In the time of Kaliyug, when the need of the hour is to spiritualise society, the role of the householder seeker is a crucial one. Juggling career, family, multiple relationships and traffic jams, the householder must bloom like the proverbial lotus in the muck of everyday life More>>
Reverse aging. Erase the genetic suicide code. Link your mind to a computer.
Or step out of the human chrysalis and seek the wings of an everlasting
life. A life of immortality.
Would you like to die?
Or live on even as time stretches to its ultimate limit. Mortal stars
collapse to their nebulous cores. Worlds die and worlds are born. But
you live onimmortal, eternal, Godlike. Perhaps a little lonely.
Like the Wandering Jew who trudges his way through millennia. Like Ashwatthama,
cursed with eternal life.
For most of us, the choice has already been made. Unless we refuse water
to a Christ, avenge a father cunningly killed, or take the insidious path
of vampirism, we can't attain that dreadedand desiredfive
syllable word: immortality. Or can we?
Theoretically, immortality is possible. After all, if the human species
can raise its average life span from 25 years in the medieval times to
64 years today, there is no reason why we cannot extend it indefinitely.
Except that then the maximum life span was about 120 years. It is so even
now.
The cells of our body are fated for collective suicide. Or so believes
science. This internal suicide program is triggered off after a certain
age and our system begins to collapse. This, immaterial of whether we
have lived an ideal life or existed on junk food, black coffee and cigarettes.
CHILDREN
OF DEATH
Part of the clue, perhaps, is hidden in our evolutionary scheme. According
to Carlos
Castaneda, best-selling author and self-proclaimed sorcerer, bearing
children creates holes in people's luminosity (an aura-like layer around
the body), which depletes their energy levels. Science validates itif
not exactly in terms of luminosity.
Apparently, on the evolutionary balance sheet, longevity deducts from
fecundity. According to a study conducted by Rudi
Westendorp of the Netherlands and Thomas
Kirkwood of the University of Manchester, women who postpone their
pregnancy are likely to live longer. Even those who have fewer children
or none at all make better candidates for longevity. If it sounds unbelievable,
consider this: the adrenal glands of the Pacific salmon release a massive
amount of corticoid hormones into the bloodstream just after they spawn.
This ages them immediately: they wither and die. The octopus glands are
not even that considerate. The eight-limbed mollusk gets its hormone overdose
immediately after mating. But if you restrict their amorous instincts,
both species live longer. There is a catch here. If a species wants to
procreate and evolve, it has to die fasterto make way for future
generations as well as allow faster genetic mutations during natural selection.
It also works the other way. In a research conducted at the University
of Colorado, scientists modified a specific gene, Age-1,
that was responsible for aging a roundworm. The result? The roundworm's
life span increased by a mind-boggling 70 per centand its fertility
dropped by 80 per cent. Even male fruit flies that mated with more females,
had a shorter life span.
DEADLY IMMORTALS
Nature's practical jokes extend further. Why else should almost 20 per
cent of humanity be wiped out by what is truly immortal in us?
A human cell can divide and replace itself up to about 50 times (also
known as the Hayflick
limit). The only exceptions are the cancer cells that have somehow
superseded nature's suicide code. These cells can be kept alive and dividing
in the lab till the edge of eternity. In fact, a few cells obtained from
Baltimore-based Henrietta Lacks, who died of cancer in 1951, have now
gone up to billions and are alive in laboratories around the world, still
dividing profusely. A curious kind of immortality! But since none of us
would appreciate eternal life as a tumor, the only other way to break
the Hayflick limit is to get a dose of telomerase,
the wonder drug.
It all started when a group of scientists from the University of Texas
found that adding an enzyme called telomerase to normal human cells allowed
them to continue dividing 20 times longerwithout triggering off
tumors. What prompted the experiment was the discovery that portions of
telomeres, the end parts of DNA strands, fall out with each cell division.
When no telomere is left, the cell ceases to divide. Restoring it artificially
could allow the cells to divide beyond the Hayflick limit.
Cheating nature, however, might not be that easy. While telomeres might
keep the cells alive for a longer time, there is another clock ticking
away in our body. The irony is, if we stop the clock, time may pass us
by while we stand rooted to the crossroads of evolution, unable to move
on. This time, the culprit is the DNA repair system in our body. The DNA
in every cell is constantly being damaged and repaired. But like a faulty
plumber, the repair process is far from perfect. "Aging is simply a byproduct
of the repair deficit," says Roy L. Walford, a USA-based gerontologist.
But the defect also leaves scope for mutation-and thus evolution. If we
perfect the repair system, chances are we would remain as we aretill
time itself ceases to be. Are we perfect enough to afford this risk?
