2023-07-14 - Interview Dr. David Sinclair - mindbodygreen - AGING is a disease we can REVERSE

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    Transcript

    [Music]

    David welcome

    thanks for having me on it is an honor

    to have you here I'm a big fan of your

    work and congrats on the new book

    lifespan

    so what you say in the book is so

    there's so many interesting things I'm

    going to start the highest level where

    you say aging is a disease

    let's talk about that

    well so aging is a disease is a shock to

    most people because we thought we knew

    what aging was

    but what I'm saying is that we should

    look at aging as we do a disease

    definition of of a disease is that over

    time you lose function

    you become

    disabled and eventually if it's a bad

    disease you die from it that sounds a

    lot like aging right and if you go to

    the medical dictionary the only

    difference between aging and a disease

    is that a disease affects less than half

    the population

    so if aging affected 51

    we as we do we separate it from disease

    if it was affecting 49 percent

    we'd be studying this and putting

    billions and billions of dollars into

    trying trying to solve it and that 50

    cut off is completely arbitrary

    the problem with having aging separate

    from disease and remember it's just a

    word definition it's not a biological

    difference they're actually totally

    intertwined aging is the major cause of

    all major diseases on the planet

    but we put into a separate category

    partly because of History because we

    didn't understand it it seemed natural

    whereas cancer was unnatural but it's

    all natural and we've always fought

    against diseases like cancer and heart

    disease we didn't know how to until

    recently same with aging but we're at a

    point now like we were with cancer 30 40

    years ago we Now understand we think

    what drives the process and we're having

    some really great success in the lab and

    in some clinical trials with people of

    being able to at least slow down and

    some evidence that even reversing aging

    is possible and when you can do that

    then I think we should start taking

    aging as a disease very seriously so in

    your opinion we're at that point where

    we can slow aging and it is reversible

    in mice it's pretty easy it was it was

    shockingly easy but we're not mice so we

    have a bit of work to do but there are a

    number of studies that already published

    that you can reverse aspect of Aging in

    people boost their immune system improve

    endurance improve metabolism

    in fact there's a drug on the market

    called metformin which we may delve into

    yes uh which is our our best guess is

    it's a longevity molecule it actually

    slows down aging because diabetics you

    take this molecule

    are relatively resistant to heart

    disease and cancer and Alzheimer's and

    Frailty even though they have diabetes

    and we think that if healthy people or

    pre-diabetics take this drug they'll

    also be protected

    um but yeah it's here right now that's

    what I'm trying to say in my book and

    that there are things we can do with our

    lives today and there are things that

    are coming down the pike just a few

    years from now so let's stay on

    Metformin for a minute I think it's so

    interesting because essentially it's

    refined our real medicine it's French

    lilac but it's a drug

    and so let's just talk about what it is

    and you mentioned diabetes that's where

    it originated from but there was a

    recent study where it was a combination

    of Metformin DHEA and growth hormone

    that took it was a small study I think

    it was like nine or ten people but took

    two and a half years off of the

    biological clock

    so let's just yeah talk about that for a

    second

    right well until recently we didn't

    really know how to measure aging

    telomeres are a bit wishy-washy they

    move around it's not super accurate

    these are the ends of chromosomes that

    shorten

    um there are blood biomarkers which a

    company that I work with called inside

    tracker measures so I've been estimating

    my biological age using five different

    measures in blood but recently we've

    developed What's called the epigenetic

    clock and Stephen Horvath a colleague of

    mine

    gives his name to it so why is that

    important now we can take a DNA sample

    from any part of your body typically

    it's blood because that's easy to get

    and I can I could tell you how old you

    are exactly within a few percent

    biologically I don't have to see you I

    don't need to measure you I don't need

    to see birthday candles and then I can

    predict accurately when you're going to

    die as well wow so where can I do this

    test if you show up at your lab it's

    right on the cusp of being commercially

    available

    I'm working on something with Steve

    there are a couple of others

    it's almost ready for prime time so this

    time next year you should be able to

    fairly cheaply figure out when you're

    going to die have you figured out your

    bio I'm sure what's your biological age

    well I haven't done this test yet okay

    um I want to I've Been Working on mice

    and

    getting that to work also and we're

    working really hard to bring the test

    down from 300 bucks down to three three

    bucks so that that'll really change

    things but yeah your your point is what

    HMI well the best estimate came from

    that inside tracker company and uh it's

    an independent thing even though I'm a

    small time investor they didn't know it

    was my blood right so but they

    I was actually at 58. aged 58

    biologically when I was 48 which freaked

    me out I didn't want to be 10 years

    older I wasn't exercising I wasn't

    eating the right things I wasn't taking

    nmn which I do now we'll talk about that

    later

    um and I wasn't on Metformin so I added

    a few things step wise and had a look at

    what happened to my body

    and pretty quickly it was in less than

    six months as I added things and got

    better and better

    uh looking at my blood biochemistry the

    algorithm independently determined that

    I went down to 31.4 wow now people look

    at me and say David

    that's not science and it's true that's

    not a clinical trial uh but if nothing

    else I improved a lot of the parameters

    that go up with age and I brought them

    back down

    and that that's if nothing more it makes

    me feel good about myself and it was

    motivational and what I've learned from

    that experience is that the more you can

    know about your body like a dashboard

    the better you can respond

    um if you go for a run or if you change

    your life if you eat a certain new diet

    you exercise too much or too little how

    do you know it's working you have to

    measure things to really be able to a

    know if it's working and B just be

    cognizant of of what you're putting in

    your mouth and what you're doing with

    your body so you think we're a year away

    from this okay so the clock yeah getting

    back to the clock yeah it's

    it's really interesting you take the DNA

    out and you just treat it with a

    chemical and run it through a sequencing

    machine and determine the DNA code and

    what we're measuring is not just the

    code but there are chemicals that bind

    to the letter c you know how DNA is actg

    on the C's we get what's called a methyl

    chemical that's

    six there binds to it and doesn't come

    off and they accumulate essentially in

    different places as we get older and we

    can read that sequence and that pattern

    is very predictable between people in

    fact the same pattern can predict the

    age of a dog as well so that there's

    this common what we call epigenetic

