PBJ
#21
I would rather die than wear that vest in the picture.
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If I can remain 18 for the rest of the time, maybe but I will get bored of livingā¦ just like I get bored of many things once I get to a point of satisfaction. Example, I stop eating lobsters simply because I ate them too muchā¦ so I give them away to my friends. I still catch/hunt maybe around 200 lobsters a year but I may eat half a lobster each year. But I think living is more than about staying alive in this planet forever in this one life. This place feels like hell and often is described as hell by many ancient cultures. Do you ever get the feeling that we are not from this place?
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Neo
#23
Interesting @adriank
I think the world is going to change so incredibly much the next few decades, perhaps more than in the last thousand and in some ways perhaps more than since the beginning of human civilization up until today.
While I agree there is a lot of badness and a lot of things that are scary in the world, in many scenarios things will get much better and being able to see these things unfold would be fascinating.
Even without new virtual experiences, no new food sensations, no ability to travel to Mars, the asteroid belt, etc, with just the literature, art, nature and adventures one can have today I donāt think Iād get board in the next many hundreds of years.
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@adriank If life seems too hellish, Iād recommend adding lithium orotate and GLYNAC to your stack. They are mood enhancers as well as.longevity supplements that make life feel better and last longer.
Fortunately I was born with a positivity gene that causes Polyannatitis which makes me and my male family members too optimistic and positive in general. 
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I believe life exist in multiple dimensions. I actually practices lucid dreaming. But when I look at the reality of our world it can get very depressing. The politics and religious conflicts just show how adults behave like children all over again. That is why I rather set up an animal sanctuaryā¦ Like a cat or dog shelter to past my time. Good friends are few.
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Neo
#26
This is very important and super high impact in my view
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Yes, good friends are few and far between. Most of my best friends are from high school or university. And of course there is family.
Try to think about the things and people you have influence over and try not to let the things which you have no influence over influence you. Thatās why I usually ignore politics and wars. Nothing good ever comes from thinking about it.
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I find it ironic this man is so afraid of dieing heās not taking the time to live. Can you imagine fussing with your teeth for 45 min in the morning putting on multiple creams and ointments, sitting in front of a red light board for an extended time. Then getting what amounts to dialysis 3 hours a day. Lord knows what else he does but actually going out and enjoying life, nah. He might be better off just living in a hyperbolic chamber. It would just be him staring at the ceiling but Atleast he could do it for 150 years.
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AnUser
#29
You get most of the effect just taking a statin, SGLT2i, and BP med, anyway, probably.
1 Like
Neo
#30
Are you talking about Peter Diamandis?
No treatment will make up for getting the irreversible mRNA poisons either, but Iām sure someone is working on a removal/remedial process for that already.
It will probably use some form of a modified dialysis procedure.
Thatās what the blood dialysis procedure described here sounds like?
Dr. Mercola also recommends frequent blood donations to rid your body of excess iron, which supposedly canāt be eliminated any other way.
Then there is the already known issue of the contaminated blood donor supply from the mRNA poisonsā¦
I guess it is good that wealthy individuals are willing to try to benefit their health and stimulate the economy. Iāve certainly done my part to provide major income to supplement companies over the years. But I do feel a good deal of wonder and emotional humor when I think of others who have done absolutely nothing and lived into their late 90ās+. Like this dear fellow:
Probably laughing at the $$$ spent by others.
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All it takes is for the longest living person taking Rapamycin to break the 122 barrier (hopefully by many years) to change everyoneās tune.
However, I may be 100 before that happens. 
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I would like to donate blood to lower my iron but for some reason my blood pressure collapse when giving blood thus I stopped. I cannot give more than half the amount each time.
I wonder if one way they could study the effects of rapamycin in the elderly is to dose a sample of 100 centenarians who are also disease free (to the extent possible to measure), and then track the survival rates over 10 years. This would seem to be a relatively inexpensive way to test and validate the effects in elderly humans.
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You could even offer to pay them a small stipend ($100-200/month would probably do it) to do so. Youād probably have to beat them all back with a stick to prevent them from signing up.
Any millionaires want to fund this effort?
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