2021-12-31 - Interview Dr. David Sinclair - mindbodygreen - How to look & feel 15 years younger

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    Transcript

    david welcome

    hey jason it's great to see you great to

    have you back on the show and

    it was so awesome to see you mentioned

    in our wellness trends specifically

    around longevity

    and something we're particularly excited

    about and you're excited about is this

    idea of democracization

    you know

    when people tend to think of longevity

    they tend to think of

    really expensive tests and potential

    potentially pharmaceuticals and

    supplements and so on they think of

    silicon valley and billionaires and all

    that crazy stuff you read

    but let's take a step back and and talk

    about democratizing longevity and i'm

    curious you know what is democratizing

    longevity mean to you yeah well you're

    right that there is a group of

    individuals that

    i meet more and more often

    that have the means and the wealth and

    the connections

    to extend their lifespan i think by

    20 30 years

    but it's a small group of people

    and what we need to do is to give

    that that information

    to everybody and that involves not just

    making it available but truly

    being educational

    and interesting and so what i've

    decided to do with my career as this

    harvard professor from a lab

    is to use hopefully decent abilities at

    storytelling to educate people and make

    it interesting i have a podcast coming

    out early next year january 5th where

    hopefully it's an

    interesting uh

    journey through the longevity world of

    science and

    nutrition and and exercise but also

    supplements and

    some of the more far out things that

    these billionaires are into and so it's

    about education primarily but the second

    part of that that i'm very into and

    driven by is to make

    the

    medicines that will come out of this

    field of aging research available to

    everybody

    uh because if it's just for the rich and

    it's cost a hundred thousand dollars

    treatment then that's really not going

    to help me achieve my goal in life which

    is to really make millions

    hopefully billions of people live

    healthier lives and in doing so lengthen

    their life as well

    and so the science that we do and the

    drug developments on i've started about

    a dozen companies now the companies are

    very focused on making those drugs

    are cheaply and widely available

    and the kind of technologies for the

    most part

    are

    drugs that could be just a few cents a

    day once they

    eventually uh get widely used

    what do you think was the biggest update

    that impacted our understanding

    of longevity in the last year you're on

    top of everything

    what's been interesting to you over the

    course of the last year

    yeah

    well

    what's actually happening in society is

    super interesting i used to be uh the

    pariah of biology i'm so sure harvard

    wanted to kick me out a few times

    but there's been a real shift both in

    mentality of doctors and researchers and

    the public

    that aging is something

    that is more akin to a medical condition

    a disease and that it's treatable so

    there's this zeitgeist mega trend if you

    want to call it in society that's

    changed but in terms of research and

    breakthroughs a really big one and

    forgive me for focusing on myself for

    one second my lab and the research team

    and our collaborators a year ago exactly

    to the day almost that

    we could reset the body in terms of age

    go back by about 80

    and do a permanent reset of the body now

    this is in animals but these are mice

    that are very similar biologically to us

    and we've done it now in human cells and

    human

    tissue so we're optimistic that the same

    principles that i'm going to tell you

    about in mice apply to humans and that

    is that we have a backup copy of youth

    in our bodies that can be accessed we're

    now using gene therapy because that's

    what we know works but we're hoping

    uh to find natural molecules that will

    achieve the same result to not just slow

    down the aging process which we know we

    can do by eating well at a training kind

    of diet and exercising lose your breath

    a few times a week at least

    but by actually taking a supplement that

    would reset the body within a matter of

    a few months to go back

    not just by six months but

    many many years

    and i truly believe that's going to be

    possible in the next five to 10 years

    and our goal now is as a society is to

    stay alive until these discoveries

    become mainstream

    and so you you think we're five or so

    years out from having that smart drug if

    you will or

    that

    we can take and that alone will extend

    health span

    yeah i know it sounds crazy right

    unfortunately i'm at harvard so people

    tend to take me a little more seriously

    but

    the big

    breakthrough was the discovery that we

    have this backup copy

    of

    youthfulness

    the easy part is figuring out how to

    reset the system it's similar if you

    want to use the analogy of the wright

    brothers i know it's used a little too

    much but it it works the wright brothers

    the hard part was figuring out how to

    glide around

