Why Longevity? My Story

People often ask me what motivates my interest in longevity. My passion for health has been intertwined into my life for so long that the answer is lost in the noise of time and myopia. Hearing the question and attempting to answer it repeatedly has made me think on what my truth is.

I’ve responded a few different ways, each time with more clarity and conviction like every answer is one layer closer to my actual reason. It isn’t a tear-jerker story of a relative that passed too soon or overcoming a chronic illness myself. The answer is woven into my personality and the common thread that seems to string through everything I do in life—peak performance and control.

Before college, the gist of my efforts towards health started and ended with high school sports. Track, field hockey, lacrosse. Exercise was the default because we practiced daily so I didn’t think much about it. When I got to college, all that ended. Being healthy and active and to what degree was now up to me.

Two things happened. 1, I realized a fit body and everything associated with health like mood stability, good sleep, and clear skin were things that didn’t come automatically. Now that I didn’t have a coach telling me what to do and when to do it, I’d have to figure it out and take action myself. And 2, double click on the second point: I didn’t have a coach telling me what to do and when to do it, I’d have to figure it out and take action myself.

I like control, I like autonomy. My health was now something I could take complete control over, the pure joy I had in that realization was enough to tell me I really shouldn’t have been in team sports for the majority of my life but that’s for another introspective blog post. So I took action, a bit too much action maybe.

Freshman year, I joined the boxing team. We met every weeknight at 9 to quite nearly die for 2 hours. My dorm mates never understood why I prioritized it over Loose Tuesdays and $2 well drinks but once getting started there was no pulling me out of it. I needed to reach peak performance—not necessarily the best on the team but the best I knew I could be. (Although, to be fair, I did periodically rush home shower and meet everyone out after).

Boxing introduced me to weight lifting, I soon took that up myself which turned into daily gym sessions between bioengineering classes. Next came nutrition. I realized that eating differently would impact how strong my workouts were, it was another tool within my control to reach peak performance, so I started optimizing there as well. I cut out processed foods then meat then grains then dairy. I ate more fruits and vegetables, researched the best protein powders and supplements.

Looking back, I realize I dove head first into this world and went a little stir crazy. I won’t bore you with the progression from there to now but the gist is that I continued optimizing diet and exercise until I was introduced to the other vital pillars of health: sleep and mindfulness. Both of which I was almost certainly sacrificing in order to optimize the first two. As a result, I reeled back some of the methodical perfectionism until I reached a routine that’s made me feel the best, in both body and mind. I now enjoy helping others do the same.

The next logical step was thinking longer term. What can we do to maintain a healthy, thriving state for as long as possible?

Longevity for me is about peak performance, the pinnacle of health. What’s next after optimizing how we feel every day? It’s making sure we can have that for as long as possible, extending both healthspan and lifespan—the self actualization of health.

Today, most people don’t know how to approach the first part (feeling great today) let alone the second (feeling great till 100). I want to take everything I’ve learned from applying it in my life, my friends’, and my startups to change that.

Calculate Your Longevity: see your expected lifespan and custom recommendations

Check out a new tool now launched on my longevity site: Longevity Calculator.

Answer some questions about your habits to get your expected lifespan, low-risk lifestyle score, and recommendations on how to improve both.

Why does this matter?

The best strategy we have today to study longevity is to look at centenarians. When looking at individuals who live past 100, we know that most of them have a few genotypes that are associated with living longer. That’s less interesting because we can’t edit our genetic makeup (yet). What’s more compelling is that these people die from the same causes on average, the big three—cardiovascular disease, cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases. The difference is, the onset of these chronic diseases are delayed for the centenarians. This means that even if we’re lucky to be born with longevity genes, we face the same fate as the general populous. The best way to extend life with the tools we have today due to what we know about the most common causes of death, is to delay the onset of the big three.

What we know about chronic illnesses are that they are always progressive and almost always preventable. Progressive in that they begin developing before we feel symptoms. Preventable in that lifestyle factors we control today are the primary causes.

What science is it based on?

Many studies have been done to analyze the effect of lifestyle factors on health and longevity, one published in October 2007 and another in July 2018 (both funded by the NIH) looked at 6: diet, physical activity, sleep, BMI, smoking, and alcohol intake. This studies combined the results from 3 sources to estimate the extended life expectancy associated with maintaining low-risk vs. high-risk behavior within these 6 lifestyle factors. 

What is it?

The calculator is programmed based on the results of this research. It’s a simple, fun little stepping stone towards some more ideas I’m stewing in the realm of technology for health optimization and increasing our area under the curve. Would love to hear your feedback :) Check it out:

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