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Laurentiu Lupu MD's avatar

The Kooser poem does something your whole argument turns on: it lets us feel the relief of a death that arrived with dignity intact, rather than after years of driving “from clinic to clinic… trying to read the complicated, fading map of cures.” To be grateful for that and still miss him every day is the whole human difficulty.

It makes me think longevity gets clinically complicated at the exact moment time stops being the background of a life and becomes something to be managed. There is nothing wrong with wanting more years and fewer avoidable losses; prevention is one of medicine’s real moral achievements. But something quietly shifts when a person starts living inside the body mainly as a set of risks and probabilities to be negotiated in advance.

That is where the kind of medicine you practice matters more than it looks. It can hold the preventive question without letting it swallow the biographical one, not only “how do we reduce risk?” but “what is this risk reduction meant to protect?”

So maybe the trouble with longevity medicine is not that it cares too much about the future. It is that, at its worst, it can make the future so loud that the present turns into nothing but a rehearsal for avoiding decline.

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