IN
SEARCH OF LIFE
Maybe not. There lies the trap of hubris. Why else should the human race,
even before it was out of its nappy state of evolution, search for that
elusive fountain of youth?
Adam and Eve were thrown out of Eden lest they eat of the tree of life.
Gilgamesh, the ancient adventurer king, found the fruit of life and lost
it. Similar exploits abound in myths, lores and stories, which only go
to show how desperate mankind has been to cling on to life. The modern
search for immortality is taking one step at a time in its lesser avatar:
gerontology.
Though the 19th century neurologist Jean Martin Charcot could be broadly
credited for beginning a study of aging, it was Dr I.G. Nascher who coined
the term geriatrics in 1914 and is known as the father of geriatrics.
The actual experiments, however, go back much further.
From ancient Egyptian recipes for rejuvenation with pastes of semiprecious
stones (Smith
Papyrus, 2900 B.C.) to medieval alchemic concoctions of gold,
withered flesh of mummies, viper meat and children's bloodthe seekers
of eternal life tried it all. Such was the desire for life that in ancient
Rome, doddering old people would suck the blood of dying gladiators, believing
it would prolong their own life.
LONGEVITY
TIPS
1.
Exercise regularly.
2. Eat less and have a healthy diet with minimal
fat.
3. Engage your brain in challenging activities such as crosswords,
quizzes, intelligent discussions.
4. Avoid too much of sun.
5. Avoid stress-inducing situations.
6. Meditate regularly to relax
your mind.
7. Avoid alcohol, cigarettes and other such products.
Indians, in their own mystical way, steered clear of worldly goodies and
sought immortality through a mythical herb, soma. Susruta Samhita,
the ancient Ayurvedic treatise, gives detailed instructions on how to
use soma for kaya kalpa (rejuvenation): "Vomiting marks the digestion
of the soma juice. After he has vomited blood-streaked, worm infested
matter, milk boiled and cooled should be given to him..." This is followed
by a description of how the body cleans itself of impurities. Next comes
a falling of hair, nails and skin, giving way to new skin and organs,
each fresh and totally rejuvenated.
The Susruta Samhita states: "Such a person bears a charmed life
against fire, water, poison and weapons, and develops great muscular energy,"
which enable him to "witness ten thousand summers on earth in the full
enjoyment of a new and youthful body." Wow! But there is a catch. The
soma plants are "invisible to the impious or the ungrateful, as well as
to the unbeliever in the curative virtues of medicine..." The West was
more down-to-earth in its approach to immortality.
In the not-so-distant past (1882, to be accurate), 72-year-old Edouard
Brown-Sequard, a professor at Harvard, claimed that he had regained his
youth and virility after injecting himself with the crushed testicles
of a dog. Next came Elie
Metchnikoff, a Nobel laureate, who claimed that aging is caused by
poisoning from putrefying toxic products in the stomach. His remedy? Drink
large amounts of sour milk or yogurt to ameliorate the putrefaction. If
that wasn't enough, some longevity-freaks tried inserting flashlights
into their anus. This, they claimed, gave a surge of vitality to the body.
No wonder, at one time gerontologists were looked upon as less-than-respect-able,
frustrated Faustsminus the helpful Mephistopheles.
PREDICTED
MAXIMUM LIFE SPANS OF HUMANS IF THE THERMOSTAT IN THE BRAIN WHICH CONTROLS BODY
TEMPERATURE COULD BE RESET FROM THE PRESENT 98.6º TO LOWER LEVELS
Temperature
Maximum
Life Span
98.6º
F
120
years
95.0º
F
160
years
91.4º
F
200
years
87.8º
F
280
years
THE
AGING FACTOR Science indicates that we age with every breath we takeliterally.
"It is surprising that oxygen, which is essential for life, can be tremendously
damaging in its free radical form," says Delhi-based Dr Kalyan Bagchi, president,
Society for Gerontological Research.
Free radicals are oxidants that damage tissues and cell membranes.
Which is why life on earth contains enzymes that detoxify free radicalsbut
not totally. Hence we age.
That's as far as external factors go. But there is also considerable debate
on which part of our body activates the suicide code. Though some believe
that the clock of aging lurks in the thymus, a yellowish triangle located
beneath the breastbone, Dr Caleb Finch of the University of Southern California
points his finger at the hypothalamus, a pea-sized area of brain midway
behind the ears.
You can, however, check the aging process to a certain extent.
In an experiment conducted at Wisconsin, 12 male volunteers above the
age of 60 were injected thrice a week with the human
growth hormone (HGH). Though the results weren't as exciting as the
miracle youth booster pool of the film Cocoon,
they were promising enough. After six months of treatment, these men lost
fat and gained lean tissues. Their bones grew stronger and the skin grew
thicker. The researchers concluded that the diminished production of HGH
in later years contributes to many symptoms of aging and restoring it
artificially to the body could, if not give a longer life, at least make
you look and feel younger beyond the prime of life.
