“Living Better, Not Forever” - Reflections on Kara Swisher’s Longevity Journey
Over the years, my blog has taken me, and you, my readers across many landscapes: from food and culture to science, public health, and the deeply personal reflections that come with aging. Recently, while watching Kara Swisher Wants to Live Forever on CNN, I found myself revisiting a familiar question:
Can we truly extend life or are we simply trying to outsmart time?
A Journalist’s Quest, A Universal Question
Kara Swisher approaches longevity not as a believer, but as a skeptic willing to experiment. That alone makes the series refreshing.
Her journey is not just about science, it is about loss, curiosity, and the very human desire to delay the inevitable. Watching her test cutting-edge therapies reminded me of something I have seen repeatedly throughout my years in public service and regulatory work:
When science meets hope, the marketplace is never far behind.
Red Light Therapy: Between Science and Promise
One segment explored red light therapy, a treatment that has gained popularity in wellness circles.
There is science behind it-particularly in dermatology and inflammation control. But as I have often written in my blog posts on health trends, the journey from validated treatment to marketed cure-all is often a short one.
In my years observing how medical innovations are evaluated, I learned this simple truth:
Evidence accumulates slowly. Enthusiasm spreads quickly. And therein lies the tension.
The Sleep Headband: Technology Meets an Ancient Need
Another fascinating feature was the use of a sleep-enhancing headband-designed to monitor brainwaves and improve deep sleep. Now here, the science is more grounded.
Sleep plays a critical role in:
- cognitive function
- immune health
- cellular repair
If there is one “longevity intervention” I take seriously, it is this: sleep is not optional-it is foundational.
But let me offer a gentle caution, drawn from both professional experience and personal reflection:
A device can measure sleep. It cannot create discipline.
True rest still depends on habits, something no technology can fully automate.
A Personal Reflection on Aging
As many of you know, my perspective on aging has evolved over time.
From my early blogging days in 2009, when I often wrote with curiosity about science and discovery, to today, where experience and reflection carry more weight, I find myself asking different questions.
Not: How long can we live?
But rather: How well can we live?
My work, including my time connected to the regulatory world of the FDA, taught me to respect science, but also to question bold claims.
And now, in this stage of life, I find myself valuing:
- clarity over complexity
- presence over prolongation
- meaning over metrics
The Illusion of “Forever”
What Kara Swisher Wants to Live Forever ultimately reveals is not a roadmap to immortality, but something far more important:
There is no shortcut. No red light. No wearable.
No breakthrough therapy, at least not yet-that replaces the fundamentals.
And perhaps that is not a failure of science, but a reminder of our humanity.
Closing Thoughts to My Readers
To those of you who have followed my journey for years: Stay curious. Explore new ideas. Embrace innovation where it is meaningful. But remain grounded.
Because longevity, as I have come to understand it, is not about chasing “forever.”
It is about:
- sleeping well
- living thoughtfully
- connecting deeply
- and accepting, with grace, the passage of time
In the end, the goal is not simply to live longer-but to live better.
From my desk, with reflection and gratitude, as always, David
https://www.facebook.com/reel/932071159341832
Finally, here are five of the biggest news stories today, based on major U.S. and international headlines:
A shooting outside the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C. prompted a rapid security response and the evacuation of President Trump and the first lady.
The Iran conflict is still driving global tension, with major concern over energy supplies, shipping, and broader economic fallout.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla are proceeding with their state visit to the United States despite the recent Washington security incident.
Germany says Russia may be behind Signal phishing attacks targeting top officials, adding to concerns about cyber-espionage in Europe.
A federal appeals court ruled that the Trump administration cannot suspend asylum claims at the border in the way it attempted




























