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    © The Future of Health Now 2012 1

    David KekichBe Smart, Strong, and Sexy at 100 and Beyond

    Who is David Kekich?

    In 1977, I founded the county's largest life insurance master generalagency, which raised 3.1 billion of premium income for FirstExecutive Corporation. That's when I realized people die entirely tooearly. Then, almost 33 years ago, my life suddenly turned upsidedown.

    I was paralyzed from a spinal cord injury. Shortly after, I started

    raising money for paralysis cure research. M mission started byhelping find a cure for the 150,000 Americans suffering from paralyzing spinal cord injuries. Then it expanded to helping cure the200 million American adults suffering from the terminal effects ofaging.

    I learned that controlling human aging will be possible, but because of lack of funding, probably not inhis lifetime. In 1999, I incorporated the Maximum Life Foundation. 

    What is the Maximum Life Foundation?

    It is a non-profit 501c3 organization incorporation dedicated to reversing the human aging process eventually, by greatly expanding or extending the healthy lifespan.

    Our mission is to raise money to get studies and tests funded. The government is certainly notgoing to do it. It's got to be done by private individuals.

    The following is taken from The Futur e of Health Now  interview conducted by Ann Wixon with anti-

    aging expert, David Kekich.

    We have compiled the best, most valuable and easily applicable content from this amazing interview so you can begin to implement positive changes today, as you strive to live a happier and healthier life nowand in the future.

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    © The Future of Health Now 2012 2

    What is Life Extension?

      The most common term that we're used to is anti-aging.

      Longevity is a very common term that refers to it.

     

    In a nutshell, it's more quality and more quantity of life.

     

    I like to say that we're going to be smart, strong, and sexy at 100.  100 is going to be the new 50.

      By smart, I mean cognition.

      When I say strong, I mean being active and being full of vitality.

      My interest in life extension began in my early 30s and maybe as early as my late 20s.

      I was taking supplements before most people were.

      I was very much into weight training and running, distance running, and into nutrition.

      Gradually it became a passion.

      I saw my parents, aunts and uncles deteriorate and eventually die.

      I started watching myself age and I didn't like it.

      I saw my friends aging around me and I just knew there was something that could bedone about it.

      Everybody wants to recapture their youth.

      Finally, after all these thousands of years of people yearning for extended youth, we're

    finally on the cusp of being able to have it.

      Living forever is NOT the goal.

      We're talking about not dying from aging.

      Our goal is to maintain and improve the quality of life as we get older, not to let usdeteriorate.

    Is Aging Normal?

      Aging is terminal.

      Some people call aging a disease, though technically it is not.

      However, since that it has all sorts of negative effects, side effects and always results indeath, then it could be considered a disease. And we're looking for a cure for it.

    Adding 20 Years to Your Life

      Proper diet and nutrition

      Exercise

     

    Lifestyle habits (avoiding accidents and injuries)  Stress management

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    Defining Proper Nutrition

      Eat like the hunter-gatherers ate (the Paleo diet).

      By doing a paleo diet, we can actually stop the aging process, or at least the accelerationof the aging process.

     

    Eliminate all grains.  Eliminate all dairy products.

      Eliminate all legumes (beans and peanuts).

    The Right Kind of Exercise

      Long distance aerobic activity is not the way to go.

      Aim for interval training.

      Sprints, rest, sprint, rest. Just like our ancestors did, just like the hunter-gatherers did.

    They ran –  they were either chasing or were being chased. And they would stop, and thenthey would walk as they were gathering.

      But I'd rather see somebody out there on the roads doing a lot of distance running thansitting on their couch and eating Twinkies.

      Exercise is more important as we age.

    Anti-Aging Medicine

      There's a specialty called “Anti-Aging Medicine.” 

     

    If you're not seeing a doctor who's trained in anti-aging medicine, you're probably notgetting the right medical care.

      There are thousands of doctors trained in that specialty and they are trained to take careof you, to keep you from getting sick, rather than treating you.

      They spend time with you and care about you as a patient.

      Look for a good anti-aging specialist.

       Not that every one is good, so just because someone is an anti-aging specialist doesn'tmean they're the best.

