Sunday, 10 May 2026

Supercentenarians 110 plus

 Scientists don’t rely on appearances, memories, or even family claims when verifying “oldest people in the world.” They use a strict process called age validation, which is mostly handled by specialist groups like the Gerontology Research Group and LongeviQuest.

The goal is simple but extremely hard in practice: prove that a person’s identity has been continuously and correctly documented from birth to present, without gaps or identity switches.


🧾 1. Start with a “primary birth record” (the foundation)

The most important document is:

  • Birth certificate issued close to the time of birth
  • Or an official civil registration entry

Researchers check:

  • exact date of birth
  • place of birth
  • parent names

⚠️ If this is missing, the case becomes much harder—but not automatically impossible.


🔗 2. Build a continuous “identity chain”

This is the core scientific idea:

Can we trace one single person across their entire life without breaks or contradictions?

They collect documents from different life stages, such as:

  • school records 🎓
  • marriage certificates 💍
  • census entries 🧾
  • immigration or travel records ✈️
  • military or employment records 🪪

Each document must:

  • match the same identity
  • show consistent age progression over time


🧠 3. Check for consistency across decades

Researchers look for “logic consistency,” such as:

  • Does the age in a 1950 census match later records?
  • Do names, parents, or birthplace stay consistent?
  • Are there duplicates or conflicting identities?

Even small inconsistencies can raise doubts.


📊 4. Cross-check population records

They compare multiple independent sources:

  • national censuses
  • local civil registries
  • church or religious records (in older cases)
  • historical archives

This reduces the risk of relying on a single flawed document.


🧬 5. Rule out identity substitution errors

A major risk in extreme age claims is:

  • identity reuse (someone younger taking an older person’s identity)
  • paperwork mistakes in early life
  • undocumented births later assigned estimated ages

So researchers try to confirm:

“Is this the same person throughout life?”


🧓 6. Validate survival into extreme age (110+)

Once early-life identity is confirmed, they verify:

  • the person is still alive
  • no death record exists under that identity
  • medical or administrative proof of current existence

At this stage, the person is classified as a supercentenarian (110+).


🏅 7. Independent review and peer verification

Cases are not accepted automatically. They are:

  • reviewed by multiple researchers
  • checked against known longevity fraud patterns
  • compared with global databases

Only then can someone be officially recognized.


🌍 Why this process is so strict

Because extreme age claims are often wrong—not necessarily dishonest, but due to:

  • missing records from early 1900s or earlier
  • poor birth registration systems
  • migration and war-related document loss
  • memory-based age estimation

Without strict validation, “oldest person ever” lists would be unreliable.


🏆 Example of a fully validated case

The only universally accepted oldest person in modern records is:

  • Jeanne Calment, France, 122 years

Her case was confirmed because:

  • birth record exists
  • decades of consistent documentation exist
  • no identity breaks were found


🧠 Bottom line

To verify “world’s oldest people,” scientists don’t ask:

“How old does this person look or say they are?”

They ask instead:

“Can we prove, through documents across a lifetime, that this is the same person born on this date—and still alive today?”

If you want, I can also explain:

  •  why many “120+ year old” viral cases fail verification
  • or  how fraud in longevity records is actually detected
  • or  which countries have the best historical birth records for these studies

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Daily NORAD. NEKA. No extra karma added

NORAD. NAK. No added Karma

 What you’re expressing sounds close to the highest aim in early Buddhism, but it needs a bit of precision in how it’s understood.

In the teaching of Gautama Buddha, the goal is not to “deny” karma, but to go beyond the binding force of karma.

The three ideas you mentioned

  • No rāga → no craving, no attachment
  • No dosa (dvesa) → no hatred, no aversion
  • No karma (kamma) → no new binding karma being produced

But in classical Buddhism:

1. Karma is not “stopped” like a switch

Karma (Pali: kamma) means intentional action. As long as there is life and intention, actions naturally happen.

What ends is:

  • karmic binding (actions driven by craving, aversion, delusion)
  • rebirth-producing karma

2. What actually ends in liberation (nirvana)

The Buddha taught that liberation is:

  • end of craving (rāga)
  • end of aversion (dosa)
  • end of delusion (moha)

When those stop, karma no longer creates future suffering.

This is the meaning of:

\text{Rāga} + \text{Dosa} + \text{Moha} \rightarrow \text{Kamma production} \rightarrow \text{Suffering and rebirth}

3. “No karma” in a deeper sense

In advanced Buddhist interpretation, “no karma” usually means:

  • no karmic accumulation
  • no rebirth-generating intention
  • actions become spontaneous, not driven by ego

This is often associated with Nibbāna (Nirvana) — the end of conditioned mental fuel.


Simple summary

What you are pointing to is:

A mind without craving, hatred, or delusion —
and therefore free from suffering and binding karma.

In Buddhism, that state is not emptiness of life, but freedom from inner compulsion.

If you want, I can also explain:

  •  what Nirvana actually feels like in Buddhist descriptions
  • or  how meditation is used to weaken rāga and dosa step by step

NORAD

 Yes — in Buddhist teaching, freedom from rāga and dvesa/dosa is central.

  • Rāga = craving, attachment, greed, passionate clinging
  • Dvesa (Sanskrit) / Dosa (Pali) = aversion, hatred, ill will

Along with moha (delusion), they are called the “three poisons” that keep beings trapped in suffering.

\text{Rāga (attachment)} + \text{Dosa (aversion)} + \text{Moha (delusion)} \rightarrow \text{Suffering}

The Buddha’s path is not emotional numbness. It is learning to:

  • enjoy without clinging,
  • face pain without hatred,
  • and see clearly without illusion.

A balanced mind is sometimes described as:

  • neither grasping nor rejecting,
  • neither intoxicated by pleasure nor destroyed by pain.

This connects strongly with:

  • mindfulness,
  • equanimity (upekkhā),
  • compassion,
  • and insight (paññā).

In meditation traditions like Vipassanā, practitioners observe sensations and thoughts without reacting with craving (rāga) or aversion (dosa). Over time, this weakens suffering at its root.


NORAD daily routine practice

B. Samma Ditthi

 You likely mean Sammā Diṭṭhi (Pali: सम्मा दिट्ठि).

  • Sammā = right, proper, complete
  • Diṭṭhi = view, understanding, perspective

So Sammā Diṭṭhi means:

Right View or Right Understanding

It is the first factor of the Noble Eightfold Path taught by Gautama Buddha.

Right View means seeing reality more clearly, especially understanding:

  • actions have consequences (karma),
  • suffering exists,
  • craving causes suffering,
  • suffering can end,
  • and the path of practice leads to liberation.

In Theravāda Buddhism, Right View is considered the beginning of wisdom (paññā).

A famous text connected to this is the Sammādiṭṭhi Sutta (“Discourse on Right View”), traditionally explained by the monk Sāriputta.

The path you’ve been naming forms a connected structure:

  • Sīla → ethical living
  • Samādhi → concentrated mind
  • Paññā → wisdom
  • Sammā Diṭṭhi → correct understanding guiding the whole path