Gotcha. Basically one bite steaks…

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That actually sounds good. Even the Buddha would prefer ice cream, and sitting in the shade.

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My guilty pleasure right now is hummus and crackers. I have about 5-10 wheat crackers slathered with hummus when I get home from work. Yum!

That tides me over until dinner. Dinner over here is 7:30-8:00 pm.

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It does sound good if you replace the crackers with french fries, and the hummus for some high fat dipping sauce. Just saying.

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You need to write a book titled “The Charlie Munger / Warren Buffet Longevity Diet” (and include the McDonald’s protocol :wink:

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I wish there was a way to eat food all day and not get fat.

High dose flozin and you might be peeing out the twinkies and candy bars. Super power.

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My lifts would suffer.

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This vibrating diet pill may trick the stomach into feeling full

The capsule—reported today in Science Advances—slashes food intake in pigs without causing obvious side effects. Scientists now hope to develop it into an obesity treatment for humans.

“It’s a credible and ingenious approach,” says neurobiologist Guillaume de Lartigue of the Monell Chemical Senses Center, who wasn’t connected to the study. “The data look very convincing.” Still, other experts question whether the pill can be turned into a practical weight loss therapy.

https://www.science.org/content/article/vibrating-diet-pill-may-trick-stomach-feeling-full

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14 posts were merged into an existing topic: Bryan Johnson’s Anti-aging Skincare Routine

Why not just use Mexican Jumping Beans?

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I do think Bryan has a point about eating most meals early on the day, his experience and many others is that it improves sleep. I did look at the scientific literature awhile ago and it seems very good to set the circadian rhythm as well.

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Curious @AnUser - what’s is your current longevity protocols + what are you thinking it might become over the medium term?

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I only take rosuvastatin 5 mg. I literally do not do anything else - no exercise, no sleep hygiene, nothing. I have the hobo protocol of the longevity world right now. After my blood test soon I’ll add 5 mg ezetimibe and then retest. If apoB is not optimal then I dunno what to try to add with it.

I am going to try different things but this is my first priority, I do think my longevity protocol development is on an exponential curve so it is all going very slowly right now. Generally I think I will optimize different things for wellbeing, including diet, exercise etc, and drugs, it’s of course good if they cross on a venn diagram. I did make a meal I liked recently that did score higher points for the Med diet. Exercise will be to optimize wellbeing. Of course is there is a longevity drug that doesn’t affect wellbeing that is fine too. But it does affect my choice of SGLT2i if I do likely try one in the future, for example.

image

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Thanks for sharing.

I think you should consider seeing exercise and sleep as at the same level of importance and impact and risks avoidance as optimizing Apo B.

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I can’t since I don’t believe it’s true.

What don’t you believe is true?

That optimizing exercise and sleep is of the same importance and impact as optimizing apoB.

Interesting - it may be difficult to quantify, but my feeling is that it’s up there giving how multifaceted impacts both provide across cancer, cardiovascular health, metabolic health and neurological health.

Think on exceeding we can debate at what point it becomes too much, but that zero is massively worse than a little does seem to have a lot of support.

Anyone no need to debate - I was just saying it out of caring for you.

I think that the data on sleep and exercise suggest they are important (specifically for exercise and quality of life / activities you can do later in life), the data also suggests that if you’re basically getting reasonable levels of both (e.g. 7 to 8 hours sleep, and 30 minutes a day of activity) they are not going to be limits on your life. Whereas an unmeasured and untracked APOB that is higher than ideal will literally kill you, and in fact does for most of Americans. I think the model that @AnUser is looking at is someone like Charlie Munger and Warren Buffet, who never exercise (from the looks of it), eat at McDonalds frequently, probably get reasonable sleep, and live well into their 90s without any issues.

I would argue that these two reference points (both billionaires) probably also had excellent concierge doctors and the best of class medical care , but hard to prove.

And of course, if at 90 years old you only want to shuffle between the bedroom of your mansion and the home office so you can Zoom with friends and employees, thats your choice :wink:

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