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A Longevity Mindset is one in which you believe in the ability of science to extend your healthspan, perhaps by ten or twenty years.

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42 Replies

I am shooting for 30+

The Tech Blog

by Peter H. Diamandis, MD

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My Longevity Practices Part 5: Mindset

How long you live is a function of many factors, including your mindset. You can actually will yourself to death—or will yourself to a longer healthspan.

My goal is to transform the way you think. The best way for me to do this is to give you overwhelming evidence of the massive biotech and medical advancements that can and will extend your healthspan.

I want you to go from thinking: “That sounds possible” to thinking: “Wow! This is really happening!”

One way I do this is by taking a small, select group of entrepreneurs, investors, and philanthropists on my annual Platinum Longevity Trip. Together, we’ll meet with the top 50 scientists, CEOs, and labs working on adding decades to your life. You’ll also learn about breakthroughs against a wide range of chronic diseases.

In today’s blog, I’ll discuss what it means to have a Longevity Mindset, why it’s so important to me, and how having one can help you maximize your healthspan.

Let’s dive in…

What is a Longevity Mindset?

One of the most important elements of my Longevity Practices is creating and maintaining a Longevity Mindset.

A Longevity Mindset is one in which you believe in the ability of science to extend your healthspan, perhaps by ten or twenty years.

Further, it is a belief (and an understanding) that during these additional decades, science isn’t standing still. Instead, health technologies are accelerating exponentially, continuing to make breakthroughs driven by AI, CRISPR, gene therapy, genome reading and editing—all of which are being focused on expanded healthspan and reversing disease.

A Longevity Mindset means becoming the “CEO of your own health” and recognizing that “Life is short, until you extend it.”

What Shapes Your Longevity Mindset and Your Healthspan?

How long you live is a function of many factors: where you were born, your genetics, your diet, and your mindset. Most people imagine that longevity is mostly inherited, that the genetic cards you are dealt have predetermined your lifespan.

You may be surprised by the truth.

In 2018, after the analysis of a 54-million-person ancestry database, scientists announced that lifespan has little to do with genes.

In fact, heritability is accountable for only ~7% of your longevity.

Other studies peg this somewhat higher, estimating that heritability accounts for some 20% or 30% of your lifespan—which still means, at a minimum, that lifestyle choices account for 70% of your longevity.

The power of shaping your healthspan is much more in your hands than you might have imagined. While we’ve already discussed things like diet, exercise, and sleep, one of the biggest (underestimated) impacts on your healthspan is your mindset, which we’ll explore below.

There are 7 key mindset and lifestyle areas (under your control) that fundamentally impact your healthspan. Let’s review each area together, and as we do, I invite you to ask yourself: “Where do I truly stand in this area? Where can I improve? What would it take for me to modify my beliefs and actions?”

#1. What do you honestly believe? Understanding your ingrained beliefs about your expected healthspan is the first place to begin. At one end of the spectrum, you see life as short and precious—you’ll consider yourself lucky if you make it to 75 or 80 years old. At the other end, you’re focused on breaking through 100 years old with energy and passion, making “100 years old the new 60.”

In this latter mindset, you see aging as a disease that can be slowed, stopped, and perhaps even reversed.

#2. What media are you consuming? The type of content you consume (e.g., books, blogs, movies, news) is constantly shaping how you think and directly impacting your Longevity Mindset. Are you reading the obituaries of old friends? Or are you reading books like Life Force, David Sinclair’s Lifespan, or Sergey Young’s Growing Young? Are you reading digital content about the latest political battle or are you reading LongevityInsider.org, a free, AI-enabled longevity newsletter, that summarizes daily breakthroughs and innovations from around the world?

#3. Who do you hang out with? Who makes up your community? The people you spend time with have perhaps the biggest impact on shaping what you believe and the actions you take. Are you actively building and deeply engaging with a community that is optimistic and youthful, despite their age? A group actively pursuing longevity and sharing best practices and encouraging one another?

#4. Are you prioritizing sleep? Sleep is a fundamental tool to optimize your healthspan. A great book that details this is Why We Sleep, by Dr. Matt Walker. We physiologically need 8 hours of sleep per night. Do you believe the motto that “There’s plenty of time to sleep when I'm dead”? Or do you prioritize sleep and use the best available techniques to help you achieve 8 healthy hours of sleep?

#5. How healthy is your diet? There is truth to the saying that “You are what you eat.” Do you eat whatever you want, whenever you want? Are you overweight, and eating way too much sugar? Or have you intentionally shaped your diet, minimizing sugars and high glycemic foods, while eating a diet high in whole-plants and sufficient protein to build muscle?

#6. How much exercise do you get? Along with your mindset, sufficient sleep, and a healthy diet, exercise is fundamental to longevity. The latest research on longevity makes it clear that increasing muscle mass is critical. So where are you on the exercise spectrum? At one end, you don’t exercise at all. On the other end, you’re getting in 10,000 steps a day, and exercise with weights at least three times each week, focusing on interval training and weightlifting.