    the dunes strapping on the engine flying

    eventually transcontinental flight now

    global that's just extensions of what

    they did in kitty hawk

    and we basically in aging we've done

    that now we know how to fly

    and now we're going to strap on the

    engine and see

    how quickly and how cheaply we can do

    this so i'm quite confident that we will

    find molecules that will do this in fact

    there was a paper that just came out

    that shows a natural molecule called

    alpha ketoglutarate

    that i predicted in my book lifespan

    probably would work

    was able to reset the age

    of 40 people i think out of 42 people 40

    people had their biological age reversed

    by an average of eight years

    within just

    uh under a year of taking this

    supplement so akg

    right and we can take that that is

    currently a supplement that's out there

    or can it be found in food naturally or

    where can we find it i think a lot of

    people are going to be very intrigued

    yeah

    me too like like most of these molecules

    that plants make in response to stress

    these molecules are called xenohermetins

    that we name them that

    they uh

    you need to

    a lot of them a lot of plants to get the

    amounts that

    are medicinal and so i it's better to

    eat a purified source of it you can buy

    akg or of ketoglutarate on the internet

    i look for trust and supplier

    very high quality high

    content of alfie kimku right there are

    some companies that are selling it that

    are combinations with vitamins in the

    case of this human study that's what

    they sell but yeah it's widely available

    and it would be really quite a thing for

    humanity to have a safe molecule that's

    similar to an amino acid that we could

    just pop and if it's true take our years

    our age back by half a decade or a

    decade now i'm quite skeptical because

    it sounds way too good to be true

    but then again some things are true so

    we're going to repeat the experiment

    and see what happens but i will say that

    the reason i think it's it's plausible

    is that if you give alpha ketoglutarate

    to yeast cells that make beer and bread

    to fruit flies and to mice they also

    live longer so there's something really

    important going on here

    building off of akg

    resveratrol you've always been a fan of

    resveratrol in many ways i feel like you

    put resveratrol on the map are you still

    a fan of resveratrol in terms of

    supplementation and in terms of some of

    the magic can do in terms of our

    longevity

    well i i am since we first made this

    discovery in 2003

    or there are something like 5 000 papers

    showing that it's beneficial to cells

    human cells and animal studies and and

    even now there's about a dozen

    positive human studies with resveratrol

    now the downside of resveratrol is that

    you cannot get it from red wine you'd

    need to drink 200 glasses a day and that

    even when you buy it purified

    it's it's insoluble so if you put a

    spoonful of resveratrol which i did take

    every morning into water it'll sink to

    the bottom

    so you need to mix it with something i i

    have a low-fat yogurt i recently am

    doing vegan yogurts

    which work well coconut base or with a

    bit of olive oil which itself is a

    xeno-hermetin product but not too much

    because i like to fast until about late

    afternoon or dinner but then it gets

    absorbed in the body we know that from

    human studies as well and unfortunately

    most people don't know that and they

    just swallow whereas resveratrol peeled

    with water and they think that'll work

    and it doesn't so keep that in mind now

    in terms of red wine i did raise the

    the sales of red wine by 30

    by our discoveries uh and it stayed up

    and i'm known as the red wine guy but my

    my good friend um and colleague serena

    poon who's a nutritionist among other

    skills and a chef had

    looked at my diet and said there's too

    much dairy there's too much meat and

    there's also too much alcohol so i'm a

    kind of binary guy i don't like making

    decisions so i just said okay i'm

    cutting it all out and we'll see what

    happens and i've done that i'm currently

    vegan

    uh no alcohol

    and i feel great i think i can continue

    doing this i'm grateful to serena

    actually for making those

    recommendations but not everybody can do

    it and a little bit of red wine really

    doesn't hurt unless um you've got a

    medical condition well on the subjective

    diet you know if we're gonna have to

    wait five years we've got a lot of work

    to do between now and then in terms of

    lifestyle so

    in terms of you know working on

    feeling good

    working on

    you know our health span for the next

    five years because a lot can happen

    between now and then

    what does the latest science say about

    lifestyle in general in terms of

    nutrition how i know it's highly

    personalized but

    if you were to generalize you know still

    plant-based for longevity still

    high-intensity interval training still

    some hot cold therapy i'll just stop

    there like what in terms of lifestyle

    what should we what should we all be

    focusing on right now

    yeah well the science is really strong

    on those areas it's not really up for

    debate

    and i say that because some people don't

