Dr David Sinclair: Can Aging Be Reversed? After 8 Weeks, Cells Appeared 75% Younger In Tests!
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This is very uh
It's bad, right? It's hard, yeah.
>> That's what it's like to be old. And for
far too long, we've ignored [music] it
or accepted it as natural. And I reject
the idea that aging, just because it's
natural, is acceptable. Dying at 80 is
not inevitable. Absolutely, that can be
changed. So, if you're skeptical, I am a
Harvard professor who has been studying
aging, longevity, and age reversal for
30 years. And I've seen enough from my
lab showing that we can literally now
reverse the aging process. And it's not
a question of if, it's [music] a
question of when this is going to And
everyone should stick around cuz I'm
going to tell you some of the major
things that people should be doing. They
can lengthen your life by a decade. Hey,
you're not taking that off, Steven.
You've got 10 minutes of that. So, you
can accelerate aging by smoking, getting
an X-ray, ultra-processed foods,
excessive drinking, flying a lot. I fly
all the time. That's probably
accelerating your aging process.
Even going to a rock concert and
blasting your eardrums because your ear
hair cells are getting [music] older
faster. And so, I look at the body like
it's a computer and we can reinstall the
software. And what's [music] interesting
is when you reverse aging, diseases like
Alzheimer's, cancer, heart disease go
away [music] or are cured. Because
what's driving a lot of those diseases
is aging. And so, my lab is like Willy
Wonka's chocolate factory. They are
making discoveries that blow me away
every week. And I think we're at a
turning point in human history [music]
where you're probably going to live into
the 22nd century if you do all the right
things. And we're going to dig into all
of those in great detail. But what are
the unintended consequences of such a
world where we all live longer? And
also, do you think it's going to be
possible in the next 50 years for us to
live forever? And then, what's the best
uh treatment you've discovered for hair
loss?
>> This is why I love your podcast, Steven.
You ask the right questions. So, first
of
This is super interesting to me. My team
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And some of you have told us, according
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If you are a regular viewer of this show
and you like what we do here. We're
approaching quite a significant landmark
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free thing that you could do to help us,
my team, everyone here, to keep this
show free, to keep it improving year
over year and week over week, it is just
to hit that subscribe button and to
double-check if you've hit it. Only
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Do we have a deal?
If you do it, I'll tell you what I'll
do. I'll make sure
every single week, every single month,
we fight harder and harder and harder
and harder to bring you the guests and
conversations that you want to hear. I
stayed true to that promise since the
very beginning of the Diary of a CEO,
and I will not let you down. Please help
us. Really appreciate it. Let's get on
with the show.
>> [music]
>> Dr. David Sinclair. I have waited many
years to speak to you. And I've been so
keen to speak to you for so many years
because
so much of the research and the
information I've consumed on the
subjects we're going to talk about today
comes from you, directly from research
you've done, and from theories and ideas
and hypotheses that you formed. I think
the place that this conversation should
start is
is probably with this picture because it
appears to be incredibly formative
in your journey.
Oh, yes.
That is an important picture, true.
This is a picture
of my grandmother and me when I was in
my early 20s, I'm now 56, if you're
wondering.
And uh my grandmother has played a major
role in my life. Uh I'm going to have to
be careful not to get too emotional
because uh she's now passed passed away,
but she's inspired
me to
do the best I can to leave the world a
better place than uh I found it.
And there's this particular book here
called Now We Are Six.
It is Anyone who's read my book uh
Lifespan knows that this book is very
important to me. And I didn't realize
it, of course, when I was a kid that
this was going to change my whole life.
And there's a poem at the back there
that my grandmother, Vera, used to read
me
when I was six.
And it goes like this. When I was one, I
had just begun. When I was two, I was
nearly new. When I was three, I was
hardly me.
When I was four, I was not much more.
When I was five, I was just alive.
But now, I am six.
I'm as clever as clever. So, I think
I'll be six now forever and ever.
I'm getting chills reading this again
and hearing this poem again because
the impact on me was the following, that
subconsciously, my grandmother was
saying, "You you don't want to grow up.
Adults can be evil." She grew up after
World War II.
There was horrendous uh
impact on her and her family in Hungary.
And she thought that a child is innocent
and people shouldn't grow up. But what
actually happened was I realized
why do people grow old?
That's a terrible thing to happen. And
so, I've spent my life
trying to figure out why do we get old?
Why do we grow up? Why do we get frail?
Because I also think that if we can
solve that, understand it,
slow it, even reverse it now,
we we'll have the biggest impact on
human health in history.
Am I right in thinking your grandmother
told you at that young age that she was
going to die, that you were going to
die, that your parents were going to
die? Yes, uh she did tell me that. I
remember it very clearly, actually. I
was on the floor and she was crouching
down and I said, "Vera." I didn't call
her
grandma. She didn't want to be called
grandma. She wanted to be young like a
kid to me. I said, "Vera, will will you
always be here to protect me? Will you
always be around?" She said, "No, I'm
going to die."
I'm like, "What do you mean?" She goes,
"Every everything dies. I'm going to be
gone.
Your parents will be gone. Your pet cat
will be dead pretty soon. And you
yourself will be dead one day."
At age, you know, four or five, that's
that's that's heart-wrenching, right?
We've all gone through this realization
around that age that the world that we
believe in and see will one day all be
gone. That moment, I remember it so
clearly because I thought, "That's not
fair. Why would any species be made or
created that knew that fact? That's
cruel. It's better to either not know
or to not exist. But to know that that's
what's going to happen
is really cruel. And so, I I I vowed
actually legitimately around the age of
18
to get a PhD, to go to the United
States,
and develop a research lab to try and
do something about it. The preservation
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