What Will Your Years Actually Feel Like?
Most people think longevity is about living longer.
But the real question is:
What do those extra years actually feel like?
Because longevity, at its core, is two things:
Lifespan — how many years we live
Healthspan — how many of those years we feel well, capable, and fully able to live our lives
And if you ask me, healthspan is where it really matters. (And in many cases when you focus on improving health span, lifespan tends to follow).
In my mindset sessions with clients, I often ask a simple question:
What does health actually mean to you?
Most people pause.
Some say energy. Some say feeling good. Some say freedom.
The dictionary defines health as the absence of disease.
But I like to think about it differently:
Health is the ability to live your life — and your dreams — fully.
Your A1C is a Bit High. Now What?
Your A1C is one of the most important early signals for long-term health. Here’s what the numbers really mean—and the small, steady habits that can bring it back into a healthier range.
Activate Brain Gains to Minimize Cognitive Declines
Health … is … complicated. Or, at least it can be complicated.
Especially if we're confronted with a chronic disease.
The best approach? Being committed to “the work” of staying healthy, and hope that we never face a complicated diagnosis.
In other words, “the time to fix the roof is when the sun is shining.”
The work is a simple formula: awareness followed by action. Our long-term health hinges on recognizing the importance of proactive measures and implementing lifestyle changes.
Regrettably, our healthcare system predominantly focuses on treatment rather than prevention. The emphasis lies in waiting for illness to strike rather than promoting proactive health measures.
Dr. Peter Attia, in his book OUTLIVE, highlights "the four horsemen" of disease, responsible for 80% of deaths in individuals over 50 who are non-smokers:
- Heart Disease
- Cancer
- Neurodegenerative Disease
- Type 2 Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes is the foundational disease of the other three - meaning if you have Diabetes 2, you are at higher risk of the other diseases developing.
Longevity Unveiled: Decoding the Science of Aging Backwards
Longevity. It’s not something we think too much about when we’re young.
In fact, when we’re young, we just want to get older. And when we’re “old,” we just want to be young again.
Those middle years creep up fast … and come with the realization that we’ve perhaps lived more than half our life.
So logically, at this point in time, the idea of longevity might be something that enters our brain a bit more frequently.
And really what we all want is to live as long as possible, in a way that feels good and healthy.
Unfortunately, reality is harsh. Aging is the biggest risk factor for every chronic disease.
The statistics are staggering - 80% of adults over sixty-five have one chronic disease, and 77% have two chronic diseases.