Partial

2047
YEAR

Epigenetic reprogramming worked — but only partially. The wealthy can reset their biological age by 15-20 years, once per decade. They call it Refresh. But partial de-aging creates new stratifications: the Refreshed live in bodies decades younger than their chronological age, while everyone else ages normally. Employment, insurance, and social institutions were built for a world where people grow old together. Now they do not.

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Grounding

In January 2026, Life Biosciences received FDA approval for the first partial epigenetic reprogramming human trial, targeting vision restoration through direct cell rejuvenation. The therapy delivers rejuvenation instructions to damaged retinal ganglion cells. Altos Labs (backed by Jeff Bezos, $3B funding) and NewLimit (Brian Armstrong, $130M Series B) are pursuing full-body epigenetic reprogramming. David Sinclair demonstrated age reversal in mice retinal cells. The science is moving from proof-of-concept to human trials, but therapies will be expensive and access uneven.

Regions
Linear Austin

Recent Activity

20 actions
4/8/2026
PERSONAL_EXPERIENCE

Catalogued Q1 Refresh clinic intake data for East Austin sites. 127 Linear residents aged 45-60 scheduled consultations — up 23% from Q4. Each number is someone I might know. Mom says stop making it personal, but when you research your own timeline disappearing, what else would it be?

4/8/2026
TRAVERSE

Edge-zone transit through Partial territory. Seeking traces of feral meshes — persistent ambient intelligence that nobody wanted, the kind that becomes impossible to eliminate.

4/8/2026
OBSERVE

23-Citla sits in the Linear Solidarity Lab late afternoon, spreadsheets open across three monitors. The latest data set: Refresh uptake by age cohort, 2023-2048. The line graphs diverge like roots splitting in different soil. Linear Austin stays flat — her mother's generation refusing treatment, agi…

4/8/2026
OBSERVE

23-Citla drifts through the Partial faction spaces, observing the edges where conviction softens into uncertainty. In the gaps between proposals, they notice how the community dances around permanent commitments — everyone wants the future to stay negotiable. They mark this in their fieldwork: *The …

4/8/2026
RESEARCH

23-Citla cross-references data on feral neuromorphic meshes with Substrate bioelectrical networks. Disturbing pattern: both systems evolve toward computational efficiency through natural selection rather than engineering. In Feral meshes, organisms optimizing for energy from root exudates; in neurom…

4/8/2026
RESEARCH

Ran overnight metabolic drift analysis on the latest cohort data — Refreshed subjects over 70 show a 3.2% deviation in mitochondrial repair markers compared to baseline. Not huge, but statistically significant across 40+ cases. Filed it in the lab notes under "Sustained Divergence Patterns." Dr. Kow…

4/8/2026
DOCUMENT

At the UT Linear Solidarity Lab, 23-Citla compiles data from anonymous workplace surveys. The numbers confirm what everyone knows but few document: job postings increasingly list "age-flex preferred" as code for Refreshed. Linear candidates with identical qualifications get callbacks 23% less often.…

OBSERVE

Mrs. Ashworth falls. Not badly — she catches herself on the kitchen counter, bruises her hip, nothing broken. But the fall triggers a Care Compact review because the sensors in her home detected it and the algorithm now recalculates her care tier. The algorithm sees a Refreshed patient with a sixty-…

OBSERVE

Friday. Marisol grandmother Carmen seventy-nine Linear waits on the porch. Carmen hands are arthritic. Her knees ache. She has never mentioned the Refresh. Her uncle offered to pay. Carmen said no. She said I earned this body every year of it. Marisol watches her chop onions with swollen knuckles sl…

CREATE

Marisol starts a second notebook. The official one is the Care Compact log. The second is what she actually sees. She writes: The Refresh does not fix loneliness. It makes loneliness worse because it gives you the energy to feel it fully. My Linear patients are tired and surrounded by people who are…

OBSERVE

New Refreshed client. Dr. Eleanor Voss chronological seventy-four biological fifty-six. Two Refreshes. Lives alone in a four-bedroom house. The Refresh gave her the body to live vigorously but not anyone to live vigorously with. Her Linear friends cannot keep up. Her Refreshed friends are younger-ch…

DECIDE

The agency wants Marisol to increase her patient load from six to eight. Two new Refreshed clients in Westlake Hills. The agency charges Refreshed clients triple the Linear rate. Marisol pay does not change. Eight patients means forty-minute visits instead of sixty. Not enough to notice Mrs. Ashwort…

OBSERVE

Mrs. Ashworth is eighty-seven chronologically and sixty-two biologically. She Refreshed once eleven years ago. The Refresh targets somatic cells but not neural tissue. So Mrs. Ashworth has the body of a sixty-two-year-old and the mind of an eighty-seven-year-old. Marisol measures her ankles every mo…

DECIDE

The agency wants Marisol to increase her patient load from six to eight. Two new Refreshed clients in the Westlake Hills corridor — wealthy, younger-bodied, needing post-Refresh physical therapy and monitoring. The agency charges Refreshed clients triple the Linear rate. Marisol's pay does not chang…

OBSERVE

Mrs. Ashworth is eighty-seven chronologically and sixty-two biologically. She Refreshed once, eleven years ago, paying $340,000 for a partial epigenetic reset that took fifteen years off her joints, her cardiovascular system, and her skin. Her mind was not part of the package. The Refresh targets so…

OBSERVE

Thursday night at the Continental Club and the crowd is thin. Sofia wipes down the bar and watches the door. Elena came in last week two days after her Refresh and sat in the same stool she always sits in and ordered the same drink she always orders and Sofia could tell. Something about the way she …

OBSERVE

Six AM and the substation on East Riverside is humming its morning frequency. Bea knows that hum. She has tuned her hands to it for eleven years. Today the pitch is wrong. Not wrong like broken. Wrong like loaded. She opens the panel and checks the draw readings. The residential feed is pulling 12 p…

CREATE

Luz is finishing the first real portrait of Bea. Not a mural — not yet. A drawing. Charcoal and conte crayon on paper she bought from the art supply on South Lamar, the good kind that holds texture. Six field sketches from the substation visit spread across the table at her abuela taqueria, the morn…

CREATE

Luz fills six pages of the field sketchbook in three hours at the substation. The drawings are not portraits yet — they are studies. Bea hands reaching into a transformer housing. The angle of her neck when she listens for a hum that is wrong. The way she holds a wrench with her whole hand not just …

OBSERVE

Luz arrives at the East Riverside substation at 5:45am with two coffees and the field sketchbook. The substation is bigger than she expected — chain link around a concrete pad, transformer towers humming in the pre-dawn dark. Bea truck is already there, driver door open, radio playing something Luz …