Dear Health Conscious Reader,
Did you see the recent cover of TIME magazine?
In a special issue on aging, TIME featured the Nobel Prize winning breakthrough on telomere research.
In the article, Scientists Get Closer to Understanding Why We Age, they confirmed that telomeres “are the closest we may come to identifying a biological clock – and our best bet for learning how to stop or turn back that clock.”1
If you’re a regular reader, you’ll know telomeres are the part of your chromosome that gets smaller as you age. When the telomere runs out, cell division stops, and life comes to an end.
But here’s the deal: There are simple ways to stop the loss of the telomere. You don’t have to wait for a new drug to benefit from this breakthrough.
During my conference on the telomere and aging, I revealed these simple steps you can take to ensure a long “health span” and fight off chronic diseases like cancer.
You can find out more below…
- Harrel E. “Scientists Get Closer to Understanding Why We Age,” TIME, Feb 15, 2010.
There’s a hidden switch in every cell of your body. It controls how long you live… and when you die.
It has the power to extend life – maybe indefinitely.
Most doctors have never heard of it.
A group of scientists stumbled upon it just 10 years ago. They watched in awe as generation after generation of cells multiplied… without aging.
As one top researcher put it in a Harvard report, “With this switch turned on, these cells become ‘immortalized.’”1
Until very recently, we didn’t know how to activate it. Today we do.
We’ve uncovered the very mechanism by which you age. And we’ve found a simple compound that flips that switch.
For the first time ever, you can affect that process.
You’ll be in the front row as my team of leading anti-aging experts and I walk you through the process in my brand-new DVD.
It’s called TA-65. Simply put, it’s the greatest breakthrough in the history of anti-aging medicine.
Recently, a select group flew in across the country to hear about the new TA-65 science.
At $500 a ticket, it was a pretty exclusive event. That’s why I hired a video production crew to film it. We wanted to make this something you could experience at home.
When you play the DVD, you’ll have the secrets behind TA-65’s rejuvenating power. And I’ll show you 6 simple steps to activate your anti-aging gene – right away.
You’ll also hear people whose immortality gene is already “switched on.”
In fact, my colleagues and I are personally undergoing this historic anti-aging treatment ourselves. We’ll share with you the changes they’ve seen in a matter of months, sharper vision to enhanced mental powers.
You’ll hear about people like Bob Hayes. At 82 he regularly runs 50-mile races – and bests competitors half his age.
Or Helen Klein. She just broke the world record for marathoners aged 85-90 – by over an hour.
TA-65’s power lies in a genetic structure called the telomere. It’s the mechanism that controls aging. It’s also the key to total health.
What are your telomeres? They’re protective tips that cap the ends of your DNA.
Each time your cells divide, your telomeres get shorter. When your telomeres run down, cell division stops and your life ends.
For the first time in history, we can influence – and even slow – this process.
The secret lies in an enzyme called telomerase. Telomerase makes your telomeres longer. That means your cells actually get younger as time goes by.
Simply put, telomerase turns back the hands of time. It’s in every cell of your body, but it’s turned off. TA-65 switches it back on.
It’s not just your lifespan we’re talking about here. Telomeres are dramatic indicators of your overall health.
Here’s some of the evidence:
- Aging/Los Angeles Times:2
Your risk of heart attack increases the faster your telomeres break down. Scientists looked at people in perfect health… who later died of heart disease. They found the death rate due to heart attack was three times higher for men whose telomeres got short the fastest. The death rate for women was 2.3 times higher. (2009)
- Journals of Gerontology:3
100-year-olds in good health had “significantly longer” telomeres than those with health problems. (2008)
- American Heart Association:4
People with shorter telomeres in their immune cells had twice the risk of death heart failure as patients with the longest telomeres. The study, published in one of its key journals, looked at over 750 people with heart disease. The highest-risk group had telomeres half the length of the lowest-risk group. (2008)
- Psychosomatic Medicine:5
Women with shorter telomeres are more likely to be overweight and insulin-resistant. (2008)
- American Association for Cancer Research:6
One of its flagship journals published a potential link between telomere length and colon cancer. (2006)
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences:7
People with short telomeres are more likely to suffer weaker immune systems and greater heart disease risk. (2004)
And the prestigious journal Lancet backed up my 6 steps to switch on your immortality gene.8
It came a study led by Dr. Dean Ornish. He found that the same lifestyle changes you’ll find in my TA-65 DVD can boost your telomerase levels by 29 percent.
You can see just how important your “immortality gene” is to your life and health. You really can “switch it on.”
Find out what you can do to start “growing younger” right in your own home.
I recommend you pick up your copy today.
To Your Good Health,
Al Sears, MD
- Reekie, Yvonna. “Telomeres Affected by Genetic and Nongenetic Factors.” Research Brief. fr. Focus Online: News Harvard Medical, Dental, and Public Health Schools.” June 20, 2008. www.lef.org/news/LefDailyNews.htm?NewsID=5216&Section=AGING
- Fr. unpublished report in Aging. E Epel and E Blackburn. As reported to Cathryn Delude in “Genetic clues to predicting life span: Inside chromosomes are telomeres that age as we age, and may serve as indicators of how long we’ll live.” Los Angeles Times. March 2, 2009.
- Delara et al. “Association of Longer Telomeres With Better Health in Centenarians.” The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences. 208. 63:809-812.
- Farzaneh-Fal et al. “Prognostic Value of Leukocyte Telomere Length in Patients With Stable Coronary Artery Disease: Data the Heart and Soul Study.” Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis & Vascular Biology. 2008. 28(7):1379-1384.
- Kiefer et al. “Dietary restraint and telomere length in pre- and postmenopausal women.” Psychosomatic Medicine. 2008. 70(8):845-9.
- Sullivan et al. “Telomere Length in the Colon Declines with Age: a Relation to Colorectal Cancer?” Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention. 2006. 15:573-577.
- Epel et al. “Accelerated telomere shortening in response to life stress.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2004. 101(49):17312-5.
- Ornish et al. “Increased telomerase activity and comprehensive lifestyle changes: a pilot study.” The Lancet Oncology. 2008. 9(11):1048-1057.




