If you want to track the pace at which you’re aging, HRV, biological age test, sleep, and VO₂ max are OK, but there are 12 deeper metrics worth quantifying over time. And your wearable isn’t tracking them yet.
Scientists have mapped out 12 core processes that drive aging, called the 12 Hallmarks of Aging. These may determine how long and how well you live. First outlined in 2013 then refined in 2022 as science evolved, they form the foundation of longevity medicine today. These help guide how researchers and clinicians measure, test, and target the biology of aging.
When I traveled to the Amazon rainforest for a week-long longevity retreat, I expected to explore the usual pillars of healthy aging: movement, nutrition, recovery. What I didn’t expect was how deep we’d go into the cellular mechanisms behind them. The workshops went way beyond lifestyle advice.
During one-on-one consultations with the founders of Unlimited Life, Dave Asprey, Dr. Tim Cook, and Marc Kielburger, each member received a personalized chart of the status of their 12 Hallmarks of Aging, showing which mechanisms were actively accelerating their biological age. Seeing your aging, quantified in color-coded data, is both humbling and empowering. It turns longevity from a vague journey into something visible, actionable, and deeply personal.
Here’s an example of how over 600 biomarkers as well as health and lifestyle indicators help Dr. Cook’s team assess each patient’s aging profile.
Unlimited Life/Klaudia Balogh
The 12 Hallmarks of Aging
Before dissecting the five lessons I learned in the jungle, here’s a breakdown of what the 12 Hallmarks of Aging are. It could get a lot more scientific than this, but it’s worth having a high-level understanding of what we’re looking at. It’s also especially important to understand that lifestyle choices are the main drivers impacting these hallmarks.
1. Genomic instability
DNA damage builds up over time from stressors, toxins, poor sleep, and even normal cell activity. When your body’s repair systems can’t keep up, small errors start slipping through, changing how your genes function and slowly weakening your body’s original blueprint.
2. Telomere attrition
Telomeres are the protective caps at the end of your chromosomes that get shorter each time your cells divide. When they become critically short, cells stop dividing or die, slowing tissue repair and contributing to aging.
3. Epigenetic alterations
Your genes don’t change, but the way they’re expressed does. Aging flips certain genetic switches off and others on, reshaping many things from energy metabolism to inflammation.
4. Loss of proteostasis
Cells rely on perfectly folded proteins to stay functional. As that system begins to have cracks, misfolded proteins accumulate and cellular repair slows. It’s like trying to build a house in which the blueprints are scrambled, and the door ends up on the ceiling. In other words, the structure stops working the way it should.
5. Deregulated nutrient sensing
It’s the scientific way of saying your body gets worse at recognizing what you consume. Over time, those mixed signals may throw off metabolism, recovery, and energy balance.
6. Mitochondrial dysfunction
As your mitochondria, your energy engines, become less efficient over time, your cells may accumulate more oxidative stress leaving them more vulnerable to damage. The downstream effect of that may manifest in symptoms like brain fog, fatigue, sluggish recovery, and more.
7. Cellular senescence
Senescent cells are the so-called “zombie cells” that linger when a cell stops functioning properly but refuses to die, or go into apoptosis. Instead, they release inflammatory signals that damage nearby healthy tissue, increase reactive oxygen species, and contribute to aging.
8. Stem cell exhaustion
As we go through life, and especially in athletics or bodybuilding, our stem cells are constantly called upon to repair microtears, joint stress, and tissue damage. Over time, both the number and effectiveness of these stem cells decline, reducing the body’s ability to regenerate. Scientifically speaking, stem cell “exhaustion” doesn’t mean they vanish, it means their regenerative potential weakens over time as DNA damage, inflammation, and stress in the surrounding cellular environment impair their ability to renew and repair.
9. Altered intercellular communication
As signaling between cells becomes distorted, it may lead to increased inflammation and immune dysfunction. It’s like static in the system, your body stops communicating clearly with itself.
10. Chronic inflammation
Low-grade, persistent inflammation quietly drives most age-related diseases. It’s the slow burn beneath many forms of decline, and often gets the nickname “inflammaging”.
11. Disabled macroautophagy
Autophagy is your body’s self-cleaning system. When it declines, damaged components pile up inside cells, clogging renewal and recovery. Internal medicine specialist, and pioneer of integrative longevity medicine Dr. Cook told me that while there’s no commercial testing available to quantify this hallmark, “if someone isn’t fasting at least 16 hours (periodically) and if their bio-age and inflammatory markers are elevated, then we assume this hallmark is active,” he explained.
