Stanford Center on Longevity Magazine (Sept/2025)

I find the work that the Stanford Center on Longevity does is pretty run of the mill health info, nothing really cutting edge or pushing the boundaries much (but still good quality).

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Issue 3: September 2025
Be prepared to be amazed by the future of aging . Read more
IN THIS ISSUE

TEST YOUR LONGEVITY-READINESS ** ** LIFE TRANSITIONS

Create a Purpose Portfolio

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People in their 50s, 60s, 70s and beyond are ditching retirement and crafting “second adulthoods” instead. SCL Ambassador Annie Coleman shares insights for creating a “purpose portfolio,” curated as intentionally as an investment plan, to help people realize longheld ambitions and lean into their untapped talents as they transition from their primary careers.
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GAME **CHANGER ** ALIGNING HEALTH & LIFE SPANS

Building Muscle for the Long Haul
Helen Blau, PhD

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Stanford stem cell biologist Helen Blau and her team have discovered a potential breakthrough for treating sarcopenia, a condition that causes progressive loss of muscle mass and strength as people age and affects one in five people over 60, and up to half of those over 80. Blau’s quest to develop a therapeutic, shown to be effective in mice, could change the future of aging for humans.
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ALT/SHIFT CONNECTING GENERATIONS

Your Brain on Nostalgia

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In our new column looking at the ways longevity is changing culture, we unpack the lure of nostalgia. Wendi Aarons interviews the cohosts of Pop Culture Preservation Society podcast, a trio of Gen X friends who bonded over their shared love of 1970s hits and icons.
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LONGEVITY LITERACY FINANCING LONGER LIVES

Social Security’s Next 90 Years

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Social Security isn’t literally broke. But it does need fixing. MP Dunleavy breaks down how the system designed in the 1930 functions today and ranks proposals to get the system into financial shape for its next 90 years.
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**DEEP DIVE ** LEARN THROUGHOUT LIFE

The School of Future Life

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Korea has the world’s lowest birth rate and one of the longest life spans. The country’s leaders have enshrined the right to lifelong learning in its Constitution, recognizing Korea can flourish only if older citizens are active, engaged and leading lives of purpose. Author Ken Stern reports on his visit to the School of Future Life at Kyungnam University in an essay adapted from his forthcoming book, Healthy to 100: How Strong Social Ties Lead to Long Lives .
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@SCL

EVENT ** Big Ideas in Medicine: September 5-6**

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SCL is proud to co-sponsor the Big Ideas in Medicine Conference taking place at Stanford on September 5-6, 2025. This year’s conference will explore critical themes including Neuroscience, Magic Medicine, Climate and Health, and “Living to the Last,” a panel reflecting longevity research that has been central to the conference since its inception in 2023.
Learn more and register
IN THE NEWS ** ‘Longevity is going to change almost all aspects of our lives’**

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