    basis for the Aging clock between all

    mammals and seemingly all the way back

    to jellyfish

    so

    I want to talk about the what we can do

    in terms of Lifestyle because metformin

    it's a drug we're talking about we're

    going to talk about NAD and nmn and R

    and all the other things we can kind of

    do there

    but for for many listening they're going

    to say okay I have this information

    maybe a year from now or today or I want

    to do there are things I can do in terms

    of Lifestyle yeah in your opinion as

    always our friend Rich Roll says you uh

    you know hell begins on the plate for a

    lot of people so if we start with

    nutrition in your opinion what's the

    optimal diet for longevity

    yeah well so the the good news is that

    that clock will tell us if we're doing

    the right thing

    and we didn't know that until now so

    what are the things to do uh well the

    first thing that I started to do based

    on all the evidence was to eat less

    often

    and I have propensity to diabetes and

    obesity in my family and in my genome so

    I have to be extra careful if I didn't

    watch what I ate I would be probably

    over 200 200 something pounds you were

    far from it uh yeah what am I a

    135 or something

    um but I have to work at it and so that

    means I cannot eat and I shouldn't eat

    three meals a day

    um I try to eat one meal a day if I can

    sometimes it's a bit hard with all of

    the work and brain activity that's going

    on

    but yeah that's one thing is the three

    meals a day with snacks in between never

    get hungry

    I think that's the worst for people it's

    it's I know it's against what your

    mother said uh probably

    um and the old idea was that you don't

    want to stress out your system you don't

    want to have big spikes in ups and downs

    in glucose because that'll stress out

    your pancreas and that'll lead to

    diabetes

    but what we've learned is that yeah

    overeating is bad but under eating is

    not so bad as long as you're not

    malnourished you know we're not talking

    about malnutrition here we don't want

    particularly young uh kids thinking that

    they should be too little but we're

    talking about adults here who are

    clearly given too much food in their

    lives and have access to too much food

    um which leads not just to obesity but

    even those who are healthy always being

    satisfied and never feeling hungry it

    puts the body into a state of

    complacency we've worked in my lab on a

    set of genes called the sirtuins for the

    last 30 years we found them first in

    baker's yeast and they're in our bodies

    these are very ancient genes that evolve

    to to survive when times were tough

    and we think that's why diet or healthy

    diets and being hungry and even exercise

    give us health benefits that's why we

    live longer if we exercise it's not

    because blood flows around the body it's

    because you're turning on these ancient

    defenses to survive and if we're sitting

    around and we're eating as as much food

    as we want

    and we're always in a thermo neutral

    zones we're always just perfectly air

    conditioned and heated throughout the

    year our bodies just say hey great no

    need to fight disease I'm good

    and so fasting I'm going to stay there

    for a minute a lot of people have

    different definitions of fasting whether

    it's

    over a night or 16 8 or 18 6 or and then

    people will debate well what what is

    autophagy kick in and the power of

    autophagus so let's talk in your opinion

    what what is the

    optimal way too fast for longevity right

    well let's get one thing clear because

    there's a lot of debate about this

    uh we don't know what's best for

    the average human because there is no

    average human

    and that's why I say when when you come

    to me and ask me for advice I'll say

    well I know what works for me because

    I've been doing this for 15 years very

    fair point all right but let I'm not

    judging the question I think that that

    what I do is good for me in part because

    it fits my lifestyle but if I could just

    do whatever I wanted to I would try to

    skip food for three days in a row

    at least once a month

    um our friend Peter otia does does that

    he goes for even a week once a quarter

    now I can't do that I just find it

    really tough but I think it's good

    because after three days we know that a

    different type of autophagy kicks in to

    scrape the barrel and recycle proteins

    and it's called chaperone mediated

    autophagyin do you say that again it was

    a mouthful so chaperone okay we've got

    that uh mediated autophagy

    okay and it's really what it means is

    there are proteins called chaperones

    that hold on to proteins and guide them

    where to go and in this case they push

    them into the garbage can to be recycled

    and that takes a lot of hunger

    uh I would say starvation but a lot of

    uh yeah three days is no joke pretty

    close to starvation right

    and so your body will say okay now it's

    time I've run out of all my fat or uh

    run out of my certainly my liver stores

    I'm gonna start chewing up the protein

    to make energy and that's what's going

    on and that's when you get rid of the

    really bad misfolded proteins in the

    body which accumulate cause diseases

    like Alzheimer's and other things so

    that's all good and so I think that

    being able to do that would be wonderful

    um there are other ways to do it there's

    there's that drug that's fairly toxic

    called rapamycin that stimulates a lot

    low amino acids I haven't gone there yet

    because it's it's got some side effects

    but it has been shown in humans to to

    boost their immune system so it does

    have some problems the other good thing

    to know is that there's a clinical trial

    about to read out the results really

    soon phase three which means that's the

    final result

    um and there might be a new drug that's

    safe and effective to boost this pathway

    this protein sensing pathway

    but in the in the absence of that drug

    which is still many years away for the

    average person the best thing to do is

    to go hungry for three or more days

    so for the average person yeah probably

    not going to happen

    what's more likely is 14 hours 16 hours

    18 hours and in your opinion is one I

    know we're all Unique Individuals I'm

    six seven 200 plus pounds I'm very

    different from you and our average

    listener

    what and it's hard to generalize but is

    is there sort of a minimum in your

    opinion to get the benefits of fasting

    for longevity

    yes specifically autophagy too yeah

    there is and you can also look at look

    at um

    places on Earth where people live a long

    time

    now there are plenty of places where

    people don't eat breakfast but they

    don't live a long time most people not

    most but a lot of people skip breakfast

    anyway before this whole intermittent

    fasting periodic feeding uh thing came

    into the mainstream so I think it's got

    to be more than just skipping breakfast

    so that's why I try to skip lunch too

    um so I think if you can't skip

    breakfast do it

    and if you don't then try to skip

    another meal dinner perhaps have a very

    early dinner or not at all

    my metabolism by the way is

    the type where my my blood sugar goes up

    as I wake up and therefore I'm full with

    sugar and I don't need any more and that

    explains why I'm not hungry in the

    morning so if you're not hungry in the

    morning you're probably like me you

    don't need breakfast so don't don't have

    it

    um

    and we actually just as an aside we have

    a son uh Benjamin who has my metabolism

    and my wife as old parents thought it