#7. Annual Diagnostics? Most of us are optimists about our bodies. But in reality, we have no idea what’s really going on internally—until that moment we end up in the hospital with some condition. Your job is to catch any illness (cancer, inflammatory disease, insulin resistance, etc.) as early as possible, when it is most easily reversed. And the best way to do this is to make use of the increasingly available onslaught of diagnostic technologies that can help you find disease at inception.

Why Your Mindset Matters: The “Will to Live”

I want to close this Longevity Mindset Practice segment with a notion about the power of the human mind. Specifically, “the will to live.”

Mind over physiology.

A key mindset for longevity involves being excited about the future, having something to live for, to look forward to.

My coach, Dan Sullivan of Strategic Coach, puts it this way, “Always make your future bigger than your past.”

Tony Robbins says, “Having a bigger purpose to live for is absolutely key to longevity.”

My favorite story illustrating this comes from the annals of American history.

As it turns out, in an extraordinary demonstration of “the will to live,” two of America’s Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, both willed themselves to live long enough to see the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.

Even though in the early 1800’s, the average life expectancy was only 44 years old, Jefferson (who was 83) and Adams (who was 90), made it to July 4, 1826, both dying on that exact date, the 50th anniversary of the nation they had founded.

Clearly, they had a goal in mind, something to live for.

So, how long do you think you’ll live? Until you’re 80 years old? Maybe 90?

What mindset or purpose would you require to set a target of 120 healthy years, and make it there?

Your health is your greatest wealth, and today is the most extraordinary time to be alive.

Please begin to change how you discuss your lifespan / healthspan with others. Make it known to friends and family (with conviction) that you’re shooting for 100, 120, or even 156. Pick a number that inspires you and program that into your mind.

The results are powerful.

I’ll close with a compelling piece of data on why you should be optimistic about an extended healthspan, and why you should be optimistic in general!

In a study of 69,744 women and 1,429 men, published in the prestigious journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, it was found that optimistic people live as much as 15% longer than pessimists. The study was conducted over the course of 3 decades, controlling for health conditions, behaviors like diet and exercise, and other demographic information.

There is a lot to be grateful for, and a lot under your control.

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42 Replies
Baldylocks profile image
Baldylocks

just another reason to love you man, thanks

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toBaldylocks

You are invited to my 105th... celebrating my 75th next week.

Baldylocks profile image
Baldylocks in reply toScout4answers

from your lips to Gods ear, I pray it be so for us all.

Nusch profile image
Nusch in reply toScout4answers

And I invite you to my 104th - that’s my goal since long time. And Happy Birthday 🎂🎁🎈

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toNusch

looking at your updated profile I would say you have a great chance of hitting 104

Nusch profile image
Nusch in reply toScout4answers

🙏 - at least I try. Why? Always wanted to reach 103. Then I saw a 104 old lady participating in a 100 meter race. As a runner I was so impressed, that I decided, I would like to do this, too. I trust in the importance of setting goals and believing reaching them. So I contribute daily, starting with meditation, when waking up. Exercising daily and taking good care of healthy nutrition and enjoying going to sleep. Will it be enough? Only God knows.

Enjoy your 75th birthday today - all the very best! 🎂🎁🎈

dockam profile image
dockam in reply toScout4answers

A lil early for this youtu.be/vbJNjRoaIws Have a Wonderful 75th

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply todockam

Thanks Randy

TMcgee profile image
TMcgee

Thanks! Happy 75th

Zengal79 profile image
Zengal79

Happy 75th birthday Scout!💙

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers

Thanks, sorry you and your friend will not be here, get well soon.

billfenley2 profile image
billfenley2

With AI, this becomes all the more believable!

dorke profile image
dorke

Thank you 🙂Just in time for me

maley2711 profile image
maley2711

Today, I talked to a rep at a credit union. Hearing of my PCa, she mentioned her friend/boyfriend, age 50, who has already suffered FIVE different types of cancer.....and his Dad had prostate surgery for PCa. Made me appreciate my luck in making it to 74, let alone worrying about making it to 100. Sure I'd like to live longer.....but when I hear about QOL deterioration many men are suffering in this PCa struggle, I have second thoughts. Best to everyone on making it to 100!!!

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply tomaley2711

Healthspan... not just lifespan.

QOL

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply toScout4answers

gotta have lifespan to have healthspan?

CountryJoe profile image
CountryJoe

Thanks for this Scout and for always promoting hope.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toCountryJoe

The Stoics would say only focus on what you can control. Mindset is within our control.

Ramp7 profile image
Ramp7

Coco, turn up the music. Inspiring. My Mom lived to 95. SOC and the Hospital finally did her in. She taught me that life is a celebration to be enjoyed. I was holding her hand as she took her last breath.