    bother changing their lifestyle because

    they think oh next year there's going to

    be something new but that's not true

    when it comes to

    the

    benefits of

    plant-focused diets

    um and exercise

    there's nothing no science that i could

    see ever coming along saying

    the opposite of that now

    there are a lot of people who are

    excited about

    meat-based diets there are the

    carnivores as they call themselves if

    you look at the science and that's what

    i do you know i love me i wish meat was

    going to make me live to 200. that would

    be my dream

    but the science says that a

    plant-focused plant-based diet

    is associated with longevity and

    meat-based diets are not that's just

    a fact and we even know the molecular

    mechanisms that likely promote longevity

    amino acid ratios in plants turn on the

    body's defenses against aging and meat

    amino acid ratios do not

    and you know the other issues with meat

    as well but those are the main things

    and so

    the the longest lived people

    are either on a mediterranean diet

    which as you'll is mostly plant-based

    there's a little bit of fish a little

    bit of meat not a lot of olive oil and

    unsaturated fats and monounsaturated

    fatty acids

    um as well as a little bit of wine

    preferably red wine that's your

    mediterranean diet now those people live

    the longest on the planet there's a

    variant in asia called the okinawan diet

    which is also mostly plant-based and not

    a lot of calories and then it's the

    opposite for red meat it's inflammatory

    and you'll end up with high levels of

    cholesterol among other issues

    but if you want to build up muscle and

    you want to temporarily feel great you

    know by only all means eat eat a lot of

    steak but i wouldn't do it for a long

    period of time over your lifespan it

    won't

    have a lot of benefits and the way to

    think of this jason is that

    there are adversity mimetics that mimics

    that that mimic adversity and the body

    hunkers down

    and builds a stronger longer lasting

    body that's the lifestyle i've chosen

    so by eating these plants and by

    exercising and being a bit hot and get

    cold the body thinks heck i could die

    next week i better build a stronger body

    that's what i do then there's the

    abundance memetics which is i'm going to

    take growth hormone i'm going to eat a

    ton of meat i'm going to burn the candle

    at both ends which will make things

    brighter for a while but you'll burn out

    but both lifestyles can make you feel

    great and i can vouch for that with my

    lifestyle and

    in terms of

    exercise

    what have we learned about high

    intensity interval training recently you

    know

    there's lots of debate around you know

    it's five minutes or it's ten minutes or

    it's this percentage of your this is

    what you need to get your heart rate up

    on like is there consensus on high

    intensity interval trading in terms of

    benefits for longevity uh yeah

    uh some is good

    that's what it is it really is

    don't sit around

    so that the the worst

    for you is don't move okay sit in a

    chair all day and then go home and

    or stay at home watch movies okay that's

    the baseline that'll probably take 15

    years off your life

    the next thing that's good is you you

    can have a standing desk i'm standing

    here

    pretty much all day and behind me you

    can see gym so when i have a break i go

    do a bit of working out that's what it

    says the next level minimum a lot of

    people like walking minimum seven

    thousand steps twelve thousand some

    people do above that doesn't give you

    benefit but you asked me about interval

    training i i looked at the science i

    think three times a week losing your

    breath for at least ten minutes is a

    good thing above that doesn't hurt

    unless you're

    really over doing it but it's hard to

    overdo it

    rowing

    watch out for your back it's good

    cycling even better but yeah just move

    and maintain flexibility maintain muscle

    mass as well because it'll help with

    your hormones and if you fall over you

    won't break a bone

    and

    what about

    those who

    push themselves probably

    a little too much who

    maybe run a little too far

    who

    you know look we have a lot of people in

    our audience who love

    being well love feeling great and they

    go to the gym every day or they run

    every day or they do yoga

    what how do you think about the line

    that's crossed where potentially too

    much is detrimental for longevity

    yeah well so the clients that i work

    with are often

    for whatever better term fitness

    fanatics

    and

    many of them exercise

    every day

    and what we see in response is a spike

    in cortisol

    and that will age you there's no doubt

    about that

    and so to you can overdo it you can

    overstress the body and so my

    recommendation or advice

    is every other day exercise let your

    body rest and that's also true for some

    of these supplements i occasionally skip

    a day and let my body recover

    and you know that's i think the recipe

    for for success is that just

    going full bore the whole time

    is is not going to be optimal you do

    need those recipes

    and then what about hot cold therapy and

    how you view that right now

