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CRYONICS
UK


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Thursday, April 21, 2005
Woman's body to be frozen after
her death
Science fiction could become
science fact in quest for second go at life. Susie
Carter reports
A Cornish woman is embarking on a chilling quest for
a second go at life - by having her body frozen
after death.
Chrissie Loveday from Porthtowan, plans to spend
approximately £20,000 on being cryogenically frozen,
which she hopes will allow her to experience life
for a second time.
The process sounds like it has been lifted straight
from the script of Austin Powers, but
Chrissie says the benefits behind it are serious.
"There is just this tiny, tantalising thought that
you could be brought back in the future - it is the
nearest you will get to time travel," she said.
"Imagine what the future would be like. I would do
all the things I never managed to do in this life.
"I might even meet my great, great grandchildren."
While many rely on miracle creams to banish the
signs of ageing, Chrissie believes cryogenics could
be the answer.
"I would rather not have arthritic knees and have
the energy I used to have," she said. "What is
daunting is whether anyone is going to care enough
to thaw you out."
Chrissie was recently guest speaker on cryonics
during a conference entitled Who Wants to Live
Forever which was broadcast around the world from
the Natural History Museum in London.
She signed up to the Cryonics Institute in America
in 1994 and will only pay her £20,000 if and when
the appropriate technology becomes available. She
said bodies would not be reanimated if the world had
become nasty or dangerous.
After death, those who sign up are taken to America.
Bodies are cooled down first before blood is removed
and replaced with a solution that minimises freezing
damage. Bodies are then cooled further and immersed
in liquid nitrogen at a temperature of -196 degrees
celsius.
Participants hope their bodies will be thawed out
and `re-animated' when appropriate medical
technology becomes available.
Once thawing was complete, scientists could perform
nanotechnology - the manipulation of cells in the
body - which could allow the ageing process to be
reversed. However, experts believe the ageing
process would slowly resume after thawing.
"My soul could think `ha ha, you silly fool for
trying'. It is a long shot but I think it would be
so exciting." said Chrissie. "It is a completely
unknown quantity and it is wrong to say never. In
the 1950s people said it was impossible to
transplant a heart.
"I am not a total dimwit: there are some brilliant
minds in the world signed up for it.
"I do laugh about it too. I don't talk about it
non-stop all the time. "The greatest gift that God
gave us is life and we are trying to preserve it."
she said.
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