 2020, the Culhanes started building a spa-like, biohacking dream house. The project persevered through Covid-19 pandemic curveballs like difficulty getting a construction loan, the lumber shortage and the supply chain crisis—plus the couple’s own stock-portfolio fluctuations—before the Culhanes, who have three children, finished construction in late 2022.

Brian Culhane’s biohacking protocol varies day-to-day. Some days he might lie in his PEMF bed while using infrared light, wearing compression boots and receiving supplemental oxygen and IV nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) drips—a combination that leaves him, he says, “feeling jacked.” Other days, he might engage in at-home ozone therapy or stem cell shots.

Everyday, however, Culhane aspires to do the same morning routine with his wife, which includes waking up at 4:45 a.m. followed by praying, meditating and doing thought projecting; making the bed and drinking a half-cup of coffee; taking amino acid supplements; honoring the morning sunrise; doing a 30- to 45-minute workout or heavy qigong; taking a 10-minute, very hot 194 degree Fahrenheit sauna while doing breathwork; taking a 3- to 5- minute, very cold 39 degree Fahrenheit cold plunge; taking a 3- to 5- minute hot-tub dip; taking a 3- to 5- minute steam while doing breathwork focused on vocal vibrations and lymphatic draining; rinsing off in the cold plunge; drinking a green shake and taking prebiotics and more supplements; getting the kids off to school by 7:45 a.m.; doing some kind of movement like going to the gym, walking, hiking, or biking; and, finally, recovering.

“Why not build a house where you can do these things?” Brian Culhane asks. “You spend so much time at home. Your house should heal you. It should nourish you. It should rejuvenate you. It shouldn’t kill you.”

At a basic level, biohackers are onto something: Air quality, water quality and light are the top elements of indoor wellness as validated by the WELL Building Standard, a global certification used to assess a building’s effect on occupant health. The standard was launched in 2014 by New York-based company Delos and backed by research contributed by such institutions as Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic. The company’s founder and CEO Paul Scialla says sufficiently improving indoor air, water and lighting can be done for 1% of construction costs or less. “It doesn’t have to break the bank,” he says.

Considering the built environment is the approach Luke Storey, 52, took when he and his wife, Alyson Charles Storey, 44, gut renovated their 3,500-square-foot house in Texas Hill Country, about 30 minutes from downtown Austin. Storey says people call him a biohacker even though he doesn’t like the word. “The term has a reductionist, mechanistic view of the body and a person’s relationship with it,” says Storey, who is a wellness expert, spiritual guide and the Life Stylist Podcast host. “I relate to my body as an intelligent organism, but there isn’t a catchy term for that.”

The Storeys bought their now five-bedroom, three-bathroom space for $865,000 in 2021. During inspection, they discovered a dreaded wellness foe: Mold. It required the demolition of the bathroom sinks, laundry room and kitchen sink. The Storeys had been considering a less-substantial renovation, but in remediating the mold, they decided to dream bigger and to spend $500,000 creating what Storey calls a sacred healing temple.

Storey estimates there is about $150,000 in biohacking technology in the house, including an ice bath, two infrared saunas, a hydrogen water machine, a molecular hydrogen gas generator, a red-light-therapy machine, an ozone generator and PEMF devices. But making room for equipment was a secondary renovation objective. The primary goal was to replicate the natural world indoors as much as possible, what Storey refers to as creating an ancestral environment.

There are air purifiers in the HVAC system and around the house. Water goes through two purification systems; there is a separate drinking water station. White-blue light bulbs are used during the day to mimic the full spectrum of sunlight, and at night, only amber incandescent or solid red light bulbs are used—this includes orange or red landscape lighting to protect animals. There is red tape on every in-home blue light source, such as inside the fridge. Electromagnetic field (EMF)—invisible areas of energy—is reduced with ethernet wiring, WiFi with a manual on-off, an EMF kill switch in the main bedroom, EMF mitigating paint and EMF-harmonizing devices and quantum energy generators.

Storey concedes that not all houses need all these things. “I go the extra mile because I’m just extra, that’s who I am,” he says. “A lot of this might sound crazy or extreme to some people.”

“To me,” he adds, “this is just basic biology.”

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That may be true for some people here. I don’t know what everyone else is taking or spending. It may be that they think if they spend more, they get more time to be healthy.