    well covert makes a little tough unless

    you have these in your in your house

    which i i don't but i used to do cold

    plungers i used to do cycles of

    four degrees celsius which it will you

    know almost shivering cold water up to

    my neck

    stay in there for as long as i could

    bear which was about five minutes

    jump out go in a sauna

    for 20 minutes feels great and then

    repeat that a few times and i i never

    felt better after that you know so it

    may not make you live longer but you

    certainly feel invigorated

    but the science is really getting

    stronger on that

    i would say that

    five years ago we didn't know but now we

    do know that sauna protects you against

    heart disease if you do it regularly i

    would say at least do it once a week and

    cold plungers are increasingly thought

    to be helpful for a reason that's

    interesting what it does is it activates

    the production of brown fat which exists

    mostly in your back

    and brown fat is super healthy it puts

    out signals that increase your

    metabolism and also again this adversity

    signal that your body will defend itself

    better and i think we're just going to

    learn more and more that keeping your

    body

    or getting your body out of the comfort

    zone in temperature wise

    and oxygen wise and nutrition wise is

    the trick

    so in the spirit of democratization what

    does that practice look like in the

    shower can we hack it in the shower with

    temperature well of course you can uh

    just

    don't turn on the hot water and get

    under there for a few minutes but

    for some reason i can't do that myself

    but if you can

    i think it'd be great i instead like to

    turn it up to almost scolding hot hope

    that's mimicking a sauna but yeah all of

    that i i totally would do that if if i

    could manage it

    but i just love warm showers in the

    morning so it's not for me so so do i

    that's that's the one i i i pretty much

    will try and practice everything with

    that one i'm having part of it's made me

    psychosomatic because back in college

    when i played basketball you know i

    lived and i i used to hate that sitting

    in that tub after practice you still

    want to go back there

    at cold tub another one which is

    emerging but you know so many people are

    excited about myself included

    intermittent fasting what's your take on

    intermittent fasting these days and what

    does the science say

    so adopting intermittent fasting in my

    life has been the single biggest change

    to how i feel and also how i look

    and i've taken off i've been getting

    younger past decade and the biggest

    impact has been this change in my eating

    habits

    and

    so what the science says let's

    leave me aside for a minute what the

    sign says is that

    it's not just about what you eat it's

    when you eat and

    the body should not always be fed so

    what actually happens in the typical

    american western is

    you eat you wake up you have some food

    for breakfast your blood sugar will

    spike up to about 120 130 megs per

    deciliter

    you'll feel great a lot of energy sugar

    and then the body produces insulin and

    sends the glucose way down now you're in

    a deficit and they go way down below

    like a roller coaster now you're you're

    feeling like you need a snack it's

    eleven o'clock i gotta be hungry i just

    had breakfast so you start snacking then

    you have lunch and you're up again

    and then you shoot down again in deficit

    now it's the the middle of the day and

    you've got

    low glucose you're tired you've got the

    brain fog i can't wait till dinner and

    then you

    snack and you eat and you repeat this

    cycle every day

    so i don't eat breakfast

    i have tiny bit of yogurt or olive oil

    but that's nothing

    for fasting and then i don't eat if i'm

    on a good day i don't eat until 7

    o'clock at night now there are stressful

    days where i might grab a handful of

    nuts or something that's healthy and you

    can't always

    you know be perfect and i'm not but most

    days i try my best to get through the

    day with hot teas and vitamin drinks and

    this kind of stuff just fill up my

    stomach with liquids

    now what that's done to me is that now

    my liver after just three weeks of doing

    this and now it's been many months

    is well close to a year

    is it's now putting out

    its own sugar my liver is way smarter

    than my mouth in my brain

    and i wake up in the morning and you

    know you can measure these things i use

    levels health device but there's a bunch

    and i can see that my liver is smart it

    builds up my blood glucose as i'm waking

    up even before i actually wake up

    and then it's leveled throughout the

    whole day steady like that a few little

    blips so i have a nut or i exercise or

    something

    and then at dinner it'll go up but not a

    lot and then

    i sleep through the night so that's

    optimal for longevity we know that that

    it's very healthy to have relatively low

    blood sugar levels and steady ones so

    i'm hugely in favor of intermittent

    fasting and

    i've had

    i've got my 20 year old body back as

    well i never thought i could i had love

    handles for most of my life and they're

    gone finally

    you mentioned levels and glucose

    monitoring

    [Music]

