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Why Some Humans Wear Out Faster Than Others explores a quiet but unsettling question about aging and inequality inside the human body. Even when people share similar genes, environments, and lifestyles, why do some bodies decline earlier while others endure longer? This episode of History for Sleep invites you to reflect calmly on why human aging is uneven, gradual, and deeply biological. In this long-form sleep audio, we examine scientific evidence from evolutionary biology, anthropology, and modern population studies to understand why aging does not follow a universal clock. Research on cellular repair, immune aging, and long-term stress shows that the human body was never shaped to age evenly across individuals. Natural selection favored survival only long enough for reproduction, leaving late-life maintenance inconsistent and vulnerable to chance. Across ten thematic arcs, the video traces how small differences in repair accuracy, stress exposure, and biological trade-offs accumulate over decades, leading some humans to wear out faster than others. Each section connects these findings to accepted scientific research, including studies on cellular senescence, immune decline, and evolutionary medicine, presented in a slow, reflective way designed for nighttime listening. If you enjoy calm, evidence-based explorations of human history, biology, and the deeper questions behind aging and lifespan, consider subscribing to the channel. New long-form sleep-friendly videos are released regularly to help you unwind, reflect, and rest. #sleepyhumanhistory #historyforsleep #sleepdocumentary