Tuesday, 3 February 2026

The symptoms I carry

DS

 dopamine isn’t a reward molecule—it’s a prediction-error signal, encoding moment-to-moment updates in expectation that drive learning and motivation. More clinically relevant: dopamine and serotonin often operate in opponent fashion. Dopamine tracks positive predictions; serotonin tracks negative predictions and active inhibition. Their balance shapes behavior, mood, and learning capacity.

FS

 The game of life is a game of boomerangs. Our thoughts, deeds and words return to us sooner or later with astounding accuracy."

~ Florence Scovel Shinn

Dth. It should be part of the full expectancy of life. Muriel Spark

FB

 Here is the world: beautiful and terrible things will happen.

Don't be afraid.

Frederick Buechner

ODDS OF TURNING 100

 A

EVEN BIGGER QUESTION 😄
Turning 100 is rare—but not that rare anymore.

At birth (modern developed-country averages)

  • Women: about 1–2% (≈ 1 in 100)

  • Men: about 0.3–0.5% (≈ 1 in 200–300)

So overall, roughly 1 in 150 people born today will reach 100, and most of them will be women.

If you’ve already survived to…

Your odds rise a lot with age:

  • Age 65: ~2–5% chance

  • Age 80: ~5–10%

  • Age 90: roughly 10–20% (this is the big jump—making it to 90 is the hard part)

What strongly increases your chances

  • Long-lived parents or grandparents 🧬

  • Not smoking (this is huge)

  • Avoiding major heart disease

  • Staying socially connected (seriously!)

  • Decent luck—centenarians all admit this part 😅

Reality check

Reaching 100 isn’t just about adding years—it’s about not dying from the big killers early (heart disease, stroke, smoking-related illness). If you dodge those, the odds quietly stack in your favor.

If you want, tell me:

  • your age

  • sex

  • country

…and I’ll give you a more personal “centenarian probability” estimate 🔮

ODDS OF TURNING 90

 A

BIG QUESTION 😄
Short answer: it depends a lot on who you are and where you live, but here are solid ballpark odds.

At birth (U.S.-style averages)

  • Women: roughly 1 in 4 (≈25%) will make it to 90

  • Men: roughly 1 in 6 (≈15–18%) will make it to 90

If you’ve already made it to…

Your odds jump a lot the longer you survive:

  • Age 50: chances are much higher than at birth

  • Age 65: about 30–40% of women and 20–30% of men reach 90

  • Age 80: you’ve got a very real shot (many estimates land around 40–50%)

What shifts the odds up or down

  • Sex (women live longer on average)

  • Genetics (long-lived parents = bonus points)

  • Smoking history (huge factor)

  • Heart health, exercise, and luck 🍀

  • Country & healthcare access

If you want, tell me your age, sex, and country, and I’ll give you a much more personalized “90-year-old likelihood” breakdown 👀