I've had a -- let's call it a hobby of following the topic of supplementation and, more broadly, health, for decades. I can confirm that there is an ocean of high-quality source material, in some cases going back decades, for your assertions.
None of this stuff is going to make anyone "live forever" but it certainly CAN provide better odds of living longer (a surprising number of studies show increased life expectancy among animal subjects and humans from supplementation with things like fisetin, low-dose lithium -- or even the mega-dose amounts given to psychiatric patients -- and many other supplements) and of living HEALTHIER for more of those years. Bonus: Many of these things are inexpensive.
Another point: the number of deaths reported from over-the-counter supplements is, in a typical year, zero. Meanwhile, pharmaceutical drugs "are the third leading cause of death after heart disease and cancer in the United States and Europe."
There's a lot more to say on the topic of safeguarding and improving one's health via supplements and other methods (Shaw/Peason's Life Extension is 858 pages in softcover -- and that was written forty years ago). I look forward to seeing your future posts.
You're doing good work here, ghost.
I've had a -- let's call it a hobby of following the topic of supplementation and, more broadly, health, for decades. I can confirm that there is an ocean of high-quality source material, in some cases going back decades, for your assertions.
Life Extension: A Practical Scientific Approach: Adding Years to Your Life and Life to Your Years by scientists Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw, published in 1983, is still a worthy reference, and as with other tech areas, new information is growing exponentially and the list of available products based on that information is likewise expanding at a rapid pace.
None of this stuff is going to make anyone "live forever" but it certainly CAN provide better odds of living longer (a surprising number of studies show increased life expectancy among animal subjects and humans from supplementation with things like fisetin, low-dose lithium -- or even the mega-dose amounts given to psychiatric patients -- and many other supplements) and of living HEALTHIER for more of those years. Bonus: Many of these things are inexpensive.
Another point: the number of deaths reported from over-the-counter supplements is, in a typical year, zero. Meanwhile, pharmaceutical drugs "are the third leading cause of death after heart disease and cancer in the United States and Europe."
There's a lot more to say on the topic of safeguarding and improving one's health via supplements and other methods (Shaw/Peason's Life Extension is 858 pages in softcover -- and that was written forty years ago). I look forward to seeing your future posts.