287 — The Flight

Bryan Johnson spends approximately two million dollars a year trying to reverse his biological age. He does not eat sugar. He does not drink alcohol. He goes to sleep at 8:30 PM. He wears a continuous glucose monitor. He employs a medical team whose job is to optimize his biology. His stated goal is to defeat aging.
He flew to Australia. His biological age went up thirteen years.
Johnson's company, Blueprint, published the data. A single intercontinental round trip added thirteen biological years to a body he has spent years and millions of dollars trying to reverse. The biological age is measured in years. The thing it went up by is the thing he is working to bring down.
The measurement method is one Johnson himself designed and uses to track his progress. The same methodology that shows his age declining shows what one flight does. Both data sets are published on the same platform. The platform is called Blueprint. Blueprint publishes everything.
Johnson is continuing the protocol. The flight data is now part of the protocol. The protocol involves learning what affects the score. The score was affected.
The goal remains to reverse aging. The flight is not listed as a reversal. These two facts are being tracked with the same tools.