MyDad76 profile image
MyDad76 in reply toRamp7

I also hold my mom's hand. But mine was only 69, when she died of pancreatic cancer. I do think that while positive attitude helps, there are many things that are out of our control. And that living in the present moment is best we can do.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toMyDad76

The Stoics would say only focus on what you can control. Mindset is within our control.

living in the present moment is a mindset

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toRamp7

Beautiful thought, thanks for sharing

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply toRamp7

Maybe shouldn't blame Docs for the outcome...must have been reasons for the SOC and hospital?

Ramp7 profile image
Ramp7 in reply tomaley2711

I don't blame Doc's. I blame the system.

LongevityAT profile image
LongevityAT

I believe also that mindset is the absolute key to longevity because it permeates every aspect of our lives. While I agree with the seven points listed above, and while I agree that science/medicine can play a major role, it really boils down to you and your mindset.

Every year I pick one thing that challenges me, scares me or is hard to do as part of having a growth mindset. One year I learned a musical instrument and sung in public, one year it was to hike the Appalachian Trail (made it 630 miles before having to leave trail with a torn rotator cuff from a slip in the Smokies), another was to run my first marathon (a trail run in winter up Mt Mitchell in NC) and another to write a book. This year it is to attend an 11 day silent meditation retreat in south Georgia and next year to once again hike the Appalachian Trail, except to complete all 2,183 miles this time.

Maintain a growth mindset and by definition you will have a positive mindset. My PC treatment was partially selected by the fact that I'm going to live to 100 and want to be able to enjoy it both mentally and physically.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toLongevityAT

You are my kind of guy, like your yearly challenge, might have to formally incorporate into my life. Last year Coco and I took Swing dance lessons, this year we are adding Salsa to our repertoire. Good steps forward (pun intended)but not as challenging as yours.

This year it is to attend an 11 day silent meditation retreat in south Georgia

Have you read the book 10% Happier by Dan Harris? He describes his experience in a similar situation.

LongevityAT profile image
LongevityAT in reply toScout4answers

yes, great book! Like books that make me laugh out loud. Looking forward to my experience.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toLongevityAT

I hope you will share the experience with us

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply toLongevityAT

how do you KNOW you'll make it to 100??????????????

LongevityAT profile image
LongevityAT in reply tomaley2711

All I know is that if I don't believe it, I won't make it.

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply toLongevityAT

what leads you to that conclusion?

LongevityAT profile image
LongevityAT in reply tomaley2711

The mind is an incredible tool and can be leveraged for good or bad in our lives. And by good or bad I mean towards ourselves. A positive or negative mindset will impact the thousands of subconscious decisions you make every day and define the path you are on.

We can choose to live our lives with a positive or negative mindset towards ourselves and others. The results of living with a positive, or growth mindset, can be life altering, it becomes your "superpower". Learning to live consciously, in the present moment and not let that inner voice guide you is the key. Unfortunately, I didn't figure this out until in my early 60's. Hate to think of what my reaction to my PC diagnosis would have been otherwise. As a minimum, I can see days full of anxiety, depression and poor sleep.

There is much more and if you are truly interested, I suggest reading a book called The Biology of Belief.

maley2711 profile image
maley2711 in reply toLongevityAT

whatever you choose to believe !! Do we actually "control" what we believe.....scientists are studying that topic!!!

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toLongevityAT

just read Biology of Belief for the second time.

K-xo profile image
K-xo

Love your optimism & message of hope

Beautiful decor in that photo, too! 

Happy birthday S4a! 🎈

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply toK-xo

Thank You, I like to surround myself with beautiful objects, and people of great character.

chefjlu profile image
chefjlu

Excellent information for all. Just before I was diagnosed I was on a health reset, lost 140lbs. and adopted a "Blue Zones" lifestyle. This is a key factor within that. My doctors always remark about my attitude and positivity. Most research shows genetics is only about 25% of the equation - diet, lifestyle, stress, connection, purpose and mindset account for the rest. ---- as I've been told by several researchers I've been involved in discussions - "You can be pre-determine - You are not pre-destined."

Feliz Cumpleaños! 🥳

Purple-Bike profile image
Purple-Bike

My congratulations and compliments to you, Scout. Trying systematically to incorporate all aspects of longevity, I will up my personal health span goal another five years to 100 after reading your post. I don´t dare say 105 yet :)

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers

Go for it ! You can do it.

j-o-h-n profile image
j-o-h-n

Holey Chit,,,,,,,,,,,,I only have 86 birthday candles left,,,,,,

Good Luck, Good Health and Good Humor.

j-o-h-n Saturday 06/03/2023 11:52 AM PST

SViking profile image
SViking

if we can believe it, we can achieve it. And then there’s that part about a certain mustard seed…

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