Bryan Johnson’s $2M anti-aging plan starts with cutting these toxic habits
Biohacker Bryan Johnson spends $2M yearly to fight aging—avoiding smoking, inactivity, and digital stress to stay ageless and prove discipline beats time.
- Oct 8, 2025,
- Updated Oct 8, 2025 12:10 PM IST

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Bryan Johnson isn’t just anti-aging—he’s funding it. Spending over $2 million a year, the biohacker has built his life around one goal: to outsmart time itself.

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In a recent podcast chat with William Rossy, Johnson confessed he’s created “rules” to protect himself from human impulses—like staying up late, scrolling endlessly, and skipping workouts.

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“We’ve been trained by a broken system,” he says, blaming modern society for normalizing stress, screens, and sleep deprivation. His fight isn’t just biological—it’s cultural.

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Smoking tops Johnson’s no-go list. Experts agree: it permanently scars lungs, fuels COPD, and remains the leading risk factor for lung cancer—no matter how advanced your biohacks are.

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Respiratory specialists say the damage begins invisibly—irritation, mucus buildup, coughing, then years of chronic inflammation. The result? A lifetime of breathless compromise.

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His second warning: don’t skip movement. Cardiologists compare sitting more than eight hours a day to smoking a pack daily—metabolism slows, arteries clog, and disease creeps in.

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Dr Dhinesh David calls inactivity the “modern heart killer.” Office hours and streaming marathons may look harmless, but they quietly rewire metabolism and harden arteries.

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Johnson’s third enemy—stress and doomscrolling. Endless digital noise hijacks the brain’s dopamine system, deepens anxiety, and blurs the line between rest and unrest.

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Doctors now link screen addiction to joint pain, poor posture, insomnia, and even tumor risk. Johnson’s advice: log off, move more, and breathe before burnout becomes biology.