I don’t take or spend that much. Well, maybe more than what is absolutely necessary on produce, but my sources are cheap. My gym is also cheap.

But these wealthy people are spending orders and orders of magnitude more than that.

smdh

Eat the rich!!!

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Some believe that money doesn’t buy health. I believe in just the opposite: money does buy health (especially when you are not young anymore).

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Are any of you advocates of minimizing exposure to wireless communication photons? I keep hearing it on podcasts featuring people such as Dr Mercola and Dave Asprey (not quite even “mainstream longevity researchers”), and although I have a strong physical science background, I haven’t really jumped on board (also, I live in NYC so if this is a real problem, I’m probably a dead man anyway — for a research project with my daughters we measured/analyzed the spectrum from 1 through 10 GHz here in the city, and even directionally, with some very cheap equipment and a PC). Many of these people are “tenting” their beds, etc. to prevent exposure.

This ties into this topic because I keep thinking it would be relatively simple to build a faraday cage (tuned for, say, 3GHz through 150GHz) inside the walls of an apartment or house when it is being built (or substantially remodeled). I haven’t heard of anyone really doing this, though. This might create issues such as your cell phones won’t work in the home so you’ll need to supplement with your own internal base stations (although I gather you can perhaps choose which part of the spectrum you are willing to invite into your home). This wouldn’t be a huge expense during the building/renovation process. Is this worth considering?

I can see an enhanced water filtration system may be useful, and possibly an air filtration system. I’m not yet at the hydrogen bubbling system or hyperbaric pressure system.

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Money provides the freedom of choice, I agree, and I’m thankful I have choice to pursue health. However, from personal experience (and not a morality judgement) I’ve noticed that pursuit of money for many people appears to crowd out everything else, including health. I see many wealthy people who lament about their health. Maybe they aren’t too far gone and just need a good guide but can’t find one (honest and/or knowledgeable) or maybe they’re too far gone to fix their issue(s). But whatever the reason, this seems to be commonplace.

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In some cases, it is not only a pursuit for a longer health span and/or lifespan but a lifestyle, or maybe one could say that their focus on wellbeing and health is a hobby. With excess money, one can make the choice to invest time and money in activities that create a feel good effect. For some, it is expensive cars, exotic jewelry, private airplanes, extraordinary clothes, etc.

Yes, what I read above is extreme, but since their extreme lifestyle pours money into an industry that at least tries to promote a healthy lifestyle, I prefer this more “healthy” flow of money to money flowing into destructive endeavors.

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I realize I’m in the baby steps here at my home. Part of the problem is if I feel whatever I’m doing is bordering on ostentatious madness I just lose the drive to keep at it and I think some of what I see mentioned there definitely falls in that category for me.

But I have (and extensively use) a full body red and infrared light panel, a cheapie far infrared blanket that I don’t generally use and am about to sell or donate but I ordered from China a custom made sauna that incorporates all the specs I want (due to be installed mid September), a personal use hydrogen water generator which I swear by and my 69 yo mom, to whom I’ve gifted the same bottle, says makes a huge difference in her energy. I got more facial devices than a medspa (Q switched ND yag laser, rf microneedling machine, regular microneedling pen, hyaluron pen, facial ems devices targeting different areas of the face, mini hifu, mini IPL, ez gun for mesotherapy, high frequency galvanic wand, blue picosecond mini laser, and just arrived from China after I left for Europe for the month, a true plasma pen that also outputs cold atmospheric plasma). At first I was in more research and collection mode about my devices, as it took me time and mental bandwidth to research the exact device I needed and the best specs and price for it. I have an early background in STEM / engineering and need to understand things at a granular level before I pull the trigger. Also I can’t stand buying retail (enough Jews in my ancestry to account for that, make what you will of the reference), so even price shopping takes forever. By the time I order something life gets in the way of learning how to properly use it through the research it takes on YT and whatnot. So there’s a time lag from realizing something will be added to my stack to when I start reaping benefits from it. But I had already started getting compliments on my skin last summer from people I see once a year in the old country. This summer my sister (7 years younger) was asking me what I had done. And of course it’s only women who notice these things or think fit to mention them but a handful of them have independently noted it so I know it’s not just placebo (I’m not as diligent as I should be with before / after pictures for my own reference).

