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Number 3 “The Membrane Theory of Aging and Survival” Guest: Professor Brian Peskin

We do not die of old age. We die of cellular collapse, membrane dysfunction, and mitochondrial failure — years before diagnosis gives it a name.

“Throughout this series, we’ve established that people don’t die from old age—they die from cellular failure. One of the most overlooked components of that failure is the integrity of the cell membrane itself. Professor Brian Peskin has spent decades studying this exact issue.”

Medicine is excellent at naming disease. It is far less capable of preventing it.

The conventional model waits for late-stage breakdown, confirms it through biomarkers and imaging, assigns a diagnostic label, and manages the consequences pharmaceutically. This is not a criticism of clinicians. It is an honest description of the system they operate within.

The problem is that chronic disease does not begin at diagnosis. It begins silently — at the cellular, membrane, and mitochondrial level — often decades before a doctor names it.

This is why seemingly healthy people:

  • Develop cancer with “perfect” cholesterol

  • Suffer heart attacks with “normal” labs

  • Show cognitive decline without a family history

  • Age rapidly despite disciplined health habits

These are not anomalies. They are predictable outcomes of a model that detects cells collapsing, not cells struggling

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