    was essential that he goes to school

    with a full stomach so he can

    concentrate

    um and he developed obesity as a result

    so he gets a tiny breakfast now but

    that's a consequence of our genetics

    but yeah anyway the the point being more

    you can skip the better and I don't

    think breakfast is enough got it so

    you're I'd say 60 from what I'm 16 18 at

    the minimum if you go longer I go longer

    so with regards to diet

    so what what do I eat

    so we've established of what we're when

    we're not eating how often you know but

    during the eating window what is what is

    the optimal diet in your opinion how do

    you eat yeah well so I've always been of

    the opinion that you can learn from

    other cultures uh and we we know that

    what we eat in the U.S

    or at least served up when you're at

    airports is the worst you can it feels

    good it tastes good but that doesn't

    mean it's good for you in fact it's

    similar to the the point that you have

    to get your body out of a state of

    complacency if you're eating a lot of

    sugar and fat uh you're you've got

    complacency in your your mind and your

    body just is thanks for that I'm not

    going to try hard so how do you trick

    your body into feeling like times are

    about to be tough

    uh so one way is to have fewer calories

    in General so the best way I've found to

    do that is not to eat High caloric food

    which is for me is a very tasty

    vegetarian meal and uh and salads and

    actually I think many of the listeners

    will know that once you get used to that

    the idea of eating a giant steak fatty

    steak is is not that appealing

    occasionally I'll still eat meat

    um in part because it's it's often the

    only only thing you can eat on a menu

    and and I don't mind some social

    social life but I also exercise and if

    I'm exercising a bit of meat I think

    it's not going to hurt me but generally

    I try to

    be more of a uh a guinea pig than a than

    a lion I look for particularly uh plants

    that are highly colored deep colored

    plants and you might ask why that would

    be well I'm curious why and what what

    well so things like

    um

    so leafy vegetables that are really deep

    green or deep red

    and uh those are the particularly the

    good ones and I also look for organic

    foods not because I'm scared as much of

    the pesticides though that's important

    it's because organic foods aren't

    held with you know with gloves they're

    they're a little bit more stressed out

    usually

    and the more stressed out your food is

    first of all the brighter colors they'll

    have because they're producing these

    colors as a defense

    and those colors are actually an

    indicator of other molecules that plants

    produce to try and survive when they're

    stressed we call these xenor Xeno

    hermetic molecules now that's a mouthful

    so I'll break it down Xeno just means

    between species and hormesis hermetic

    means what doesn't kill you makes you

    stronger and you're getting the theme

    here right we need to trick our bodies

    into thinking that times are tough even

    though we live in Utopia compared to our

    ancestors and so the the plant molecules

    that are produced such as I could list a

    bunch of them so Resveratrol comes on

    quercetin butene um so the the green tea

    and turmeric and curcumin we've all

    heard about this but has anyone ever

    really thought why are they so helpful

    how come they tweak the right Pathways

    in the body

    in just the right way and my best

    explanation is that we have evolved to

    sense when our plants are running out of

    uh their own food or their own water and

    that's important because you've got to

    know when you're going to run out of

    food and get ready for that and that

    puts your body in a state of Defense

    and we can trick our bodies into

    thinking we're running out of food even

    though we can always just go down to the

    supermarket by eating foods that have

    been stressed themselves and those

    chemicals like Resveratrol which we've

    studied for decades

    turns on those sirtuin defenses

    mimicking exercise mimicking fasting

    without actually having to do those

    things though before you ask me I know

    you can ask me it's not an excuse to

    take these molecules in high doses and

    not

    lead a healthy lifestyle because when we

    add them together

    what we see at least in the lab is that

    they are doubly beneficial when done

    together right

    so if you had to put together your list

    of Dr David Sinclair's superfoods

    I'm walking in the Whole Foods what

    what's on that is it broccoli I'm just

    guessing you're you're like what are

    your what are your top five superfoods

    everyone's got to get out their pen and

    paper put their note this is what I must

    I must eat

    all right well the first thing I I do is

    not in the supermarket it's a yogurt

    Farm Farmers Market thank you

    um yeah so the the first thing is I

    actually order online sachets of of a

    yogurt that I make religiously and it

    lasts for about three or four weeks in

    the fridge so it's not not a lot of work

    it takes me five minutes and I'm gonna I

    have a newsletter on my website that I'm

    gonna put out the recipe but it's

    wonderful and I haven't been sick since

    I started two years ago taking this

    stuff gotta share a little bit what's in

    the yogurt I'm dying to know well

    there's a blend of about 15 different

    bacteria that are normally in the human

    gut in small amounts and the doctor that

    makes this says that they're highly

    anti-inflammatory and I was skeptical I

    bought this stuff for my son who I

    thought maybe we could reduce his

    obesity issue and we all we both started

    taking eating it and found we were

    transformed in terms of our health

    including not getting sick anymore

    so it's it's you know not a clinical

    trial again but I used to get sick every

    few weeks because I fly a lot sure we'll

    talk about flying later yeah you got to

    get this yogurt on the market well it's

    it's it is on the market I have no

    connection to it so I think I'm free to

    to say what it is

    do you mind sure

    um on if you just um type into your

    browser uh Bravo yogurt bravo bravo

    yogurt and uh I'll put out the full

    recipe but essentially you don't need to

    follow their recipe there's a quick and

    easy way to do it

    um they suggest boiling the milk and

    sterilizing everything and then lowering

    temperature blah blah blah so I'm a

    microbiologist I figured out a way to do

    this without apparently any risk

    a bit of hot Clean Water Rinse out a big

    mason jar

    about you know a bit bigger than the

    ones we've got here on this table mix

    that with whole milk

    um you know if you're lactose intolerant

    then I guess you could try your own

    brand but whole milk grass-fed

    pour it in mix it up shake it put it in

    the oven on defrost

    at 95 degrees overnight and then you've

    got two weeks worth of yogurt wow and uh

    it it tastes like the best yogurt I can

    buy

    or better actually there's there's no

    sugar in it of course and uh so it's

    yeah I don't like the taste of really

    sweet anything anymore after my diet

    anyway so that's my first one let's go

    to the farmers market

    I'll give everyone the full recipe later

    but the um

    first thing I would go for would be uh

    so a dark green leafy vegetable so that

    would be

    unfortunately kale I say unfortunately

    because a lot of people don't like cake

    that's just Dave raspberry yeah well

    that part yeah I like kale yeah kale or

    anything I think baby um broccoli is

    good

    all that uh good leafy stuff

    I'd also would do brussels sprouts