    it is

    how should we be thinking about that in

    terms of you know it you said it's

    optimal to to have i guess a baseline

    that's relatively consistent

    you know i found the experience

    fascinating when i

    did my trial just understand which foods

    had an impact on me and which didn't you

    know for example i love black coffee i

    love espresso

    coffee negligible it actually lowered my

    glucose slightly you know i would have

    fun i would do these experiments i'd say

    like all right i'll have an impossible

    burger and some fries and a frozen

    margarita and then i'll have a doughnut

    after this was like at a weekend you

    know weekend i eat more literally

    let's see how high this thing can go

    it's like you know i was like a kid like

    a teenager in like a sports car like

    let's see let's get this on the freeway

    and let's see how fast we can go

    and sure i got it pretty high it was a

    double spike it came down

    and then you know during the week i'm

    pretty healthy i do my thing you know

    what did i learn you know when i have my

    my my beans my refried beans less of an

    impact when i had a healthy fat you know

    some avocados in there versus just the

    beans and so forth but i'm curious like

    if in terms of longevity

    you know look life happens cake happens

    donuts happen and and that's also part

    of the the beauty of life living a long

    healthy joyful life is also about

    celebration every once in a while so how

    do you think about the fine line between

    all right i'm going to keep this thing

    low

    and

    forever or or

    90 of the time versus all right i'm

    going to enjoy this street over here

    and there and it's going to go up with

    it but it's going to come down and it's

    how do you think about balancing that

    well that's key you know there's no

    point me saying you cannot eat during

    the day or you can never have dessert or

    never have wine or beer

    that's really not the point you know

    if you live a life like that and you're

    not enjoying it life may not be longer

    but it'll certainly feel that way and

    you don't want that

    and

    you know sometimes people see me eat

    a sorbet or you know i'll have a lunch a

    salad or whatever and they say oh david

    you said you don't eat lunch well i

    never said that i just said i try my

    best not to

    and that's what it's all about and you

    should be able to indulge yourself

    but you know try to focus on certain

    types of diets mediterranean you know

    that can include dessert but i'd like to

    have some rules in my life because i'm

    i'm not that good at being ambiguous and

    so my rule that i set for myself when i

    was 40

    was

    no more desserts at dinner but i've

    modified it i'm allowed to steal tastes

    of other people's desserts and that's

    worked really well and i think that's

    the key to success is don't be too hard

    on yourself and if you fail at something

    or you eat something that you probably

    shouldn't have don't be hard on yourself

    everybody needs a treat once in a while

    and otherwise life's not worth living

    anyway 100 agreed

    so

    yeah we've talked about nutrition we've

    talked about

    intermittent fasting we've talked about

    exercise i think everyone understands

    sleep you need sleep you can't run on is

    that true just uh something you you

    can't run on no sleep well you can but

    you'll crash plus it's going to

    accelerate aging as well the genes that

    we work on called the sertums that

    control aging they also control the

    sleep wake cycle

    and so those two things are totally

    connected and if you disrupt your

    biological age get older you'll disrupt

    sleep and sleep will disrupt longevity

    so you just got to keep both of those in

    check in parallel because they're going

    to affect you

    and so the last one i'll i'll touch on

    anxiety

    loneliness

    we're experiencing a mental health

    epidemic you know there's obviously a

    big trauma but the big t and then little

    trauma with little t and and you know

    being in this pandemic you know there's

    definitely collective trauma for some

    it's the little t for others it's the

    big team i think it's safe to say it's

    been difficult for most everyone

    and so how do you think about

    anxiety stress mental health in general

    and the role plays and longevity

    yeah well it's really important getting

    back to the cortisol levels um your

    brain

    controls your longevity you know this uh

    in my lab we've manipulated

    mouse brains uh to make them turn on

    longevity genes and then the whole mouse

    is healthy so we just know that the

    brain is putting out factors that will

    either accelerate aging or slow it down

    so your mental state's important it's

    also important for immunity

    a beautiful paper was published last

    week in one of the world's top journals

    that showed that

    if you change a few neurons in the