Ayurveda offers its own recipe for rejuvenationthough not as fantastic
as the kaya kalpa process of soma. "Rejuvenation is basically
a cleansing of the body," says Delhi-based Gita Ramesh, director of Kairali
Ayurvedic Center that offers various rejuvenating treatments, including
panchakarma. "Panchakarma involves a complex series of therapeutic
actions including vamana (induced vomiting), virechana (purgation),
anuvasana basti (enema with oleos medications), rakta moksha
(therapeutic release of toxic blood) and nasya (use of herbal medication
through nostrils)," explains Shahnaz
Husain, queen of herbal cosmetics, who also runs a panchakarma
clinic in New Delhi.
Not to be left behind is the spiritual potion of long life. The transcendental
meditation (TM) of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi is said to aid longevity.
Maharishi's organization claims that people practicing TM have a lower
biological age. In ancient China, attainment of longevityand finally
immortalitywas the chief goal of Taoism. He who attained it became
hsien, a self-actualized human or demigod. Taoists believed that
each person's life begins with a fixed amount
of vital substances that he must preserve as the first step towards longevity.
To do so, you must reduce the breathing rate, swallow the breath on exhalation
for nourishment and direct the breath to the brain when inhaling. The
Taoists also set great score by preserving sexual forces. Not through
abstinence, but through non-ejaculation while copulating and sending the
sexual energies upward to vitalize the brain.
Of
course, you could simply refuse to die.
Leonard Orr, California-based
founder of rebirthing, claims that the correct practice of this system
can help a person attain not only longevity but also immortality. "The
belief that death is inevitable has probably killed more people than all
other causes combined," he writes in his book Breaking the Death Habit:
The Science of Everlasting Life. According to Orr, we die when our
death urge becomes stronger than our life urge. And the secret to eternal
life is just the desire to liveas simple as that. Perhaps. But,
going by Orr's verdict, if we are haunted by our death urge, then what
makes certain tribes or races live longer than the other?
Research indicates that life forms living in colder climates usually have
a higher life span. In fact, if certain kinds of fish are transferred
to a colder climate, they not only live twice their normal life span,
but also grow bigger and stronger. Don't start packing your bags for Antarctica
yet. We humans are once again caught in our evolutionary trap. Our body
has its own system of maintaining body temperature that remains constant
no matter what the temperature is outside. So, even in subzero temperatures,
our body's heating system would stubbornly remain at 98.6° Funless
we choose to freeze and die. Yet, many of us have come across yogis wandering
in freezing mountain regions wearing just a piece of loincloth. In fact,
various yogic techniques such as hatha yoga are believed to lower the
internal body temperature. It was this basic contradiction of the assumed
laws of science that led Walford to visit India. He scientifically tested
some yogis near the foothills of the Himalayas. His find? The yogis could
easily lower their internal body temperature by 4°-5°. Could there be
a possible secret of longevity here?
BEYOND SENILITY
But when age knocks at your door, it also brings along its dreaded cousin,
senility. If we live long, can we evade this menace? "Senility is the
process of rediscovering the natural divine child within," says Orr. Perhaps
which is why the aged often seem so childlike. But whether good or not,
senility is certainly not a necessary byproduct of aging.
"There could be many causes of senility," says Dr Bagchi who, at the age
of 78, is as alert as a 30-year-old. "But, to a large extent, you can
ward off senility with proper care." Which means that though the IQ level
begins to decrease after a certain age, it need not be so. Given the right
kind of atmosphere and stimulus, you could aspire to be an Einstein beyond
the prime of your life. Activity, motivation, social acceptance and good
health are some of the factors that maintain sharpness of the brain even
at the age of 90.
LONGEVITY RECIPE
But a long life demands discipline. The ancient adage against sloth, greed
and gluttony apply here as well. "You have to eat sensibly when you are
old," says a no-nonsense Bhagat Mataji, the 88-year-old president of the
Arya Mahila Ashram in Delhi, India. Resplendent in her immaculate white
clothes, she basks in the soft winter sun while keeping an eagle eye on
the activity around.
As I walk around the ashram, I am caught unawares by the ceaseless activity
of the elderly. There are 90-year-olds fetching grocery, octogenarians
briskly supervising office worka medley of enthusiasm and independence.
When I ask Bhagat Mataji about the secret of so much energy, she smiles
mysteriously. "What can I say? We follow a simple life, eat simple food,
take plenty of exercise and yogaany of these factors could have
helped." Lakshmi Dabur, 97, is not so eloquent. "What has made me live
till so long? How do I know? But I've always been an active person," says
she. Vidya Kapoor, nearing 100, also credits her longevity to her independence:
"Even now, I do my own cooking. I have no family. So I didn't have the
luxury of a laid-back life. Maybe it is this that has made me live so
much longer." And immortality? Would she take it if it was offered to
her? "Why should I want immortality? Aren't these many years enough? Now
I just want to spend the last years of my life in peace."