12. Dysbiosis
Our body thrives in a symbiotic relationship with the trillions of bacteria that live in our gut. However, when harmful strains begin to outweigh the beneficial ones, inflammation rises, metabolism takes a hit, and nearly every system starts to feel the effect. The gut microbiome gradually shifts out of balance as we age due to a myriad of reasons (antibiotics, nutrient-deficiencies, a diet high in ultra-processed foods, stress, and more), and that microbial chaos spans from nutrient absorption to immunity and even mood.
Unlimited Life/Klaudia Balogh
Five lessons I learned in the Amazon
Understanding the 12 Hallmarks gives you the “what” of aging. The Unlimited Life program teaches you the “how”. Over several days of workshops deep in the rainforest, we explored some powerful levers that may influence these hallmarks. What’s interesting is that since nothing in the body works in isolation, neither do these 12 hallmarks. They are interconnected, so when you improve one, you create ripple effects across the others.
Here are five lessons that stood out throughout the week.
1. Nutrition
Every meal you eat sends messages that influence how your cells respond, how efficiently your mitochondria produce energy, and how your body manages inflammation. It’s one of the most direct ways you can influence several hallmarks of aging. Stop jumping on the next diet trend, and take the time to listen and track how your body responds to what and when you eat, and be willing to adapt as it changes. Different phases of life, hormones, and training loads demand different macros and micronutrients. Asprey noted during one of the workshops to “not approach food with fear, approach it with awareness,” because “your nutrient status helps you handle your environment better.”
Continuous glucose monitors can show how your body reacts to certain foods in real time, while genetic and methylation testing can reveal how well you process nutrients.
That awareness means understanding what you’re eating at a deeper level, like being mindful of oxalates in certain plants (yes, Asprey still isn’t a fan of kale) or cooking mushrooms thoroughly to avoid compounds that can irritate arteries.
2. Personalized supplementation
Asprey shared that just in the last decade, 50,000 new studies were published on supplements. So if you think you were confused about what works and what doesn’t, it’s not even half of it. Dr. Cook added that research in longevity medicine doubles every four months. No matter where you are in your health journey, supplements are critical to maximize your healthspan and target weak points within your individual aging profile, whether it’s DNA repair, mitochondrial support, or nutrient sensing. Several members were asked to reshuffle their supplement stack as they reviewed their test results.
3. Connection
This was the most unexpected takeaway. Kielburger shared several notes on how connection directly affects cellular health and inflammatory markers. Studies have shown that loneliness was associated with higher levels of C-reactive protein and changes in gene expression in immune cells. So, while your healthy journey might feel like a path of isolation, it’s worth putting in the effort to nurture close relationships because it may literally add years to your life.
4. Move consistently
The notion that muscle is a longevity organ has been well-established. But it turns out that even short-duration but consistent activity goes a long way. For example, REHIIT, which is a short maximum-intensity sprint workout.
Exercise activates autophagy, stem cell renewal, mitochondrial repair, and nutrient sensing, making it one of the most potent anti-aging tools we have. All three founders highlighted that you can’t supplement your way around movement.
5. Advanced biomarker testing
Finally, the thread that ties it all together: data. One of the workshops made it clear that most of us are looking at an incomplete health dashboard. Conventional lab tests, like cholesterol or thyroid panels, offer a narrow view of health, and don’t tell the full story. As Dr. Cook explained, true longevity medicine requires digging deeper. His team ran coronary CT angiograms on all members to see what was actually happening inside the arteries, along with tests that reveal how inflamed those arteries might be, including CRP, fasting insulin, HbA1c, homocysteine, ApoB, Lipoprotein(a), and oxidative stress.
Additionally, measuring key biomarkers like intracellular NAD levels, DNA methylation, and microbiome balance reveals which hallmarks are thriving and which need attention.
The Takeaway
Over the past couple of years, I’ve studied the 12 Hallmarks of Aging at a surface level, enough to understand the framework, but never quite seeing how it all comes together in practice. What I liked the most about the Unlimited Life program was watching these hallmarks shift from academic concepts into actionable interventions.
Plus, the team made it clear that no matter how many red flags show up on an individual’s assessment, you’re not supposed to tackle them all at once. Instead, they focus you on the lowest-hanging fruit, whether that’s optimizing your hormones, refining your nutrition, or adjusting your supplement stack. This longitudinal approach is what sets it apart from most of what I’ve seen in the longevity space. You’re getting a deep understanding of your unique aging profile, followed by a deliberate, phased strategy that evolves as your body changes and as your test results shift over time.