      But a regular doctor is like a mechanic.

      You want somebody who's going to help you prevent aging and disease.

      Anti-aging doctors inherently take more time to work with you. It's just part of their

    nature.  Your doctor should have a good understanding of nutrition and hormones.

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    Determine Your Biological Age

      We have chronological age, which is measured by the clock or by the calendar.

      Your biological age is how you compare with the average person who is your

    chronological age.

     

    You can measure that by any number of ways: skin elasticity, reflexes, skin tone, hearingand vision acuity.

      Telomeres are the ends of your chromosomes.

      Every time your cell divides, your telomere shortens. They're protective ends to keep the

    chromosomes from unwinding. As cells divide, they shorten.

      A lot of things can shorten your telomeres, including stress and so forth.

      A lot of things can maintain the length, including exercising and diet and stressmanagement.

      The length of your telomeres is probably the most accurate determinate of your biologicalage. What kind of balance you have as you age, your cognition, lung capacity, so forth.

    The Longevity Escape Velocity

      Gerontologist Dr. Aubrey De Grey developed the Longevity Escape Velocity.

      It is the point we reach when we're adding more than one calendar year to the average person's lifespan, no matter what your age, every calendar year.

      Right now, when we live a year, we're actually adding about two or three months to our

    average lifespan every calendar year.

      Last year we had a little blip where obesity and things were reversing that.

      But we're gradually adding more and more time to the average lifespan every year.

      This average is accelerating.

     

    We're predicting that, assuming the funding is generated for the research we'resupporting, that within 13 to 15 years, we're going to be able to gain more than one yearfor every calendar year on our average lifespan.

      Your day of reckoning will be moving away from you, rather than you closing in on it.

      Once we reach that point and we keep maintaining our health and longevity, then wehave a much better chance to reach the day when the technologies that are going to beable to reverse the aging process and be able to restore youth and rejuvenate us.

      We are about 19 or 20 years away from being able to reverse the human aging process.

      Things could move faster, they could move slower.

      We could have government interference with the FDA, with regulations.

     

    We could have government support, which would accelerate things.

    The Manhattan Beach Project

      In June of 2000in Manhattan Beach, California, we held our first international conference

    among aging researchers and life extension researchers.

      All came from various disciplines:

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      When they started the Human Genome Project, they had about 1/10000ths of the humangenome mapped. They got halfway through this project and they had 1% mapped, whichwas a 100 times improvement.

      They knew that if they had the same progress for the next seven and a half years, thenthey would reach their goal, which is exactly what happened, except they did it a year

    ahead of schedule.  Today we're mapping human genomes for $50,000, and it's going to be done at $10,000

     pretty soon, then $1,000, then pretty soon it'll be $100.

      We're going to each have our own individual genomes mapped.

      Aging has a lot of components to it. There are a lot of pieces to the puzzle. But we put allthese together, at least for budget purposes and other purposes as well, and we came upwith the figure somewhere between $3 and $5 billion spent over 15 to 16 years.

      Compare this with the $100 billion we spend in this country every 16 days on a broken

    health care system.

      It's going to be a fraction of what we're spending on health care right now.

      We’ll keep people productive longer.

     

    We're going to ease a lot of the pain and suffering.

    Age and Arthritis

      Exercise is important.

      A lot of it's caused by food, sugar.

      There are some amazing stem cell therapies now that are rescuing people from having hipand knee replacements.

      Using your own autologous, adult stem cells.

      Getting them from your fat tissue or your bone marrow and then they do a little bit ofwork to the cells to sort them, and then re-injecting them into where you need them.

      They’ve had some amazing results right now.

      There's a company in Denver called Regenexx.

      There are other clinics around the country starting to do this.

      They've been doing this on animals for years.

      They've had racehorses that have been crippled that have come back and are winning andhave won races.

      They've had dogs that could barely limp along that are now jumping up on their master's

    laps and jumping up on their beds and sofas.

    Age and Alzheimer’s Disease 

      We have over 5 million Alzheimer's patients in this country now.

      When we hit age 85, our chances are about 50/50 of getting Alzheimer’s.

