Saturday, April 18, 2015

A Google Executive Is Taking 100 Pills A Day So He Can Live Forever

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The innovative minds behind Google have repeatedly declared immortality is not a fantasy but a certainty.
Bill Maris, the president and managing partner of Google Ventures, suggested the means to combat all diseases and age-related conditions could be available within his lifetime.
Maris said,
We actually have the tools in the life sciences to achieve anything that you have the audacity to envision. I just hope to live long enough not to die.
Subscribing to a similar belief system is Ray Kurzweil, who is Google’s director of engineering.
He’s 67 years old but, thanks to an extremely strict diet and pill routine, is confident he’ll live to see the day when the human body is no longer vulnerable to deterioration.
It’s because of his precise health regimen, which is also followed by his wife and children, that Kurzweil says biologically, he feels like he’s in his late 40s, according to Entrepreneur.
A usual breakfast features berries (85 calories), smoked salmon and mackerel (100 calories), dark chocolate infused with espresso (170 calories), vanilla soy milk (100 calories) and porridge (150-350 calories).
Kurzweil also enjoys stevia and green tea, the Mirror reports, both of which contain no calories.
The food choices are undoubtedly peculiar, largely due to the high amounts of sugar.
But the real secret to cheating death seems to be the 100 pills Kurzweil takes every day.
It costs him over $1,000 a day to take 30 in the morning and 70 more before the day is done.
They each target specific functions of the body such as “heart health, eye health, sexual health and brain health,” Kurzweil said.
His former routine consisted of 250 pills a day, but fairly recent advancements in supplements have allowed him to replace 10 pills with two, he says.
Kurzweil intends for the diet and pills to deny the expiration date his genes originally had in store for him.
His father died of a heart attack at just 58 years of age.
Kurzweil says,
The common wisdom is it’s 80 percent genes, 20 percent lifestyle. If you’re diligent, it’s 90 percent intervention and 10 percent genes.
He added one more reason exceeding the current life expectancy shouldn’t be too hard to conceive: Humans have, after all, been doing it over and over again for thousands of years.

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