@thriving__kids Great to see our video is still out there, what a surprise seeing myself and Tara on my X feed this morning 😅 glad our video is still making a good impact 💥
@SunWeatherMan It seems extremely bizarre that Elon has not mentioned anything about the war, yet continues to post about trivial things .
something doesn’t add up.
@JacobEdwardInc Been awhile since I’ve seen a post so on point. Since having two kids I find it hard to relate to all these single people and their advice. They have no idea. Still respect and listen to them but have to agree with this
Psilocybin made human cells live 50% longer.
A new study has uncovered surprising anti-aging potential in psilocin—the active metabolite produced when the body breaks down psilocybin, the psychoactive compound found in magic mushrooms.
In laboratory experiments, researchers exposed two human cell lines (skin fibroblasts and fetal lung fibroblasts) to a 100 μM concentration of psilocin. The results were striking: lung cells took 57% longer to reach replicative senescence (the point at which cells permanently stop dividing and accumulate damage), while skin fibroblasts extended their replicative lifespan by 51%.
These findings suggest psilocin may slow fundamental cellular aging processes, possibly by lowering oxidative stress, enhancing DNA-repair pathways, supporting mitochondrial health, or dampening chronic inflammation—mechanisms that overlap with those targeted by leading experimental longevity drugs.
The benefits extended beyond cell culture. In aged female mice (19 months old at the start, equivalent to approximately 60–65 human years), a single monthly dose of psilocybin dramatically improved outcomes. After 10 months of treatment, 80% of the psilocybin-treated animals remained alive, compared with only 50% of untreated controls. Treated mice also displayed markedly fewer visible signs of aging, including reduced fur loss and graying.
This research marks the first direct demonstration that psilocybin/psilocin can influence biological aging itself, rather than solely producing psychological effects. The authors emphasize that the study used relatively conservative dosing and are now advocating for follow-up work with higher or more frequent administration, detailed assessments of immune, metabolic, and cognitive function, and investigations into whether the extended lifespan corresponds to genuine improvements in healthspan and quality of life.
["Psilocybin treatment extends cellular lifespan and improves survival of aged mice." npj Aging, 2025]
@DrJackKruse Have you ever experienced Ayahuasca or Ibogaine ? They both radically changed my life for the better, so am wondering what I should be worried about ?
@DrJackKruse I enjoy your content and have learned a lot from you, but this is abit of a stretch. Joe Rogans podcast has had an incredibly beneficial impact on society. This makes you lose credibility. If you knew anything about Onnit and its original founder, this seems even more absurd.
One way of elevating your reputation is to claim unearned moral virtue.
And so, a huge part of what motivates the “Woke” nonsense that insists that the mere reflexive act of feeling sorry for someone constitutes a moral virtue, is an attempt to claim a reputational status without having to do any of the work whatsoever.
To be a good person, you have to be productive. That's hard. And you have to be generous. And that's hard. And you have to play medium to long-term stable, voluntary games with other people. And that's hard.
Nothing but diligent, upward-oriented work over the years puts you in that position.
Whereas if you make an unwarranted moral claim, “I'm compassionate,” then instantly, you're with the angels. It also allows you to derogate those whom you regard as predatory and enhances your moral virtue.
“Not only am I compassionate, and that makes me good, but and I'm on the side of the angels, but there are the snakes, and they're not in me at all because I'm saintly in all regards”.
The snakes have to be somewhere. And the most convenient place to put them is in someone else.
In case anyone is in any doubt about where my views lie: Despite having thought nothing of submitting my own children to the standard vaccine schedule back in the day, what I’ve learnt about the field since declining the transfections for them and me is so disgusting that, if I could roll the clock back, I would not expose them to a single dose of any.
Japanese Professor Delivers Stunning Message Everyone Needs to Hear
“The pandemic was used as a false pretext by the WHO to drive vaccinations of all peoples in the world.”
He says the fraudulent use of “experimental gene therapy to healthy people” was not only an “extreme violation of human rights,” but “the result was the induction of the terrible drug-induced injury that has never [been] seen in human history.”
- Prof Masayasu Inoue, Professor Emeritus of Osaka City University Medical School.