Iāve been on that list, and interacted with these people and many more who went on the CR journey longer or shorter term. Iāve been on strict CR for some 8 years, but am no longer so. I still donāt overeat, but my view of CR in humans has evolved over the years and has become far more nuanced than in the early days, decades ago where the enthusiasm based on Walfordās work led to the āitās all about the caloriesā mantra.
Itās funny, but most of the insights from this study were already explored on the list over the decades. Nothing new. Been there, done that. In particular the decoupling of healthspan and lifespan. There were intense arguments about exercise, with the general acknowledgement that it squares the survival curve but does not extend it, and that at the extremes it can be actually counterproductive; if you want to go for the records, itās CR all the way, abandoning any exercise beyond the simple functional movement. I personally have always been a proponent of āitās the genesā view, in keeping with the unromantic adage of āitās better to be lucky than goodāā¦ Iāve gotten into many long arguments over this view, and the persistance of the just world fallacy (in this context: surely if I do everything right Iāll be rewarded with a long and healthy life). I could never get over the real life evidence: countless paragons of good health practices living not that long, and the huge variety of lifestyle among the true supercentenarians. Since such diverse lifestyles (icluding the quite unhealthy!) all can end up with 110+ years, clearly itās not about lifesyles but the blind luck of genesā¦ which is why asking the very old āhow did you do itā makes no sense, they canāt give us any actionable advice (be lucky!), and have traditionally been all over the place.
You can fiddle at the margins, boost healthspan, but in the end you have a set physiological potential, and lifestyle interventions (diet, exercise, smoking etc.) will at best allow you to reach it in full, whether yours is 75, 85, 105 or 125. Your genes set your limit, whatever it may be. Only pharma, and ultimately genetic manipulation can truly affect lifespan beyond your natural limits. Pharma in turn depends on individual response (driven by your genes!), so rapa or drug X, will work on a spectrum from very well to not at all and even counterproductive. Luck of the draw. In the long run, itās all about genetic manipulation, and we are still nowhere on that journey.
Speaking for myself, Iām about to roll the dice with rapa and hope for the best, while keeping an eye out for better drugs. Genetic manipulation - not within my lifetime (Iām 66), and suspect not within yours either, even if you were born just this morning. Weāll see where this strange and wondrous jorney of life takes usā¦