What it sounded like to me was that he dropped to the floor and did 90 consecutive pushups. Check it out and see if you agree that that’s what he said.

He sure has got some fat meat lol. If i were him i wouldn’t boast about being strong. If he wants to boast about being healthy that is ok but not about being strong. I happened to believe that strength is not necessarily related to health nor longevity. He doesn’t strike me as being strong. he does look good for his age though. but never tells exactly what he is doing or what he is taking unlike many in longevity that are very honest about substances they take.

1 Like

I don’t know who this guy is, but out of curiosity I checked out his face in each video… he looks great, but as someone who studies faces as a hobby :), I don’t think it’s natural… more power to him.

1 Like

Dagnabbit. I’ve been fooled again.

2 Likes

There are many different definitions of push-ups. He’s probably using a more lenient definition. But, his bicep is quite impressive as is.

You’ve gone from positive to negative on him within a couple of days. Are you just goofing around on a beery Sunday afternoon, or was there something that changed your mind?

Nah just don’t like the fact that he is elusive about what he does (don’t drink btw, not because of longevity but alcohol does not sit well with me). As far as looking good for his age I’ll def give him that. and what’s more important i checked some old (over 10-year vids of him) and he is fat ugly and deformed. Whereas now even his gait and his body posture is way better and actually looking better (if not younger) _ than he did 10-15 years ago. But again, he NEVER tells what he does.

I see your point, but tend to have a more charitable take. He’s clear that his company is a commercial venture, so his view of intellectual property won’t be the same as that of research scientists at universities and non-profits.

2 Likes

I heard him in an interview a few years ago (might have been 3-4 years ago now) mention he takes Selegeline, Centophenoxine, and NAD. I don’t know if he still does or if he’s added anything else besides what he is doing in TRIIM

1 Like

Yeah, he is also big on L-carnosine. Heard him talk about it in one of his interviews. But getting him to talk about his stack is like pulling teeth lol.

1 Like

New video of Greg Fahy providing more positive updates on the TRIIM-X trial

3 Likes

Ok, so what’s with the brown hair / lack of grey on Greg Fahy? Is it from the TRIM protocol, or is it dye? Did he document this in some way (videos at stages along the way for his n=1)? Did it happen suddenly )like as it would if it were dyed)? I’m onboard with Rapamycin, urilirthin A, perhaps TRIM, and others making people healthier at their chronological age. But I don’t think I’ve seen anything on this forum (or elsewhere) where grey hair meaningfully transformed back to color. @Agetron has a great homemade hair “tonic” which has meaningfully restored his hair, but if I remember correctly, some of the additives restore trhe color and not really “de-aging”. A few people have a few straggler black hairs on photos. Same with some of these other commercial/novel hair “de-gray-ers”: they are more (natural) dye rather than a biochem change in the hair follicle.

So did Greg Fahy dye it? Or did TRIM restore it?

Maybe I’m just not yet a believer: I think we are likely meaningfully improving our health, but not really “reversing our age”: my grey hair is a bit better but still there (no dye). My age-related eyesight hasn’t reversed. My skin is definitely somewhat better but I certainly don’t look 30. My vitiligo (which generally “switches on” at roughly 40) hasn’t reversed. If I was really “de-aging”, should these things reverse? I guess there are cases of reversed menopause here. And I’m definitely stronger than I’ve ever been, and regularly wearing clothes from when I was in grad school, and when I did the Grand Canyon a few years ago I left my teen daughters in the dust (not literally) and planning another five large(;ish) mountains over the summer, but I can attribute all of these to hard work in the gym and on the stairs, not to GlyNAC or Taurine. Or maybe I’m just an unsuccessful n=1 and everyone else is “de-aging”.

3 Likes

Amen to that my friend. Actually, I created this thread because I was impressed with the way this dude looked now compared to 10-15 years ago, but i have done some more research on him lately and more I look into him fuller of something he seems to me. However, I do think that thymus is an important organ (if that’s what it is) and would make sense to try and maintain its health but this dude is full of something (can’t say the word because I might be called on it lol). He never explains/tells his regimen/stack other than the TRIM thing.

2 Likes

The thing is… I just did my blood panel work and my thyroid score (TSH T4) results are unexpectedly better than average – excellent at 66 years.

Thank you rapamycin.

No TRIM for me…which is expensive.

4 Likes

Trimm’s cost AFAIK is HGH dominated. I am myself not persuaded that HGH is a good approach.

I have however got some hairs which have regained pigment part way along the shaft. Very few though.

3 Likes

Dr. life used to prescribes HGH for anti-aging, and possibly still does. I’m not saying this is the ultimate path for longevity, but it clearly has some positive healthspan effects, although with (cancer?) risks. I’ve met Dr Life in person and he look terrific, and continues to look great in his 80’s, and move smoothly. (He, too, though, is bald…)

1 Like

You could be right (I doubt) but HGH was covered in other posts in these forums and HGH is indeed BAD (capital letters) for longevity. It might however be good for short term things such as building muscle etc. For me it is a big NO NO.

BTW, the dude has a six pack at 80, pretty impressive.

1 Like

Did you get T3 or Free T3 checked by any chance? That one tends to decline. HGH improves T4 to T3 conversion. For myself, my TSH (1.6) and FT4 (1.4) are great but my Free T3 sucks (2.7)

1 Like

HGH reduces risk of cancer
Growth hormone replacement therapy reduces risk of cancer in adult with growth hormone deficiency: A meta-analysis - PMC (nih.gov)

However, if you have already had cancer, it could increase risk of getting it again
Frontiers | Association Between Recombinant Growth Hormone Therapy and All-Cause Mortality and Cancer Risk in Childhood: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (frontiersin.org)

6 Likes

I’m not taking it so all good for me. And I’m not keen on getting cancer again so probably less likely to take it in the future as well (or NMN for that mayter). But Dr Life and Dr Fahy both take it and look pretty good at 80’s (Life better than Fahy, although @desertshores better than Fahy as well without HGH). Just an n=3 observation without a control.

3 Likes