    um

    I would avoid grapes actually uh grapes

    so Rhonda Patrick and I agree that

    grapes are overrated

    there's huge amounts of sugar and you

    eat one and you can see actually if you

    monitor your blood like we do she sends

    it through the roof so that's just one

    thing I'd walk past and then the next

    aisle so we've got two three items

    already I think

    um if you include the yogurt then then I

    would go and I'd get

    I get fruit I'm not a verse to fruit

    it's a nice snack in between if I need

    it so I'm pretty good on on apples but I

    don't go for a really sugar Laden fruit

    you know I don't want another sweet

    um banana I think things like um oranges

    uh stink you know they're fine with the

    the pulp but still I'd rather keep I'd

    save my glucose intake for something

    that is really really great the other

    thing that I noticed actually on this

    diet and having monitored myself is

    food special now it's a treat and so if

    I stick something in my mouth that isn't

    great

    I've been known to go spit it out not

    religiously and not at a restaurant but

    if it tastes like crap I'm not going to

    swallow it because that's that's

    something else I can't eat later sure

    it's a good way you know I don't eat a

    lot of meat anymore and what I do it's

    gonna be a damn good piece of meat yeah

    yeah I'm not gonna do it it's like I

    don't want a burger just for a burger

    when I'm like I do it it's going to be

    amazing and do it once a quarter or

    whatever yeah so I I also ate beans and

    things um I'm not okay with electives

    I'm not sure what about about Dr

    gundry's uh thing I have to be convinced

    about that

    okay that's good so you're okay with

    beans too

    yeah I am I'm a little bit more cautious

    now that I've read his book

    um

    but I've been eating that stuff my whole

    life I think people struggle with

    autoimmune and could have issues but if

    you you'd know if there was a problem

    that's my take at least my my uh my

    I don't have a medical opinion

    but that's my personal opinion well it's

    all personal here's the thing that

    like you say what what works for

    someone's microbiome and Physiology and

    immune system might not work for another

    and so you can feel what works for you

    and you can monitor

    uh not just how you feel and how how

    many times you get sick but you if you

    want you can do a blood test at one of

    these questions but also what you can do

    is um

    uh you can measure things like blood

    sugar and see that

    it's working or it isn't

    the other thing that's important is that

    um it's taken me about 15 years to to

    optimize things for myself wow it's not

    just

    I'll just switch to one diet and hope

    that it works

    and that's often a misunderstood because

    my colleagues

    who are scientists they say well you

    know David's doing this doing that how

    does he know anything this is you know

    and they say n of one n of one that's

    the criticism

    well it's an end of one but you know

    over 15 years every day you'll you do

    learn a lot and you can repeat the

    experiment over and over again

    give you a quick example I had cacao a

    big thick chocolate drink as part of a

    ceremony uh

    we uh I was just out in San Diego and I

    drank it and it had a bit of sugar in it

    which is not going to kill me but I

    expected my blood sugar levels to go up

    which they did because I've got a

    monitor here

    uh but then what happened was really

    weird my blood sugar went way down as I

    went to bed and through the night stayed

    Baseline couldn't even go lower

    according to the sensor when I woke up

    it came back up I've never seen that

    happen and I'm curious if I try it again

    will it happen again is there something

    in chocolate that particular type that

    that really made my insulin sensitivity

    go up which would be great and those are

    it's an example of the kind of

    experiments that I can do on my body

    I was going to ask you I think for

    someone who does a lot of experiments on

    their body and so when it sounds like

    who also listens to their body

    do you mostly find when you when you've

    feel good after eating something and

    then you look at the lab results that

    they're in line and vice versa when you

    when you feel like crap and then you

    look at the Bloods or whatever Mark

    you're looking at

    marker's not good do you find that

    mostly to be true I do and that's been a

    surprise I've only been monitoring my

    glucose for a couple of months now but

    now I know what what it feels like to

    have good blood glucose and what it

    doesn't and that's a surprising thing

    about it besides great seeing bad and

    potatoes not being as bad as I thought

    and white rice being horrendously bad

    unfortunately I ate sushi for 10 years

    so that was a mistake but but here's

    what I also learned is that if I overdo

    it let's say

    well maybe I'll tell you for sure last

    week I I ate a lot of food and I drank a

    fair amount of alcohol regrettably

    I felt bad I slept poorly

    and that's to be expected but what I

    didn't expect was the next three days

    my metabolism was out of whack my I

    couldn't get my blood sugar down I I saw

    it was just massively high and I thought

    this has never happened this is weird

    what I think has happened is that my

    liver then filled up with fat and is

    releasing it into my bloodstream even

    though I'm hungry and actually felt

    hungry

    while my blood sugar was still high so

    I'd really messed up my system and I

    think that's how most people

    exist because they're not uh well not

    most people but a lot of people who eat

    a lot of food are still hungry even

    though they've got a lot of blood sugar

    in their body

    and then it took three days to go away

    the other thing that I was I was

    fascinated was that I jumped on a

    treadmill to try and get that blood

    sugar to go down thinking wow this is

    crazy I got to get it down let's see

    what happens so I ran on a treadmill for

    about

    10 minutes pretty fast and I got it to

    come down as soon as I stopped running

    it just went straight back up again oh

    and so that has taught me very clearly

    in the past week don't overdo it because

    it's not just that it's one day your

    body suffers for many days after that so

    two things that you mentioned I want to

    touch on one is fat specifically healthy

    fats and what's your take on healthy

    fats

    and then two we're gonna

    go to working out exercise yeah high

    intensity real training what does that

    look like well let's go go to fat fat is

    very with keto and fat and lots of

    different opinions what what's your take

    on on fat yeah I I don't think fat is is

    evil I just think fat is calorific

    and you just have to eat less of it

    otherwise you will build up

    um adiposity

    and adiposity is the killer I've found

    is that it's not the fat that's so bad

    it's what the fat signals to the body

    um in terms of inflammation and other

    things and the fatter you are and if

    you're a fat mouse or a fat rat you'll

    you'll be suppressing the activity of

    your longevity genes your Saturns and

    these other genes

    um and that's really bad that means that

    you might be healthy you think you're

    healthy but if you've got adiposity a

    large amount

    you know it's healthy I've I've got some

    fat on me I'm not too skinny but I see

    with my body if it gets over a certain

    amount let's say a BMI goes up to

    I'm probably a BMI of 23. if I go up to

    25 26 I immediately start to see

    problems

    um including evidence that my longevity

    genes are being shut down

    so getting back to what to eat though I

