The cure for cancer has been found.
2 Likes
RapAdmin
#341
More good research on why we should have lots of fun…
5 Likes
RapAdmin
#343
7 Likes
RapAdmin
#344
How about “Longevity Barbie” with a purse full of rapamycin, and young plastic transfusions from the baby doll 
7 Likes
RapAdmin
#346
And we wonder why men don’t live as long as women 
6 Likes
Problems of 40+ year olds.
4 Likes
I had a few of those problems in my 20’s LoL!
2 Likes
Bicep
#349
That’s illegal? Why is that illegal?
Not about longevity, but a funny Halloween video.
1 Like
And one that is medical related.
5 Likes
The newest Tylenol just launched.
2 Likes
Too bad that one is an AI fake as are all that account posts.
While quite funny but, it being an AI video changes the context for me.
1 Like
Beth
#355
That makes me feel better. I felt bad for the possum!!!
2 Likes
I agree with this message… 
Lie About Your Age. It’s Fun!
Free, easy and old-fashioned, lying is an anti-aging supplement for the masses.
By Paul McAdory
Oct. 7, 2025, 5:01 a.m. ET
It started when I wasn’t 11. Every day after school, I would sit in bed, flanked by posters of intricately muscled anime men, and steer purple-haired kunoichis and knuckle-cracking assassins into battle in an Xbox game. The players I competed against online ranged from late-stage adolescents to full-term adults; I would sometimes overhear the older cohort negotiating dinnertime with their partners or shooing away children. I didn’t want to be another kid to them — I wanted their respect and needed their friendship. One day, I found a solution. “I’m 13,” I lied into my mic, pushing down the prepubescent pitch of my voice. And suddenly I was, at least to my distant combatants and internet pals. In the bargain, I unknowingly became a lifelong player in a different kind of game.
Now that I’m 32, I no longer feign being a teenager. But at parties, I do check a few years like I might a coat. It’s not that I need to misrepresent myself in a formal way, as I did when brandishing a fake ID throughout the first half of college. Instead, I make jokes to my friends and online — about awaking one morning from uneasy dreams to find that I have been transformed into a gigantic 27-year-old. Eventually, I made enough of these jokes that people I had known for half a decade would join in on the bit or, surprisingly often, even be tricked by it. There was no drastic benefit to being 27 versus 32. This arbitrary age felt freeing; adopting a fake one, whether up or down, unburdened my real one of any meaning. So I embraced relative youth.
Read the full article: Lie About Your Age. It’s Fun! (NY Times)
5 Likes
LaraPo
#357
I totally agree with this approach. To lie about age is a must! What also helps is to really believe in your lie.
5 Likes
Agetron
#358
Due to my dosing rapamycin, trt and hgh… I don’t really look my age (skin on neck, arms years younger) …I am almost 68 years.
Due to inflammation scores of 46 years and DNA methylation at 55 years. I am quite comfortable saying that I am 52 years with no push back.
For those younger than me… but look years older… it is my way of being kind to the elderly. LOL 
6 Likes
Heh… I can go around and say I’m 38… biologically from my blood tests.
My wife would give me hell for it though.
3 Likes
Beth
#360
Ha, I’m the opposite. I’ve always told people I’m one year older than I am!
For me it’s just getting used to the next number. for instance, I’m 59 and I’ll tell people I’m 60… and then when the next big birthday happens, it’s no big deal because I’ve been 60 for a year 
Also, I look decent for my age, but if I told people I was younger, instead of thinking nice job, I fear they might think, well, she was ridden hard and put up wet too many times 
3 Likes