      A lot of this can be avoided or at least delayed through supplementation and exercise.

      There are some drugs being developed right now.

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      There's one supplement that’s a combination of 61 ingredients in high concentration, backed by a couple thousand scientific studies on the individual ingredients.

      It has been shown to reverse the symptoms of all sorts of dementia in virtually everybodythat it's been tried on.

      We're trying to raise just a little bit of money right now to get it available.

     

    A lot of those ingredients are in regular supplements that people could be taking now andshould be taking now.

    Telomerase Activators

      Substances that prevent telomeres, the protective caps on your DNA from shortening.

      My top four are:o  Fish oil or krill oilo  Vitamin D3o  Glutathione, which is the most powerful antioxidant that your cells produceo  A good, powerful multivitamin/mineral

    Our Biggest Health Crises

      Obesity.

      The broken health care system.

      We're basically eating way too much food and the wrong kinds of food.

      The answer is awareness, prevention, self-education, good nutrition, and exercise.

    Future of Age Reversal

      There's going to be a gradual progression.

     

    Technology is going to make them easier for us.

      Technology is going to be able to someday let us maintain our weight.

      Technology is going to be some day let us enhance our strength and our endurance andour cognitive abilities; our vision and our hearing and all of our senses.

      Eventually, we're going to be in the position where we have a technology called “NanoMedicine,” which is engineering at the molecular level. 

      We will be able to control this evolution.

      When we have that capability, we're going to have the capability of restoring andrepairing every single cell in our body.

      We're going to be living lives without aches and pains, without the wrinkles, without thegray and balding heads and without the failing eyesight and the failing hearing that weexperience as we age.

      We're going to have better eyesight, better hearing.

      At some point in the future, we're going to be able to enjoy open-ended vitality, open-ended youthfulness.

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      I can see the day when we can be sitting around a table, with people averaging in agefrom 20 to 120, and we're not going to be able to tell the difference.

      I think stem cell technology is the most profound technology in the history of medicine.

      We're learning very quickly how to take adult stem cells and tweak those to work for you.

      Some researchershave already build replacement organs. They’ve successfully grown

     bladders and implanted functioning bladders into human beings.  They've been able to grow tracheas and implant those into human beings.

      They've grown beating rat hearts. They're working on human hearts, kidneys, livers.

      There's going to be a time when we're going to be able to take your stem cells and growwhatever you need.

      We're going to have replacement parts.

    Final Thoughts

      There's one company that has identified hundreds of aging genes.

     

    They're developing drugs and supplements that are going to turn those genes in our favor.  The first one hit the market about two months ago.

      It's called Stem Cell100.o  It makes animals live a lot longer. Their average lifespan and their maximum

    lifespan in longer. It lowers blood pressure in humans.o  It raises the HDL, and lowers your blood glucose level.

      The only way that we've been able to extend the maximum lifespan in mammals is byrestricting their caloric intake while still keeping them nutritionally well fed.

    o  We have been able to extend their lives by 30 to 40 percent, maximum lifespansin mammals.

    o  They've been testing these on mice, but they started testing on chimpanzees many

    years ago.o  A lot of people practice caloric restriction, and that's basically taking your optimal

    number of calories, which depending on your size and on your level of activitywill vary from person to person.

    o  The average person's optimal caloric intake per day should be about 1,800 to2,000 calories.

    o  It's not very appealing, and people aren't going to adhere to it.o  We don't know if it's going to extend lives in humans as much as animals.o  Caloric restriction acts at the genetic level. And it tells genes what to do and what

    not to do.o  There are some companies developing supplements and drugs that will tell your

    genes the same thing. So, you get the benefits without starving yourself.

    Easily Applicable To-Dos

      We're going to have a potentially extremely long and active and vibrant lifespans if we do

    the right things today.

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      Ground yourself in understanding, grasping the law of accelerating returns and the impactthis is going to have on your health.

      Make sure that you don't get left behind, because the people you love, many of those aregoing to be on that train.

    Resources

      Dr. Aubrey DeGrey interview

      Dr. Brandon Colby interview

    This Action Guide has been brought to you by The Future of Health Now © 2012