In my ongoing quest to enhance healthspan—the years we live in vibrant wellbeing—I recently embarked on an intriguing experiment: Prolon’s 5-day fast-mimicking diet. This program activates cellular rejuvenation through autophagy while allowing minimal food intake and has been shown to offer compelling benefits for longevity. The results exceeded my expectations: renewed mental clarity, sustained energy throughout the day, and a reset of my relationship with food after the holiday season. Perhaps the most valuable thing was the deeper reflection it inspired about physical and emotional nourishment. This micro-pursuit of optimal health came with tradeoffs.
Declining dinner invitations and missing evening meals with my husband, Scott, reminded me that our wellness choices often impact more than just ourselves. While the program’s benefits were worth its short-term demands for me, it sparked a profound question captured perfectly in the words of Henry David Thoreau:
“The price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it.”
When Thoreau penned these words, he wasn’t thinking about longevity science or wellness protocols. Yet his insight cuts to the heart of a question I’ve been wrestling with lately: In our quest for a longer life, how much of today are we willing to sacrifice?
We have become accustomed to spending our time, money and energy focused on meticulously tracking our steps, optimizing our sleep, and monitoring our nutrition—all valuable practices, to be sure. But in this rush to quantify and optimize every aspect of our lives, we often neglect to count what matters most: the moments of genuine connection, spontaneous joy, and pure presence that make life worth extending in the first place.
The most common regrets shared by those in their final years don’t center on wishing they’d tracked more metrics or followed stricter protocols. Instead, they wish they’d spent more time with loved ones, allowed themselves to feel their feelings fully, or paused to witness more sunsets. What felt urgent at the time didn’t feel so important in the long run.
The irony? These very experiences—connection, emotional awareness, and moments of awe—have been shown to contribute significantly to both longevity and to healthspan. Yet we think about them like dessert, allowing ourselves the opportunity to experience these life enhancing and life extending things when we complete our to-do lists.
So, how do we strike this delicate balance? How do we invest in our future and our Trophy Years©️ without mortgaging our present?
The answer lies in remembering that each of us is an experiment of one, meaning what works for me may not work for you. After reflecting on this dilemma in my post-fasting state I realized that it’s essential for each of us to choose our own adventure by assessing our choices through the lens of both quantity and quality of our life. This means:
- Questioning the “life exchange rate” of our choices: What are we truly giving up, and what are we gaining?
- Recognizing that some of the best investments in tomorrow might be the very things that bring us joy today.
- Understanding that a meaningful and sustainable longevity roadmap should enhance, not diminish, our current quality of life.
- This is why I created the Longevity Roadmap™, a life planning framework that helps people navigate these complex tradeoffs and design a well-lived and long-lived life.
I’m leading a workshop at Modern Elder Academy, March 3rd – March 8th—we’ll dive deep into these concepts and help you create your personal roadmap for the decades ahead.
Together, we’ll explore how to:
- Assess how to prioritize lifestyle choices to serve both your present and future self
- Create sustainable practices that enrich rather than restrict your life
- Design your path to the “Trophy Years” you envision
- Build the discernment to know when to optimize and when to simply live
- If you’re ready to learn more about yourself, your preferences and how to choose your own adventure, I invite you to join me at MEA.
Here’s to making choices that enrich our lives today while building the foundation for our Trophy Years ahead and our collective future.