    center of the brain again in a mouse but

    pretty interesting

    that you'll

    change the amount of

    circulating

    immune cells in the body

    and those immune cells can pick off

    cancer cells and viruses

    and so you know i used to

    i believed that the mind could control

    the body but now we just have proof

    that's actually working and which

    neurons are doing that so what does this

    all mean it means that you should

    keep your stress levels down if you can

    up meditate i now meditate as often as i

    have time for again serena poon has been

    a good influence on me in that regard

    but if you have the big stress the big t

    then you do need some help and

    increasingly you can go online and speak

    with a therapist and

    i've seen some really great results from

    particularly young people who become

    anxious you know in this day and age

    with social media

    with school and college and the stresses

    of

    all of that and code 19 on top of it

    it's really it's hard to be

    a young person without the coding skills

    that we had also to want agreed it's

    tough out there it really is and

    you know i'm an optimist i like to think

    there's a silver lining here but we

    shall see going into 22. so just

    rounding out lifestyle we kind of

    covered everything but i'll bring it

    back to food since we all love going

    grocery shopping

    i'll put you on the spot if you had to

    pick you know your top five longevity

    foods that

    everyone would be better off consuming

    as frequently as possible what's on

    david sinclair's longevity food grocery

    list oh food lots of yeah okay so good

    food so as a as a

    guide i try to

    choose foods that have been grown under

    stressful conditions

    so these would be

    organic for a start a locally grown

    and not in a just a regular hot house

    with lots of nutrients and water so

    if i can go to a local

    farm i'll do that

    and

    but the other way you can do it is you

    can look for foods that have a lot of

    color

    the purples the reds the very deep

    greens

    these are signs that the plants are

    making healthy molecules for you these

    xenohormetans as i mentioned so that the

    top foods would be

    if i could only eat one food it would

    probably be avocados the next one i do

    like very high quality

    fresh very tasty you know with maybe a

    little bit of bread or gluten-free bread

    dipped in there but not a lot i've tried

    to avoid

    carbs like that so we've got two the

    third one would be a roasted brussels

    sprouts pan fried

    bit of garlic and

    salt pepper

    that's three but the next would be um

    cantaloupe or rockmelon as i would call

    it

    as a fruit that's the most nutritious

    you can get and if i could pick another

    one in that category i'd say blueberries

    as well i snack on those pretty often

    and then the fourth category our fifth

    category that's important would be the

    nuts and so cashews are my favorite but

    i also have brazil nuts basil and just a

    whole variety of nuts during the day so

    if i'm peckish i'll take a few and the

    protein in the nuts suppresses appetite

    i love it everyone get out their pencils

    go on their instacart or amazon prime or

    go to their local farmer's market

    wherever you go shopping you got your

    list

    personally i think

    you made me very happy with avocados

    taking the number one spot

    i'll never forget there was a moment on

    the podcast where we had walter longo

    the famous walter longo

    on the show this was like two years ago

    and we were talking about avocados and

    he said

    i'm not sure we don't have the data if

    if all this avocado consumption is good

    for us and i was like

    hold on

    you just said like there's no santa

    claus to everyone

    so i'm very happy to hear avocados

    well well i'm i'm a good friend and

    colleague of falters we've known each

    other since we were kids actually in our

    20s

    and we like to debate

    but where i would disagree about that is

    that we know that avocados have high

    levels of oleic acid

    as well as sodas olive oil and oleic

    acid will activate cert-1 which is an

    enzyme that controls longevity in our

    bodies and so we know at least some of

    the components such as oleic acid are

    extremely beneficial as well as those

    unsaturated fats that come along

    so

    in closing

    there's so much happening in the

    longevity space

    is there something specific you're just

    beyond

    excited about in the movement that you'd

    like to share in the movement

    this is the movement this is a longevity

    movement i feel like everyone longevity

    wasn't in the lexicon i feel like a

    couple years ago right

    yeah yeah you're right about that it's

    been

    really a thrill for me to see this

    movement occur because i was banging my

    head against the wall for

    25 years and no one would listen

    my book helped it's sold close to a

    million copies around the world so that

