The brutal reality about aging is that it has only an accelerator pedal. We have yet to discover whether a brake exists for people.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Life's too short. You may be on this planet for 80 years at best or who knows, but you can't just pedal around and do the same thing forever.
Aging gracefully is one thing, but trying to slow it down is another.
I figure the faster I pedal, the faster I can retire.
No one can avoid aging, but aging productively is something else.
No, but it's not because I'm getting older that I'm trying to accelerate. But something very curious is happening: The older I get, the more ideas I'm getting.
I hope they invent a machine in which you type in the age you want to be, and it lifts and separates everything nonsurgically.
If you can slow the biological process of aging, even a minor slowdown in the rate at which we age yields improvements in virtually every condition of frailty and disability and mortality that we see at later ages.
The name of the game is to keep from pushing the accelerator pedal so hard that we speed up the aging process. The average American, however, by living a fast and furious lifestyle, pushes that accelerator too hard and too much.
As the technology is developed, autonomous driving could provide driving opportunities for the physically challenged or enable the elderly to continue driving longer. This will be vital as many nations experience an aging population.
When you step on the brakes your life is in your foot's hands.
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