WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Friday, April 17, 2026

The Long Road to Longevity: A Personal Reflection

The Long Road to Longevity: A Personal Reflection

There are mornings when a single article rekindles an old question,  how far should science go in our longing to outwit time? Today was one of those mornings.

Over coffee, sunlight spilling across my kitchen table via the huge picture window in my apartment,  I opened Dana Smith’s New York Times article on longevity medicine. Her words,  peptides, stem cells, plasma exchange  felt like déjà vu from another lifetime. I’ve walked that path before, down the long corridors of the FDA, where the hum of fluorescent lights marked long days of deliberation. We were scientists and regulators, translators between promise and protection. Each new therapy carried two shadows: hope and uncertainty.

Back then, I believed that data would always be our compass,  that careful research could steady us against the tide of wishful thinking. Yet here we are, decades later, as longevity clinics blossom across the world, offering bold words and unverified miracles. Americans now travel to Panama or Mexico in search of infusions that might restore what time has taken. And still, I can’t bring myself to condemn them. I understand that longing. It lives quietly in all of us, the wish to keep belonging to the rhythm of our own lives a little longer.

After more than fifteen years of blogging, I’ve learned that aging is never just biological. It’s emotional, spiritual, deeply human. Each gray hair, each forgotten name, becomes a question about meaning. I’ve written through those questions, and I’ve seen readers write back, some searching for guidance, others simply seeking to be heard. What I tell them, and remind myself, is that true longevity begins not with injections or gene resets, but with honesty. Science must speak with humility, and we must listen with discernment.

These days, I find my faith in smaller, steadier rituals. A walk beneath the soft morning light of the THD gardens, Walnut Creek. The warmth of Pinoy chicken empanadas I am devouring with delight on a quiet afternoon. A delicious orange chicken dinner with Jasmine rice from Newton's.  A positive comment on one of my blogs. A call from a close relative. A winning hand in bridge or mahjong. A surprise and unexpected gift of Fish Pompano for lunch.  Last but not least my weekly massages that grounds me the whole week.  These are my proofs of life, the daily evidence that presence matters more than promise.

Maybe that’s what longevity really is: not extending years, but deepening them. Not racing against time, but learning to walk alongside it, awake, unafraid and grateful.

- Written by David B Katague, a Filipino American scientist and longtime blogger reflecting on aging, health, and belonging. Drawing from years at the FDA and the cultural wisdom of two worlds, Katague writes about how science, memory, and faith shape the art of living well over time.

Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview:
AI Overview
"The Long Road to Longevity: A Personal Reflection" refers to the deeply personal and often reflective journey of navigating life while aiming for a longer, healthier, and more purposeful existence. It involves moving beyond just adding years to life (lifespan) to adding life to those years (healthspan) through intentional, daily choices.

Here is a synthesis of key themes and reflections based on recent perspectives on longevity:
1. The Core Philosophy
  • More Than Just Time: Longevity is not merely about living to a certain age,
  •  but about maintaining vitality, functionality, and joy in later years.
  • The "Both/And" Approach: It requires combining scientific advancements 
  • with personal, lifestyle-driven choices—rather than relying solely on one
  •  or the other.
  • Mindset Matters: Developing a "Longevity Mindset" means consciously deciding to take control of one’s health trajectory.
2. Practical Pillars for the Long Road
Reflections on longevity often focus on actionable, sustainable changes \rather than fad diets or quick fixes:
  • Nutrition: A 90% whole-food, plant-based diet is common among 
  • long-lived populations, often with an emphasis on beans, greens, 
  • nuts, and tubers.
  • Physical Activity: Regular, natural movement, like walking, gardening,
  •  or moderate exercise is more sustainable than intense, sporadic
  •  workouts.
  • Restorative Sleep: Prioritizing 7-8 hours of quality sleep for physical 
  • repair and hormonal balance.
  • Social Connection: Strong relationships and community engagement 
  • are crucial for reducing stress and increasing life satisfaction.
  • Purpose ("Ikigai"): Having a reason to get up in the morning is 
  • essential for long-term engagement.
3. The Role of Self-Reflection
Self-reflection is a powerful tool in this journey, offering:
  • Alignment: Ensuring daily actions—what you eat, how you move
  • align with your long-term health goals.
  • Resilience: Managing stress and responding to life's challenges 
  • with calm and intentionality.
  • Growth: Learning from mistakes and adjusting health habits 
  • over time.
4. Navigating the Stages of Life
The road to longevity often highlights "Middlescence" (roughly 45–65)
 as a critical, transformative period for re-evaluating life and laying the foundation for a healthy older age.
5. Embracing the Journey
Ultimately, this path is a lifelong, personal journey that requires 
compassion for oneself, acknowledging that health is "the greatest
 wealth" to be nurtured. It is an, "adventure where you're making 
strategic health choices while also living with intention, purpose, 
and joy," says a post on MEA Wisdom.


Thursday, April 16, 2026

Is this Photo Real? I asked My Two AI Assistants


I have lived in the Philippines until I was 26 years old and have a 
retirement beach house in the island of Marinduque, but I have never 
seen a coconut  palm tree with young coconuts shown in the photo below. 
 So I asked my two AI Assistants if this photo is real and not 
AI generated  and here's their reply.  

https://images.openai.com/static-rsc-4/1KZKQHW54eZERpc0NXPAulneU8Q2kg8Xdei530pEiUtpc9h96of5iAStesaMqXmEQmvngK8OEtcsL1M-ZoXPMfmItnt6wAPxE6pgTIkoZP7gHBYDLpmAfDS3KBZJ4ImtyStq_0muaZdrpHpLvACNN0DMv8Z9TgmWL-yYexUQx2B-76EXA0kirWV_GWN0jvBB?purpose=fullsize

But I have numerous young coconuts as shown in the second photo

Perplexity AI: Yes, this photo appears to be real, in the sense that it shows 

an actual image file of a  coconut palm cluster and not an obvious AI-generated

 scene.  The shapes are unusual because the fruit bunches and fronds create

 a very suggestive optical illusion,  but the plant structure itself looks physically

plausible.

That said, I can’t verify from the image alone whether it’s an untouched camera 

photo or lightly edited. The color grading and smooth texture suggest it may have

 been processed, but the scene is still consistent with a real coconut palm.

If you want, I can also point out the specific visual cues that make it look surreal.

The image looks real because the lighting, bark texture, frond structure, and fruit 

surfaces all behave like a photographed palm scene rather than a generated one.

What makes it seem surreal is the way the green coconut clusters are packed 

together and framed by the hanging fronds, which creates a strong pareidolia 

effect  your brain reads the shapes as something else.

A few cues support “real photo”:

  • Natural irregularity in the fruit sizes and angles.

  • Organic overlap of fronds, stems, and shadows.

  • No obvious AI artifacts such as warped edges, impossible geometry, or 

    repeated textures.

One caveat: it may still be edited for color, contrast, or smoothing, so “real” here

 means a real subject captured in a real image, not necessarily an untouched 

original.

I asked my other AI Assistant, ChatGPT the same question. 

The  answer is as follows:  

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