Anyway that improvement is from using just a portion of my stack for about a year so I’m getting serious about using more of it and I’ve set up a usage calendar now. Super excited about the cold plasma pen as I’ve seen amazing results documented from aestheticians and it can be reused every 72 hours.

Anyway my next two investments I am eyeing in the horizon are:

  1. PEMF device or bed — can anyone here weigh in more on what they know at the research paper level about the best frequencies, power, etc.? I doubt the people profiled on the WSJ articles all had the same thing, and something tells me they probably don’t know jack about their settings / specs. I want to be very careful with what I buy.

  2. low hanging fruit budget wise, a PRP / PRG centrifuge (around $300) and EZ gel making machine (maybe another $200) to make PRF gel. I’ve seen amazing results from this on my skincare forums and it’s essentially homemade filler with your own blood. It looks like the same results you’d get from hyaluronic acid / fat transfer fillers but it creates your own tissues. The gel is created by heating and denaturating the albumin portion of the blood and then infusing it with PRF. The fibrin mixed in this denatured albumin creates a scaffolding structure that prevents the fast resorption of the PRF into the body and makes it possible to localize the effects of the tissue building from the growth factors, stem cells, etc. I even think it might have long term health / longevity effects if done on the regular from the elimination of the red blood cells. It’s essentially doing what a plasma exchange procedure does, if you think about it (eliminate some red blood cells, reinsert everything else).

Anyway I’m just not sure how to reinject the solution as it’s too viscous for the mesotherapy gun and I am not sure if the papules from nanosoft needles would even disappear — not about to experiment with possibly semi permanent weals under my skin. The ideal way to inject is via a blunt tip cannula but that would be crossing the rubicon in terms of risk for me. Potential arterial occlusion terrifies me, even though cannulas were developed to prevent exactly that. Still, they’re not fool proof so if anyone knows of ways someone how’s not a certified nurse can get some clandestine training on facial anatomy and injection techniques beyond what can be found on YT I’d appreciate any and all tips (@LaraPo pretty please with a cherry on top).

Anyway I’ve been all over the place with this post but I want to emphasize that an upper middle class person can afford to slowly and carefully build an impressive stack if they know their shit. It doesn’t take FU money.

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PEMF is hard to find solid material. In the end i got the recommendation from a vendor who sells a range of kit from different manufacturers. I got a hugo intense which is quite pricy, but does seem to work.

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Can you share more info on it? Website / product specs etc.?

These are the people I bought it from:

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IF some of that money went into research, it may yield more benefits for all. That what’s-his-name is spending two million a year.

I’m so impressed with the devices that you have in your collection and the amount of time you spend learning, and the knowledge you have! No doubt you have some impressive results that girlfriends notice (most men are not that good with fine details). I don’t own any devises from your collection and don’t do the procedures you describe. My approach is too elementary in comparison with yours. I just do fillers from time to time (1.5 - 2 years), and meso every 6 - 8 weeks for maintenance using just a simple syringe. I don’t even do micro needling. I’m surprised myself that I have the results I have. My grandmother used to say that what you eat shows on your face. I strongly believe in plant based diet, supplements, sleep and exercise (including facial yoga), and clean home environment (hepa filters in each room, triple water filters, UV shield and electronic filters in HVAC system).

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Diet and exercise is at least 95% of how you “optimize” your physical and mental performance. Really sounds like they’re spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on the last 5%. If they’ve got that kind of money to spend, great, but I wonder how much they’d even notice if they didn’t have the light-therapy bed and the BioCharger machine.

That said, I’m not sure how much I’d notice if I stopped taking my vitamins and supplements. In particular, I have not noticed any physical differences from taking rapa. I’m more or less taking it on faith that this will extend my lifespan. But my vitamins and supplements, including rapa, along with my gym membership and the food I eat, aren’t costing me very much money - it’s well within the reach of a normal middle class person.

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Statins are the cheapest and most powerful longevity drugs available. It’s literally dirt cheap. Money and longevity isn’t a problem right now. It even takes care of one of the worst side effects of rapamycin.

90 x 5 mg Rosuvastatin costs $5 at CostPlus

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And you can buy 20 mg x 90 for $7 and divide by 4 and have an entire year supply for $7. Even cheaper for 40 mg.

Knowledge and longevity is a huuuuuuuuge problem.

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