Slam Into the Wall: What Real Longevity Looks Like with “Dr. G”
What does aging well actually look like—and who gets to define it? In this episode, Greg is joined by Dr. Golnosh Sharafsaleh, a triple board-certified physician in geriatric medicine, family medicine, and lifestyle medicine, whose approach to aging turns the conventional medical model on its head. From reframing the very language we use around getting older, to a frank conversation about end-of-life planning and quality of life over quantity, Dr. G brings clarity, science, and personal depth to one of the most important conversations we can have. Her message: aging is not a disease, decline is not inevitable, and your elderhood deserves a plan.
ABOUT DR. G
Dr. G practiced for years within traditional academic medicine before developing her own patient-centered health framework, built around what actually matters to each person. She practices in Asheville, North Carolina, and founded Geri Academy to expand access to her approach to healthy aging. At 46, she has navigated her own health journey—including bilateral hip replacement due to congenital hip dysplasia—and brings both clinical expertise and lived experience to her work.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
* Aging is not a disease. The World Health Organization classifies aging as a disease process—Dr. G disagrees. Cellular change and transformation across the life spectrum are natural. Disease and aging are distinct, even when they intersect.
* Elderhood is the right word. Geriatrician Louise Aronson’s [https://louisearonson.com/]framework—childhood, adulthood, elderhood—gives language that honors the final third of life rather than diminishing it. Each stage carries equal weight and deserves intentional planning.
* The longevity trap is real. The goal isn’t the longest possible lifespan—it’s the most functional, independent one. Dr. G’s mantra: “I don’t want to ease into death. I want to slam into the wall and die.” Supplements and biohacks aren’t the answer; the foundational pillars of lifestyle medicine are.
* What matters to you comes first. Before any medical recommendation, Dr. G asks patients what matters to them. That answer shapes everything else. It’s not traditional medicine—and that’s the point.
* Gait speed is the sixth vital sign. Research supports slower walking speed as a meaningful predictor of morbidity and mortality. Functional strength—getting up off the floor, carrying groceries, maintaining balance—matters more than gym performance metrics.
* Functional strength is use-it-or-lose-it, but recoverable. Both Greg and Dr. G share personal experiences of noticing strength loss and regaining it quickly with intentional movement. The message: it’s never too late, but it’s always better not to stop.
WHAT YOU’LL HEAR
* Dr. G’s origin story: a childhood spent with elders, a best friend at age 80, and why geriatrics was always the destination
* The shift from conventional academic medicine to patient-centered, integrative geriatric care
* Why the language we use around aging matters—and the case for “elderhood”
* Aging as transformation, not disease—and what that shift requires of medicine and culture
* Dr. G’s HEALTH framework: How you age, Energy, Activity, Longevity, Transformation, Habits
* Gait speed as a vital sign, functional strength as a daily practice, and why Dr. G refuses to let her patients use handicap placards they don’t need
* The real cost of cancer treatment that prioritizes length over quality—and when enough is enough
* A deeply personal story about making end-of-life decisions for a child, and what another mother’s grief taught Dr. G about medicine’s limits
* Advance directives, family conversations, and why planning before crisis is an act of love
RESOURCES & LINKS
Dr. G’s website: GeriAcademy.com [https://geriacademy.com/]
Book mentioned: Elderhood by Louise Aronson [https://louisearonson.com/books/elderhood/]
Author mentioned: Eckhart Tolle [https://eckharttolle.com/]