    was good but what i'm most excited about

    is the fact that the younger generation

    has embraced longevity unexpectedly

    because

    you know stupid me i thought only old

    people cared about aging but no it's

    you know gen y and gen z that have

    realized that humans can achieve

    anything if they put their minds to it

    and we now realize a lot of young people

    realized is that aging begins before

    birth

    and every day is important and the clock

    is ticking and you can slow that down by

    living well and eating well and even

    some supplements that i mentioned these

    will slow the process down and the

    longer they live the more technology

    they can

    be exposed to so many people who are

    born around now in the last 10 years can

    make it to the 22nd century

    and imagine what's going to be available

    then if you know the last five years has

    totally changed

    everything and we can now reverse aging

    so yeah that's mostly what excites me is

    that every day i'm contacted by young

    people in their 20s and 30s who are

    excited about what we do and want to

    join the movement and either get

    involved in social media or

    medical research and devote their

    careers to it

    and for the record again what is your

    biological age versus your uh

    your real age if you will

    well i'm 52

    and uh

    my biological age is in my low 40s

    depending on the measurement but

    when i'm really good then i can get it

    down into the low 30s but yeah right now

    my blood by chemistry if you looked at

    it you'd say and you didn't know me

    you'd say i'm in my early 40s you know

    i'm still waiting for that gray hair to

    appear so

    so far so good

    the good news is that what i'm i've been

    doing to myself which is listed also in

    my book page 304 if you want to jump to

    that it doesn't seem to be hurting me

    which is a good start but also as i get

    older seems to be benefiting me as well

    i gotta get on the david sinclair

    program i'm getting up there i'm 47 now

    so

    you know i gotta do the biological age

    test i i'm somewhat i did you know

    look i believe

    wellness is a journey and and

    it doesn't matter how old you are it's

    never too late to start yet there are

    times when i look back at my 20s and oh

    man i was just a mess

    right and and we did damage to our uh

    bodies in those days and we we think

    we're immortal in when we're 20

    but now that we can measure the

    biological clock we can take a blood

    test we're developing in my lab

    this cheek swab which will be a lot

    cheaper

    than the current tests

    that can tell us our biological age and

    we know that even in your 20s you're

    aging your body if you don't look after

    it

    and that goes for things you might not

    think of when you go to a rock concert

    and you listen to super loud music

    you're aging your ears so that by the

    time you're our age you'll have less

    hearing so that actually leads me okay

    this this is the real last question so

    is there something that's really under

    the radar you know that's a great

    example that is either on

    on one hand it's

    aging us that we're not aware of like

    like going to a rock concert or on the

    other hand

    the behavior

    that is promoting longevity that we're

    unaware of like what are we unaware of

    that is working for us or against us in

    terms of the longevity that'll be i mean

    it that's the last question yeah well

    what we have found is that if you break

    dna

    that accelerates the aging clock

    dramatically in my lab we can drive

    aging forward in a mouse and make it get

    old within a few months but the good

    news is we can now reprogram them to be

    young again so we're driving aging

    forwards and backwards but what this

    tells us is that things that break

    chromosomes are

    really potent accelerators of aging now

    smoking will do that going in

    bright sunlight for hours and burning

    your skin will do that we know that from

    experience we didn't realize it was

    aging but it really is

    but there are other things that break

    dna in our lives there are chemicals

    from plastics even the new car smell is

    breaking our dna

    when we fly

    at high altitudes we're breaking dna

    because the cosmic rays hit us i'm

    skeptical of these scanners that they're

    neutral on breaking dna and getting an

    x-ray and a ct scan will break your dna

    now we need ct scans and x-rays for good

    reason i wouldn't refuse one from your

    doctor but don't get ct scans and x-rays

    if you don't need them so i've had big

    arguments with my dentist

    please don't x-ray my mouth every year i

    don't want it and they say

    you gotta have it

    and i say why because you need to pay

    for your machine so i

    i try to reduce my exposure to radiation

    in general for that reason

    david always a pleasure thank you so

    much

    jason it's been great to see you thanks