    think it's fine eating fat in fact I

    used to avoid fat like the plague

    because of recommendations from

    nutritionists sure in the nine remember

    slack Wells and all the yeah I just eat

    sugar instead low fat low-fat muffin in

    the morning to start your day it's a

    nightmare so I've changed my mind and

    and actually I would love to get my

    childhood back

    but for about 20 years I didn't eat eggs

    very little milk almost never ate milk

    or yogurt thinking that any form of fat

    was gonna hurt me and now I lead a

    wonderful life I eat cheese and I eat

    yogurt and

    I think I'm healthier than I ever was

    but it's you can't eat the same quantity

    of cheese as you do plant food you just

    gain too much weight in terms of healthy

    fats now clearly cheese is not the

    healthiest my healthy fats that I like

    are um if I eat meat I eat fish if I

    have a choice and then I take my

    omega-3s

    so do you how do you rank your fish do

    you go by the river of Smash

    salmon mackerel anchovy sardines and

    herring

    them accordingly I I try to rate them

    based on taste that's a good way to rate

    them but in terms of longevity I'm just

    curious well Salmon's good I know that

    um

    but I I don't break it down that finally

    okay

    and in terms of your healthy fats

    other than fish

    a lot of people here love avocados olive

    oil good by you oh yeah yeah okay sure

    so plant fats I'm I'm I always have a

    couple of avocados in the fridge that or

    on the table

    um

    now I'm trying to figure out should I be

    putting it on toast that's how I usually

    eat it but maybe I don't want the toast

    the good Australian in you avocado toast

    yeah

    yep so avocado fantastic for sure olive

    oil I'm becoming more and more convinced

    olive oil is the thing to do so I've

    always put liberal amounts on bread and

    on

    um

    on on salads but there's more and more

    evidence that just taking a spoonful of

    this stuff is good for you and uh it was

    Dave asprey who put me on no no it

    wasn't it was country country loves

    olive oil gandry was the one who was

    saying it's got 10 000 times whatever

    yeah

    um that makes sense and some of my

    colleagues are also uh real devotees of

    the olive oil which is great it's one of

    those foods that not only tastes good is

    good for you well he'll joke I'll have a

    side of bread with the olive oil

    um so let's go I want to go back to

    exercise sounds like you're a fan of

    high intensity interval training hit

    um I'm a big fan it's mostly a spectator

    sport unfortunately

    for me um I would love to do more I'm

    mostly on airplanes or in behind a

    computer

    um so I

    only once a week do I always do high

    intensity exercise it's terrible it

    should be three times a week at least

    occasionally I'll go to our home gym but

    usually I'm just naked um so I go

    because it's only once a week I spend

    three hours in the gym everybody said

    that I broke and he was like what are

    you doing

    for three hours

    making up for the rest of the week so we

    spend an hour so my son and I do this

    and it's the best thing I

    I probably wouldn't do it as much if it

    wasn't for my son being there um I took

    him to the gym for his benefit which

    turned out to be the best thing we've

    ever done as a family

    but so we spent an hour with a trainer

    who really works us hard uh we were

    doing deadlifts and uh wow yeah my son

    is in the top one percent for his age

    now because wow how old is he he's 12

    okay

    almost as much as me wow

    uh he's very proud of that and then um

    then we do you know a lot of muscle

    strength training and then a lot of

    stretching and then we do boxing

    and uh he's getting to the point where

    where he can actually cause some damage

    on on me to me uh and he recently got

    his his own set of boxing gloves so he's

    very happy about that so that's all

    that's fairly aerobic if you do that

    right

    and then we'll do some treadmill and

    some StairMaster and some stretching and

    then we did then we go that's that's

    about an hour and a half to two hours

    then we go downstairs to our steam room

    the sauna and the hot tub and then the

    cold bath

    and we cycle through those for an hour

    and uh I hate getting cold I'm from

    Australia I hate the Boston Winters but

    my son grew up in New England so he he's

    up to 15 minutes in the cold bath wow

    every time he's breaking his record

    um whereas a minute for me is is painful

    but anyway what I I believe is that

    these sirtuin genes are activated by a

    cold and probably by heat we don't know

    for sure but there's enough evidence

    from both of these that if you look at

    groups of people who do these things

    they tend to be protected against heart

    disease among some other things now you

    can argue all day that that's just a

    correlation and that people go to the

    sauna are probably not the same ones who

    are in hospital fair enough

    but at a minimum I'm feeling pretty good

    and we know that in mice if you make

    them cold they develop what's called

    Brown fat and we have brown fat we've

    discovered the last 15 years and

    branford's very good for us it burns

    energy and it puts out these proteins

    that help the rest of the body so for

    someone who also hates the cold

    and I'll try anything I I am not I think

    the last time I did like an ice bath was

    in college for basketball like and that

    was it I swear once I'm done I'm done

    like what's the bare minimum for someone

    to get the health benefit of going from

    extraordinarily cold to heat and back

    and forth can't do the hour or 15

    minutes like what's the bare minimum if

    I'm at home and I got the shower what

    can I do

    well it's a guess because no one studied

    it um

    so what I what I'm thinking

    scientifically is

    the shock is the biggest part always

    with this hormesis effect it's you want

    the shock get your body out of that

    state so that's why I think for a minute

    up to my neck is is enough okay once

    your body starts to get used to it the

    effects gone right so that's with most

    things

    um that's why I don't eat all the time

    and you don't want to always be running

    all the time either you need to recover

    and then you hit your body again and

    cycle it that way so a minute cold then

    hot then change it well I love what you

    said because I I found personally

    everything works until it doesn't

    to some degree

    and it's listening

    well yeah

    the other thing about it is so we know

    what's going to happen to us if we don't

    do anything okay we've seen what that

    happens all of our ancestors who didn't

    look after themselves it's not pretty

    and many in my family don't live beyond

    about 70. uh so

    like you say it if it doesn't work

    I'm not gonna cry it's a lot of fun I

    feel great I'm with my son

    um a minute of cold is really you know

    it gives me a little bit more mental

    strength as well I just I need that and

    uh

    at the at best I'm gonna give myself

    another 10 20 years of healthy life so

    that's a calculation that I think is

    pretty easy to do and with regards to

    exercise

    seems like a there there's a lot of

    interesting research lately that less is

    more with regards to interval training

    exactly yeah so in my book I've got a

    fair amount of um references yes it's

    like half the book if I remember I got

    the book like all the footnotes in here

    wow yeah I had to hire somebody just to

    format the fitness but I'm a scientist

    so everything that I say is backed up by

    science it had to be this isn't a

    self-help made-up book

