The Ammortal Chamber is the wellness world’s latest longevity machine — and social media can’t stop filming it. In one 30-minute session it stacks red and near-infrared light, pulsed electromagnetic fields, molecular-hydrogen inhalation and vibroacoustic therapy, wrapped in guided breathwork, all promising to calm the nervous system and speed recovery. It costs around $160,000, sits in roughly fifty spas across the US, and — importantly — has no published scientific research behind it.
It is longevity sold as a single, premium experience: many small, hard-to-measure “wins” bundled into one photogenic pod. The signal: wellness is shifting from daily discipline to outsourced, high-ticket optimisation — and people will queue and film, proof or no proof.
So…:
When the promise is big and the evidence is thin, what makes people buy anyway — and is that a bet you want to make?
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Tony Webster / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)