AI / Longevity / Making a difference

Winding Down, Winding Up or Just Winding-The Next Ten Years of my Life 


When I was diagnosed and treated for prostate cancer in 1996, I made a decision that changed my life forever. Prostate cancer is slow growing, and if the treatment did not work, I would still have at least ten more years to live. In my case, it appeared that the cancer had metastasized (it had not). So I decided to live my life as if I only had ten more years. This happened at a time when my friend, Dave Roux—who was then responsible for Corporate Development and M&A at Oracle and I were working together to create a leveraged buyout firm.

Having made the decision to live as if I only had ten years, I realized I did not want to spend those years running a private equity firm, and I told that to Dave. He went on to create Silverlake, which became a very successful firm. In the process, he became a billionaire. I assume I would have as well. By the way, Dave is a really good person. His family foundation supports many important projects.

I took a different path—one that I do not regret. It was no longer tied to any organization and not driven by financial concerns.

I thought at the time that ten years was long enough to accomplish something like learning a new language, developing new skills, or having a deep and meaningful relationship—but short enough to feel some urgency. Thinking that you only have ten years to live could be considered pessimistic. But now, at the age of 80, I think it is an optimistic way to consider the future.

I struggle with my age, and I have written about that in this blog. Sometimes I wake up in shock when I realize how old I have become. While about 60% of men live to 80, only about 10% are in excellent health (I appear to be one of those). Ten years later, only about 5% of men are still alive—and those who are, are overwhelmingly in poor health. 

While I have a good chance of making it to 90, it is not just a question of life span. Health span is the critical question. While I wrote that I am in excellent health, I am starting to notice a decline in my hearing and sight. I wonder, are we as old as our oldest part? I hope not.

We had left Israel just before October 7, 2023, on a combination vacation and business trip. Having already decided to move from Israel in 2025, we accelerated that decision. I loved living in Israel, but the Israel I had loved was no more. We needed to create a new life. 

We ended up moving to Amsterdam, where I was engaged in work related to AI and cancer diagnosis. It felt like a rest stop in what had become a very confusing world—still in motion, but catching our breath. Eventually, we chose Italy. I had always said jokingly that in my next life, I’d come back as an Italian—and then I thought, why wait?

But my 80th birthday weighed heavily on me. I struggled to imagine my future. We desperately wanted to settle into our own home. I missed my piano, which was still sitting in storage in San Francisco. The piano I had in Tel Aviv was sold with that house. We missed our art and the small things that my wife and I had collected over our years together.

The question of how to use the ten years—likely the last ten years—came into sharper focus recently, as we made a major life decision: we would put down our roots in Italy.

My anxiety about the future came to a head when we decided to buy a home in Lecce, Italy. I tried to imagine my life living in this city at this age and over the next ten years. It was then that I realized the decision to live as if I only had ten years was no longer a pessimistic view but an optimistic one, and I decided to embrace that optimism. We will live in Lecce in a beautiful palazzo in the heart of the historic center. Lecce is called the Florence of the South. It is a Baroque city located less than 30 minutes from amazing beaches on both the Adriatic and Ionian seas.

It will be almost essential for me to learn Italian. I am struggling with that. This is the third language I’ve had to learn after English but I am committed to doing it.

One reason to remain optimistic is the progress I expect we will see in health care because of AI. I am watching this closely and am personally involved in the field as an advisor to the Longevity Center at Sheba Hospital in Israel. I have started to get involved in longevity research in Italy as well. I still want to engage in creating the future and believe I have much to offer. I want not only to live longer and better—but to help others do that as well.

So whether I am winding down, winding up, or just winding my way through this next chapter, I know one thing for certain: I’m still moving forward—with curiosity, with purpose,  hope and a song in my soul.

5 thoughts on “Winding Down, Winding Up or Just Winding-The Next Ten Years of my Life 

    • It reminds me of Israel in someways. I love hot dry weather and lots of sun. The people are warm as well and the food is great. It is close to two seas. It feels like an earlier time with less insanity.

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