    um it's it's really is scientifically

    valid as I could make it but in in the

    book I talk about

    um what you were saying which is that we

    used to think you had to be a marathon

    runner to live a long time that's

    actually not true you you can actually

    wear out your body parts from sport you

    probably have some friends who are

    feeling it already

    so you want to be able to get the

    maximum

    bang for the buck and what we're finding

    we scientists is that just 10 minutes on

    a treadmill as long as you lose your

    breath you become hypoxic that means

    that you're you're unable to carry out a

    conversation during this one if you do

    that for 10 minutes a few times a week

    that seems to be

    nearly as good as pro athletes

    so yeah a little bit goes a long way

    when it comes to exercise but you've got

    to push yourself you can't just

    uh you know walk up a flight of stairs

    and think you're done for the week run

    up run up like five flights

    right still walking is good if you're

    elderly and you can't run clearly

    walking helps a lot of

    people who are in you know in their

    hundreds didn't run a day in their lives

    and but they did walk a lot but you got

    to keep moving

    what about sleep

    wow sleep is really really important

    more than I thought which I wish we all

    knew this when we were in our 20s all

    right

    and you came from a red eye talking to

    two guys didn't sleep last night yeah we

    should practice what we preach

    um but I do try more than I used to I

    especially as I get older it's harder to

    recover from a night like that on an

    airplane

    and again it's this biofeedback really

    helps me because it makes you more aware

    of what's going on and so that's why

    I've got this ring on my finger which is

    used by now many people to monitor their

    sleep not just when they sleep but how

    well they sleep and I learn what causes

    me not to sleep well of course being on

    a plane doesn't help but even if I'm at

    home in my bed if I have a drink late at

    night or two messes up my sleep and I'll

    feel it the next day a large meal a big

    steak late at night yeah nine o'clock

    won't sleep and I used to wonder why I

    would feel up I wake up feeling bad and

    now I've figured out it's it's the Sleep

    disruption and so you mentioned planes

    you are not a fan we have to and you're

    not a fan of TSA either but for

    different reasons than most of us yeah

    well so what what I've discovered in our

    lab is that

    one of the drivers of Aging we think and

    again this isn't brand new we've been

    doing this for now at least 20 years but

    it is new to most scientists and the

    public is that

    aging is driven by this clock that I

    mentioned and this clock is What's

    called the epigenome which

    at a very high level you can think of

    the epigenome as scratches on a corner

    CD or a DVD and the digital information

    is the genome and we what scratches the

    CD is uh largely its broken DNA because

    the cell has to reorganize all of your

    genes to deal with the broken DNA and

    even when it's put back together it

    doesn't fully reorganize itself the way

    it was you know 10 minutes before and if

    you keep doing that over a lifetime you

    lose the ability to read the right genes

    the right time in your cells we think

    lose their identity

    so

    with that said and also I should say

    that long-lived species have very good

    capability of repairing broken

    chromosomes and proteins that or genes

    that help DNA repair

    if you put them into animals they live

    longer there's one called 36 which is

    one of those or two ones that we work on

    you can make a mouse live longer if you

    give it better DNA repair all that to

    say avoid DNA breaks as best you can

    because I think that's one of the main

    drivers of Aging now you can break your

    DNA by going out in the sun we know that

    any kid who grew up in Australia myself

    being one of them will look older

    because well purpose is a layer there's

    right uh yeah ozone and uh and the

    culture

    um you know I grew up in the 80s when

    having a tan was if you didn't have a

    tan people wouldn't talk to you you're a

    loser so you had to get brown we used to

    just sit out there with oil on our skin

    cooking and our places would peel it was

    horrible especially our backs but yeah

    um

    so here's the thing I try to avoid the

    sun occasionally as long as I don't

    overwhelm my skin I'm happy to sit in

    the Sun for 10 minutes 15 minutes it

    feels great and it's good for vitamin D

    but beyond that you don't want to

    overwhelm the system because then you

    get this aging effect

    there are other ways to break

    chromosomes there are toxins in the

    environment so pcbs will do it microwave

    food and Plastics will do it even the

    yellow ink in a an enchant jet printer

    will do it that's surprisingly toxic

    I've found

    and then speaking about the TSA the

    original scanners that they had at the

    airport did break DNA and it was they

    were quite penetrating

    and they first banned them in Europe and

    for about a year or two uh

    I knew that most people didn't and I

    would say to the people in the US do you

    know that these abandon Europe because

    they're dangerous and they'd say oh shut

    up and go through it and they would

    force me to go through it and I would

    say no give me a pat down

    anyway long story short that they've

    improved them somewhat but I'm still

    aware of the dangers of even low-dose

    radiation and these mice that we've aged

    in the lab by 50 we don't trash their

    genomes we just cut them very precisely

    a little bit stop it after three weeks

    and 10 months later they look really old

    compared to their brothers and sisters

    so you don't need a lot of DNA damage to

    accelerate this aging clock

    uh which tells me

    avoid radiation unless you actually have

    to so an x-ray or chemotherapy

    these are ways to break your DNA but you

    you need those right if your doctor says

    do that you you listen to them as you

    should but these avoidable ones I think

    we should study those more I would love

    to see a group of animals that have been

    exposed to those scanners not just for

    cancer that's just one thing that can

    happen from broken DNA but go for two

    years and see what happens to them do

    they get older or Not by messing up not

    the DNA but not the genome but the

    epigenome which is the organization of

    the DNA so you mentions your two in so

    when I come back to NAD and for our

    audience something we've talked about

    here before but

    as a primer what is it why should we be

    paying attention to it

    to certain NAD NAD yeah well so certains

    are think of them as the protective

    enzymes of the body

    uh they if you we think in Upstream

    Downstream mode so Downstream of them

    what are they doing they're repairing

    DNA as I mentioned they're stabilizing

    the epigenome so they're packaging the

    DNA making sure it stays in a youthful

    package but they have to jump between

    DNA repair and packaging this is their

    job they have two two jobs and over time

    they lose their position

    similar to if there's another hurricane

    Katrina the Army Corps of Engineers will

    go down fix it but some of them won't

    ever come back or they're distracted by

    something else some other disaster and

    we think that's what the certains are

    doing they're moving back and forth

    between these two activities

    um what's good about them

    is that they sense the environment and

    the way they do that is they measure how

    much NAD is in the cell so NAD is the

    world's most boring molecule it if

