I get it. I don't have anything against all these bodybuilding hypers neither, to each it's own. But when I see a human monster it doesn't awe me in the least nor am I jealouse 
but everybodydy dies at some point. Most people when they get old their bodies deteriorate, kidneys work half of the time, liver problems, heart problems, joint problems and they depend on nurses help with all sorts of medication, cooking, cleaning etc.
Is it better to live like a rock star for 30 years and then die from the same causes earlier,or to live healthy life for decades and then die slowly and painfully anyway.
We are all here once, we all die, everyone here dies.
Mike Mattarazzo, days before he died:
"Oh, God, where do I begin? I'd have to say that everything that led to my heart problem began the minute I started getting serious about competitive bodybuilding. In order to get bigger, I'd eat five, six, seven pounds of red meat a day, no vegetables. And I'd stay away from fruits because of their sugar.
Worst were the chemicals. I have so many memories of being alone in a hotel room the week, five days or two days before a contest, and doing unspeakable things to my body—steroids, growth hormones, diuretics—anything and everything that we as bodybuilders do to achieve a certain look.
It has affected my whole life, so to all those guys who are on an eternal quest to have 21" arms and 20" calves, and who are so vain about their never-say-die attitude, I say, "Change your attitude." Worry about keeping that body of yours as healthy as possible, because it's going to have to last you not just through your next contest or to the end of your bodybuilding contract, but for a long time. And a long time for a human being is nothing. It goes by real quick, even quicker when your health is gone and you have nothing to stand on."
-Mike Mattarazzo; dead at 47