LAND OF IMMORTALS Come to think of it, not many of us would take an infinite
serving of life unconditionally. Garnished with health, money and youthfulnesswe
might think about it. Shouldn't we then ask if there is a secret death wish in
each one of us? A way out when things go wrong? The warmth of vacuous nothingness?
In fact, death has been the focal point of most religions. In both Christianity
and Islam,
moral and spiritual codes of life revolve around what will be meted out
to people when they are resurrected after death. Hinduism
also bases its tenets on the theory of reincarnation. So, how do we handle
immortality? What happens to religion and morality in a deathless world?
Do we evolve to something so idealistic that we negate the need of external
laws? Or do we create another set of religions, this time with a pantheon
of mortal gods? Also, what happens to the population explosion due to
which the earth is already teetering on the verge of collapse? With zero
mortality rate, does the reproduction process stop altogether? Or do we
reach out across stars to colonies other worlds?
"If an individual truly lived for centuries, his psyche, his perceptions
and even his thinking process would be radically different," says Michael
Talbot, author of The Delicate Dependency. Long back, I read a
sci-fi story about an invasionthis time from a deathless race of
human beings from the far-off future. With an eternity in hand, the only
experience beyond their means is the experience of death. So they travel
back in time, possess the minds of their mortal counterparts (read us),
and drive them to commit suicideintoxicated in the high of death.
Of course, immortality need not be so grim. It need not be grim at all.
At least not in Shambala.
Haven't we all heard about the land of immortals, said to be located somewhere
in the Himalayan or Tibetan mountains? Call it Shambala, Shangri-La or
Gyanganj, it is supposed to be a place of plenty, where only highly evolved
spiritual beings can enter and stay, and whatif all goes wellmight
expand to the entire earth when/if the human race attains immortality.
There are also stories of immortal saints such as Mahavatar
Babaji, mentioned in Paramahansa
Yogananda's best-selling Autobiography of a Yogi, who is supposed
to have visited deserving devotees and spiritual adepts from time to time
down the centuries. But immortality and spirituality are not necessarily
interlinkedat least not apparently.
Predicting the future, Hans Moravec of the Robotics Institute of Carnegie
Mellon University in Washington, says that "eventual immortality by brain-to-computer
interface is what mankind is aiming at". According to him, soon surgical
techniques will replace the nervous system with computers and we could
transfer our consciousness onto microchips to live as cyborgsin
immortal bodies made-to-order. Some scientists are also looking for a
'death hormone' whose removal might stop the aging clock once and for
all-or help us grow old, without aging, or dying, until we evolve into
something far beyond our present scope of vision and understanding.
ETERNITY'S CHILD
"What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly."
We should thank Richard
Bach for giving a new meaning to metamorphosis. But doesn't change
indicate deathof the old order, the form?
It's strange how most discussions on immortality revolve around death.
We defy it, valiantly fight against it, rise each time we fallyet
succumb to it. Only to live again. Call it reincarnation or resurrection.
Or even annihilationto let our body cells disperse in the air to
create new saplings of life. Isn't there immortality all around us?
But we seek immortality of a different nature. The awareness of living
on and on. I am reminded of the Greek myth of Tithonus.
The poor chap fell in love with the goddess of dawn who asked Zeus to
grant immortality to her lover. But she forgot to ask for eternal youth.
So, while the goddess basked in the glory of her beauty each dawn, time
caught up with her immortal lover. Tithonus now had an eternity to face
in a body shriveled, hunched, sickyet undying.
Immortality! A curse for some and a boon for few. What else distinguishes
a Wandering Jew from a Highlander?
Or a cursed Ashwatthama from an immortal Hanuman
of the Hindu myths? What makes God banish his beloved creations Adam and
Eve from Eden lest they eat the fruit of life, and throw it as a curse
to the man who refused water to Jesus on his way to crucifixion? Is there
a message here?
"The body can survive indefinitely," said the Indian sage Sri
Aurobindo, "only if, in the first place, it becomes fully conscious
of this immortal self, unites with it, identifies with it to the extent
of having the same capacity, the same faculty of constant transformation
which would enable it to follow the universal movement."
Taoism believes that the body is the seeker's alchemic crucible wherein
he changes the physical body into something pure and intransient. Where
the ephemeral matter gives way to the spirit and consciousness emerges
Godlike, resplendent, with the universe as its playground. The question
is, are we ready to step out of our chrysalis and face the immortal within?