    anyone who remembers biology from high

    school will remember NAD is used by

    enzymes to carry out reactions about 500

    different ones in the cell

    and then they made us learn those damn

    reactions remember the Krebs cycle or

    TCA cycle and all that stuff you

    probably don't you put it out of your

    memory but but that's that that's what

    NAD does and it was

    it was considered the most boring

    molecule up until the 2000s

    when it was discovered that these

    sirtuans are sensing them out of NAD in

    the cell

    and protecting us

    and then we realized that Ned even

    though it's a very important chemical

    which you might think therefore you

    don't want to change the levels always

    which we need the same level of NAD

    turns out a few things happen NAD Cycles

    throughout the day so when you wake up

    in the morning you're getting more NAD

    getting ready for the day

    um

    and it's cycling it's responsible for

    our sleep wake Cycles which is one of

    the reasons why sleep is so important

    you want to make sure that it's all in

    sync

    by the way if you disrupt sleep cycles

    you get aging that's not in animals so

    certains control that NAD is cycling but

    the other thing that's now known is that

    we lose NAD over time as we get older

    not so much in our blood but in our

    tissues it goes down by about half

    between the ages of 20 and 50. if you

    just say if you take a skin sample which

    is really scary because NAD is essential

    for life

    uh you're dead at zero you're definitely

    dead at zero uh if if you if we stop

    making an ad we would definitely be dead

    within about 10 seconds it's like taking

    cyanide in fact that's what cyanide does

    it blocks the ability to make NAD and

    energy

    so NAD is important and you don't want

    to have half the levels for two reasons

    right you're not going to have enough

    energy to make these chemical reactions

    go but even more important these sort of

    ones will be weak and not active and not

    repairing DNA and stabilizing the

    epigenome so the scratches on the CD get

    faster and more and more and more it's

    basically rubbing sandpaper on there and

    eventually the reader of the CD is

    playing a cacophony or or rejecting the

    CD which is what we think is aging and

    so what can we do to increase NAD

    well we know you can exercise and you

    can be hungry that's why those things

    work we think all right so that I love

    it that's the place to start that's what

    um in my book is it's not just how to

    live but why it works which is important

    because it helps you tweak your own body

    uh other ways to raise NAD would be

    uh

    so metformin will raise NAD that his

    take a little setback there are three

    main categories of longevity genes

    there's the sirtuins that I work on

    there are seven of those there's a one

    that's usually put in the middle called

    ampk or amp kinase which senses energy

    in the cell low energy

    it turns on which is good

    and then the third one senses amino

    acids and if you have a lot of branched

    chain amino acids which are found a lot

    in meat it will not be as helpful it's

    one of the reasons why I like to

    sometimes keep my amino acid intake low

    to try and get that pathway going that's

    the pathway that'll stimulate that

    autophagy that we talked about earlier

    um so NAD and all of these pathways are

    talking to each other that's my point

    and we used to fight as scientists over

    whose pathway was more important it was

    pathetic uh you know sort of two ends at

    the best no M2 is the best no we don't

    turns out if you tweak mtor you'll

    affect the other two or vice versa so

    you can if you tweak the others NAD will

    go up and if you tweak NAD the others

    will will go but what we don't

    understand which is a little confusing

    especially for the public and also

    scientists is what's the best way to

    tweak those three main things in what

    order when how

    we don't know that yet we've just

    figured out that they talk to each other

    but the optimum isn't known and what's

    interesting is about is people like

    myself and thousands of other people now

    are trying out their various versions of

    diets and exercise when to eat what to

    eat to try and optimize that longevity

    pathway and together we're figuring this

    out and clinical trials are underway but

    in a clinical trial you can only change

    one thing at a time

    and they cost about 15 million dollars

    to to complete so it's going to take the

    rest of our lives to figure this out the

    traditional way or we can try a few

    things and see what we can learn which

    is what I've done in parallel

    but so you can also boost NAD

    artificially

    if you want there are molecules that we

    make in our bodies that are safe enough

    we think to take as a supplement so at a

    hour and then we've talked about people

    are experimenting with injections and

    NAD NAD injections but not there and

    then a man but it's like it's exciting

    there are lots of things we're trying

    out right now

    that can potentially increase NAD and

    tied to longevity and

    it's interesting exciting

    well it's it it is exciting and uh so

    far there's been no downside that this

    is the right the potential risk here is

    that we've got 100 000 people or more

    trying this out and you know God forbid

    that there's some downside right we

    don't know of what what that is yet and

    I want to be the first to know

    um and I'll tell the world if we find

    something don't worry about that I'm not

    going to hide anything uh because my

    whole family is now taking and the NAD

    booster called nmn yeah yeah not to be

    confused with Eminem's uh but yeah my

    father my wife even our dogs

    um not our kids by the way we don't

    think it's worth the risk and besides

    young people make a lot of NAD anyway so

    there's no need probably

    but yeah we want to know what the

    toxicity is there doesn't seem to be any

    I will tell you that unpublished data

    we've been doing clinical trials with

    molecules like nmn and uh trying to

    develop drugs for diseases like

    friedrich's Ataxia which is a energy

    deficient disease people end up in

    wheelchairs midlife

    uh those studies look good we can raise

    NAD effectively with an oral pill it's

    not sublingual it's just a pill

    swallowed we don't need injections it

    works just as a pill but um so that

    whole debate I'm not jumping into

    because I think there's a lot of

    not disinterested parties involved sure

    um can I just say that uh if anyone

    looks at on the internet they'll see

    pretty much every company has my name

    and quotes from me on their website

    trying to say don't believe them this is

    Sinclair stuff trust me he works with us

    I don't work with any of them okay I

    barely even look at their websites first

    of all I just get too too upset when I

    look at them just like we were talking

    about all the people who have your who

    have lifespan on Amazon who aren't you

    they're ripping off my book too

    yeah I guess it's popular sign of

    success but it's uh but NAD is is really

    interesting we don't think there's any

    issues with it there are a lot of

    supplements out there I have a

    newsletter where I talk about what to

    look for sure so that that's how I'm

    helping but I have to be very careful

    because if I start

    being biased or jump into the supplement

    world or I start selling something sure

    then nobody should believe what I say I

    can only imagine

    uh so so with regards to longevity

    where do you think the conversation is

    going to be a year from now three years

    you know Dave asperi said he's going to

