He’s reportedly spending over $2 million every year in an experimental program “Project Blueprint”
When it comes to pushing the boundaries of modern health science, centimillionaire Bryan Johnson is making headlines for trying to age backward.
The 46-year-old tech millionaire, who sold his payment processing technology business to PayPal for $800 million a decade ago, is splurging millions as he has been working with his 30 doctors to boost an extreme longevity routine.
He claims it is already showing results as he has the lungs and fitness level of an 18-year-old, the heart of a 37-year-old, and the skin of a 28-year-old.
He reportedly spends over $2 million annually in an experimental program Project Blueprint, which consists of a series of adapted habits including blood infusions, over 100 daily supplements, a strict diet regimen with dinners at 11 a.m. and calling it a day and hitting the sack by 8:30 p.m.
In a recent conversation with a media outlet, the millionaire entrepreneur shared his daily habits and how he isn’t even a little tempted to sideline the greater objectives of human existence over a slice of pizza. "It makes me sick to even think about it," he said.
Johnson’s dedication to his cause reflects how he still drives himself in an electric Audi, even going at just 16 miles per hour on the streets of Los Angeles at one point. He reportedly stated, “Driving is the most dangerous thing we do.” Johnson said his “sole goal, which is to live forever, can make an accidental death a bit embarrassing.” “What would be more ironic than getting hit by a bus and dying?” he says.
Not only is he convinced he can reverse the aging process, but the tech millionaire believes he is on the right path to cancel death altogether. However, the theory is not supported by real-time data and facts.
Jan Wijg, a genetics professor at Albert Einstein College, says, “If you expect to live longer than 115, which is the maximum lifespan of our species” – there is currently no evidence that this can be accomplished.