
For most people, success means squeezing as much as possible into the 80-odd years: a big job with an attractive title and corresponding salary, a nice apartment in the city or McMansion in nearby areas, bucket list trips are squeezed into limited vacation days, kids if they want them—and maybe a early retirement if all goes to plan.
The businessman who famously spends millions every year trying to slow down his own aging now has a new target in his sights: he wants to make people immortal by 2039.
“The search for the fountain of youth is the oldest story ever told,” Johnson written in X and Facebook. “For the first time in the history of life on earth, just in the last 24 months, the window has opened for a sentient being to realistically strive for this goal. It’s an absolutely crazy moment.”
The 48-year-old said the 14-year goal is based on “new, promising therapies that could turn back decades on the clock,” while adding that thanks to AI, it’s actually a “reasonable target.”
First, he argues, his team just needs to fix some of the “buggy” issues, such as therapies that “cause the wrong cancer.”
People are now a ‘suicidal species’—Bryan Johnson cloned his organs to change that in less than 15 years
Braintree, Kernel, and most recently, Blueprint, the founder admitted that his team “currently does not know” how the project 2039 immortality will be achieved. But he revealed the efforts they will make to get there, including looking at jellyfish cells and lobster enzymes, both of which are linked to slow aging. “We have to port the software to people,” Johnson added.
That, combined with the “AI-driven rate of innovation” and using his own body as a guinea pig, is where he thinks the real acceleration will happen.
This isn’t Johnson’s first attempt to slow down time. The tech founder previously made headlines for “first multigenerational plasma exchange in the world” with his 17-year-old son and 70-year-old father. $2 million per year of treatments that he believed gave him the skin of a 28 year old and the lung capacity of an 18 year old.
Now, after six years of pushing and trying, she maintains that, biologically, she hasn’t aged a day.
“To speed things up now, I now have thousands of Bryan Johnson organ clones built in a dish,” Johnson said. “This will allow me to test drugs and other molecules against my biology to facilitate learning and save my body from potential disasters.”
“Yes, we make mistakes. Hopefully it’s not fatal,” he concluded, adding that he will share the results of his research on his Blueprint platform for free.
For the average person—whom he calls “suicidal types” who “don’t need to kill ourselves with what we eat and the way we live”—he provides details on how to replicate his million-dollar routine at “a fraction of the cost and effort.”
Bryan Johnson eats his last meal of the day at 11 a.m. as part of his multimillion-dollar anti-aging routine
High-profile execs are used to it 5 am alarm and plunge pool. But in his quest to live forever, Johnson took his high-performance routine to a whole new level.
He told before luck that he wakes up at 4:30 every morning, and then every hour of his day is regimented by an algorithm built from rigorous body monitoring and the science from over 2,000 academic publications.
Johnson starts his day by working out—completing 35 different exercises—taking a list of supplements and washing them down with smoothie.
Then, with the help of a team of 30 specialists, he undergoes daily body fat scans, routine MRIs, and often, invasive blood and stool sample tests to determine the biological age of his organs.
In between these tests, he would take 61 pills a day and eat three meals a day, within a strict five-hour time frame, usually consisting of a super veggie salad followed by a nutty pudding and lots of vegetables. The tech entrepreneur eats 70 pounds of vegetables every month.
Most people eat dinner a few hours before bed. But neither did Johnson bedtime is 8:30 pm and to ensure that his food was completely digested beforehand, he had his last meal of the day at 11 am