    want to do 180 and he'll go through his

    reasons like what what do you think is

    attainable for people today and what's

    going to be attainable for our children

    yeah well so in in my book lifespan I

    paint the pictures of what the future

    looks like in the very near future and

    and for our future and what that means

    for the world good and bad and so if you

    want a view of that it's in there what I

    think is going to happen

    and I'm right on The Cutting Edge I see

    things that most people don't sometimes

    years ahead so consider that what I see

    coming is that there are drugs that are

    in development that could be on the

    market within the next year or two that

    look like they would slow down aging the

    problem is that aging isn't a disease

    at least based on the regular regulatory

    authorities anywhere in the world

    that may change in the next 10 years too

    there's a lot of push from

    Grassroots as well as from the top down

    so that's probably one country starts

    doing it everyone's going to follow

    because it's going to be great for that

    country

    and something like metformin is only a

    couple of cents appeal so it's not going

    to bankrupt donation trying to prevent

    diseases like heart disease and cancer

    so I think within 10 years you'll you'll

    have a blood test you'll have your

    biological age identified if you're

    above a certain age let's say it's 50

    you can be prescribed Metformin and some

    of these other things and that'll be

    quite acceptable just the same way we

    now have cholesterol drugs to prevent

    something once you know it's safe enough

    and it's cheap enough then Things become

    adopted and I think it'll be quite

    normal in 10 years for people to be

    working on slowing their aging whereas

    now it feels weird because we think of

    Aging as something that's

    acceptable but increasingly and I think

    anyone who reads my book will come to

    hopefully the same conclusion I have

    which is we are kidding ourselves if

    this is something that we should accept

    right not just because it'll

    help the Healthcare System but because

    what we're doing right now is knocking

    individual diseases on the head and

    we're playing whack-a-mole and even if

    we could stop all cancer today we're

    only going to live on average an extra

    two years because all the other problems

    with aging come along right up behind

    there and so if we're going to have a

    meaningful impact on our lives we have

    to start early

    watch what we eat

    when we eat exercise if you do

    supplements you know I think that that's

    going to augment that we know in animals

    at least if you take Resveratrol which

    is one of the other things that my

    family and I take from red wine if you

    combine that with every other day

    feeding in mice you get the longest live

    mouse in the experiment so you're a fan

    of red wine

    uh I am just not late and in abundance

    it's full of a lot of these Xeno

    hermetic molecules I was talking about

    because the grapes are picked when

    they're stressed they're either covered

    in fungus or are they dehydrated so

    people figured out that's what makes a

    wine taste good what they didn't realize

    was that that also boosts these

    molecules that give our body that that

    extra boost for longevity so as we're on

    the subject of potentially healthy

    unhealthy bases red wine good anything

    else on there

    or vices well snacking at night is

    something I'd love to stop doing

    uh yeah I'm you know I'm trying not to

    eat but

    when all the families in bed and I've

    just got

    work on my mind it's comfort food for me

    not every night sometimes I'm good but

    it's so bad that I've thought about

    locking up the cupboards what's the

    what's the cover for the guts yeah demon

    comes out

    are anything salty uh

    nuts

    hopefully not chips not so good not not

    that many yeah I'll just eat like a

    maniac uh it's a it's a real disorder

    that I have

    um but it's definitely stressed when I'm

    feeling good and everything's going well

    I don't feel the need for it let's close

    with stress that's a good place to you

    know we're talking about we we've

    covered everything we've covered

    nutrition NAD

    student metformin let's close with

    stress something that I think every

    everyone can relate to and stress and

    the toll it takes on one's life

    yeah well there's two types of stress

    the stress that I talk about is

    biological stress which is not the same

    as psychological biological stress is

    good as long as it doesn't hurt you too

    badly you recover and you're more

    resilient

    psychological stress though is not good

    to a certain amount you know a bit of

    adrenaline's not going to hurt you in

    fact it's probably beneficial I've spent

    most of my life with adrenaline every

    day doing things that are out of my

    comfort zone

    but chronic stress you you do that to a

    mouse and it'll age faster you just see

    that happen anyone who's had a fish tank

    the the small one in the tank is

    is not doing too well same same for us

    we get cortisol we get a whole bunch of

    immune defects and uh so you want to

    avoid stress so how do you do that

    it act it's really hard actually it's

    taken me about

    the first 40 years of my life to figure

    out what works for me uh

    I'll make it a little bit personal

    because it it's some people might be

    like me I'm I'm a fidgeter I'm a warrior

    I'm a perfectionist and so every day I

    am saying David you're an idiot why did

    you say that why did you do that how can

    I get better or get better get better

    and that's very stressful when you put

    that on yourself

    so I've learned to not take it all so

    seriously

    I have reminders including this

    wristband here I have a a gift from a

    Maasai tribe in Africa we we visited

    this year that what I worry about isn't

    really that problematic it also helped

    that I watched my mother die and it

    sounds terrible but that taught me what

    a bad day really looks like

    and everything else doesn't matter sure

    so I used to go home and complain to my

    wife ah you wouldn't believe it so and

    so it's fighting someone said this and

    now I get home and I say it was a great

    day nobody died right I literally say

    that just about every day I get home and

    if you live like that then the stress

    goes away because you realize

    what we worry about these are really

    small things now

    I've been fortunate that I've gotten to

    my career where I'm in a good place and

    I'm not worried about

    putting food on the table

    not everybody's at that stage

    but I do think we over worry about

    things we're looking at Instagram and

    what if people posted and all that stuff

    that's really silly stuff to worry about

    so try to do meditation if it works for

    you yoga is good I found for me

    and yoga I don't know if anyone else

    feels this but when they say

    breathe and and detest your body and get

    untense I I didn't didn't realize how

    tense I am until somebody says I'll

    relax you wow I have really been tense

    every part of my body so that that

    really helps

    I think just take the Long View take the

    realize that we're all here for a short

    time realize that problems go away and

    the other thing I've realized is

    everything that you think is going to be

    super fantastic never turns out to be

    that good everything you think is is

    really really bad never turns out to be

    that bad and if you remember that it's

    also less stressful Amen to that David

    Sinclair thank you so much everyone

    check out his new book lifespan lifespan

    I must read thank you thanks for having

    me