Aging
Research shows lifestyle is more important than genetics for lifespan and healthspan. Evidence-based ways to slow biological aging that improve daily life right away: more energy, better mood, deeper sleep, sharper focus, better health, and, through clearer thinking and steadier emotions, better relationships.
Level 1
Lifting weights boosts brain function
Contrary to the stereotype of weightlifting being associated with brute strength, research shows that regular weight training can improve…
Not smoking, moving regularly, and eating varied foods add the most years to your life
A study published in JAMA Network Open found that non-smoking, regular exercise, and a diverse diet significantly increase the likelihood…
Muscular strength found more crucial than cardio for longevity
Running, aerobic fitness has heart-boosting effects. Weight lifting are associated with lower overall rates of death and negative cardiovascular events. Moderate to vigorous physical activity, 1h+/week, significantly reduces mortality risk.

Learning multiple new skills can produce test scores comparable to adults 30 years younger
Older adults who learn multiple new skills simultaneously can achieve cognitive performance similar to adults 30 years younger. A UC Riverside study found that 3 months of intensive learning improved memory, attention, and cognitive control, with gains maintained up to one year later.
videoEpigenetics lets you control your genes through five simple lifestyle habits
Epigenetics proves your DNA is not your destiny. Learn the 5 lifestyle habits - diet, exercise, stress, pleasure, social bonds - that control your gene expression.
Level 2
Renting can accelerate aging more than obesity and smoking
Living as a tenant accelerates biological aging more than being obese, unemployed, or a former smoker, according to recent research.…
Alcohol consumption may affect future generations even before conception
New research suggests that alcohol consumption can impact the health of future generations, even before they are conceived. The study…
Quality friendships enhance happiness and health more than children and relatives
The research report examines the impact of social networks on the survival of very old Australians over a 10-year period.…
Longevity expert shares diet tips for a long and healthy life
Italian longevity expert, Valter Longo, highlights the importance of adopting a diet that promotes long-term health and longevity. Key recommendations…
Mentally stimulating jobs may reduce dementia risk
Cognitively demanding jobs in midlife reduce dementia risk Individuals engaged in cognitively demanding occupations between the ages of 30 and…
The body changes faster than expected around age 44 and again at 60
Research from Stanford University identifies two distinct periods in midlife, around ages 44 and 60, where the body undergoes significant…
Level 3

Partial reprogramming shifted lab skin cells toward younger clocks
In a 2022 eLife study, researchers at the Babraham Institute and partner institutions used 13 days of maturation-phase transient reprogramming on middle-aged donors' skin fibroblasts and reported roughly thirty-year shifts on custom transcript and DNA methylation clocks, plus collagen-related signals and partial gains in a scratch-wound assay. Cells regained fibroblast identity in the dish; telomere lengthening was not seen on the methylation-based estimate used. FDA later cleared a separate company-sponsored phase 1 gene-therapy trial based on partial epigenetic reprogramming for optic neuropathies; starting that trial is not proof of anti-aging benefit in humans.

Memory rejuvenation restored recall in mice
An EPFL Neuron study found that brief OSK gene activation in memory-trace neurons improved recall in aged and Alzheimer's-model mice. The result suggests some memory decline may reflect aging neurons rather than erased memories, but it does not show human memory restoration.
Vision gains in early dry AMD stem cell transplant trial
An open-label phase 1/2a report in Cell Stem Cell covers the first six participants in the lowest-dose arm of a donor-derived RPE stem cell trial for geographic atrophy. Chart scores in the poorest-vision group rose on average at a 12-month visit, and the better-vision group showed a modest average gain at six months, but the cohort is too small and too early to treat as proof of efficacy or as standard care.
AI-designed Yamanaka factors may speed cell rejuvenation research
AI-designed Yamanaka factors may speed cell rejuvenation research, but the current evidence still points to early lab progress rather than a near-term anti-aging treatment.

Healing the liver to achieve sustainable weight loss without frustration by Dr. Réginald Allouche
According to Dr. Réginald Allouche, weight gain is not merely caused by overeating but by an overburdened liver that can…
Clearing a protein buildup in the brain extended fly lifespan by 30%
A UCLA study found that preventing F-actin accumulation in the brain restores autophagy and extends fruit fly lifespan by 30%, offering new anti-aging hope.