aging
Aging with grace and beauty. Embrace age with aging advice, tips, and tricks.
Reverse-Engineered
Chuck was an AI engineer, a pioneer who worked alongside longevity scientists to create a human chip with two objectives: 1) reduce stress on the brain by analyzing daily life inputs, and 2) increase human lifespan by fifty percent. Chuck's initial chip worked one week, so its results could not be measured. Fifteen-hour workdays of testing hypotheses and fifteen-minute standup meetings with the team daily. Finally, they decided. Five men, ten women, and ten girls, aged twelve, were implanted with the chip. The adults volunteered and were implanted in their armpits. The women volunteers perspired profusely, rivulets soaking and spreading to the breast area. The male subjects emitted a fragrance similar to almonds, acting as an aphrodisiac. The girls' hormone cycles were disrupted. Chuck tweaked the implant gradually until the body no longer identified it as foreign, ending the havoc with sweat glands and lymph nodes. The women became frigidly cold and wore thermals under heavy sweaters. One female felt continuous twitching, cut the implant out, and died from blood loss.
By Andrea Corwin 10 months ago in Longevity
A Quiet Exit?
Please press play on the link you prefer before reading. Boris Pope invested in a suicide machine, for he thought it'd be serene. His life would quietly disappear, and he'd be without fear. He thought as the nitrogen entered the chamber and his oxygen levels decreased, he'd enter into a deep slumber.
By Paul Stewart10 months ago in Longevity
Quality of Life. Runner-Up in The Life-Extending Conundrum Challenge.
It started with world-renowned reality show star and pilates instructor Patty Faynor. On Good Morning America in the year 2027, she sat down and announced to a skeptical crowd that she had found The Perfect Diet.
By Raistlin Allen10 months ago in Longevity
Breakthrough. Honorable Mention in The Life-Extending Conundrum Challenge.
Dr. Beatrice Yunez didn’t shout “Eureka” as ancient Greek scientists might have. Instead, she carefully double-checked the bloodwork of the mice in front of her. They nibbled on their pellets, unimpressed with her observation. She’d spent the past three years with them, day in and day out.
By Alison McBain10 months ago in Longevity
The Larazus Paradox
Dr. Eleanor Voss never set out to make humanity immortal. She only wanted to slow the quiet unraveling of life. For decades, she toiled in the depths of Vantor Biotech, perfecting what would become the Lazarus Treatment—a genetic breakthrough that halted cellular decay. At first, it seemed like salvation. Cancer, Alzheimer’s, and frailty vanished. Time became something to hold, rather than something that slipped away.
By Oluwatosin Ogunsina10 months ago in Longevity
Dunbar Labs
Thank you for listening to Tech Stuff. I’m Johnathan Strickland the 165th. Today’s story is about Doctor Gretta Jordan, the youngest person to open her own lab. At 20, she started Dunbar Labs, which made some of the biggest discoveries in centuries. By the age of 35, she made Time Magazine's person of the year three times, she’s published many research papers and launched her own podcast. Dunbar Labs was the first lab to clone a human being, they also perfected cryogenics and made mechanical body parts with skin that looks and feels like the real thing.
By Robert Kegel10 months ago in Longevity
The Problem With Most Of The Health And Wellness Industry
Yesterday, I wrote a Satirical Article for Finding Success as a part of April Fools Day. No, you should not take it seriously, though if you need something fun to lighten your day then you should give it a read.
By Dr. Cody Dakota Wooten, DFM, DHM, DAS (hc)10 months ago in Longevity





