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Biological Age and Calendar Age: Two Clocks, One Life

  Every human life is measured by two distinct clocks running simultaneously, and they rarely agree. The first is the  calendar clock  — the astronomical scale of our planet, indifferent to the individual, counting days and years with absolute regularity. By this clock, everyone born on the same date is exactly the same age. It is the age on a passport, a birthday cake, a medical intake form. The calendar clock does not know your name. It does not know what you have survived, what you have built, or what you still intend to do. It simply counts. The second is the  biological clock  — the deeply personal expression of an individual's genetic program, unfolding from the first inhale to the last exhale in constant dialogue with the environment. This clock does not tick at a fixed rate. It accelerates and decelerates in response to lived experience. It responds to what we eat, how we move, who we love, what we fear, and what we endure. Two people of identical calend...

Wellspan: Staying Human to the Very End

Humanity has entered a paradoxical age. We live longer than any previous generation, yet often spend those additional years navigating chronic disease, disability, frailty, and disconnection. The success of extending lifespan has exposed a deeper problem: extra time does not automatically translate into a life that feels coherent, autonomous, or worth living. Medicine responded to this tension with the concept of healthspan — the years lived free of major disease. Healthspan was a necessary correction. It challenged the illusion that more years always mean better years, shifting clinical attention from survival statistics toward quality of life. Yet healthspan still defines its goal largely through the absence of pathology. It measures how long disease can be postponed rather than how well a person can continue to live when disease, limitation, and loss are already present. The Question Healthspan Cannot Answer Most people do not age into clean categories. They accumulate diagnoses g...

We Cannot Step Into the Same River Twice: A claim-by-claim response to David Sinclair’s series of interviews on aging, disease, and reprogramming

This article is a direct response to  David Sinclair ’s  series of interviews on the Information Theory of Aging , aging as disease , and cellular reprogramming as an anti-aging strategy. Across multiple conversations—in podcasts, talks, and public discussions—Sinclair has consistently advanced the same core claims: aging is an information problem, aging should be treated as a disease, and cellular reprogramming can reverse aging itself. David Sinclair has made important contributions to geroscience through work on sirtuins , NAD-related pathways, epigenetic regulation , and the Information Theory of Aging. The purpose of this response is not to dismiss those contributions, but to read the same interviews through a different physiological and philosophical lens: the organism lives one continuous individual biological program from birth to natural death, always immersed in environment, and aging is one natural phase of that life cycle rather than a disease in itself. That dif...