I'm not a 10%er

I never believed in that whole (read in a whiny voice) "Humans only use 10% of our brains" thing. 

It's is pure silliness. The following vid (below) from discovery does a pretty good job of explaining why. 

More reasons I don't believe this:

  1. The alleged originators of this theory put it forward in the 1890s. Are we really giving credence to a theory "discovered" during a time when bloodletting was still a thing? Before antibiotics? Before vaccinations?
  2. Dale Carnegie (the guy who made this theory famous) was a self-help salesman. Seems to me like he had a dog in this hunt.
  3. If I'm only using 10% of my brain why did it get so tired after chemistry tests? My muscles don't get that tired after using 10% of them. My skin doesn't burn after being exposed to only 10% sunshine. 
  4. If I know anything about the human body it's this: if you don't use it, you LOSE it. 
  5. How is it that no other part of my body only uses 10% of it's capacity? I don't use only 10% of my eyeballs. I don't use only 10% of my bones. If I do only use 10% then I generally become very ill (see reason #4).
  6. It's insulting to me to imagine that the entire population of earth, every human that has ever lived, has only ever used 10% of his/her brain function (Jesus? Mohammed? Tesla? Hawking?)
  7. If someone ever did figure out how to use their entire brain, how is it that they still never became intelligent enough to teach the rest of us to tap into the other 90% of our own?    
 


Circadian Rhythms

To be filed under "Stuff We All Should Know"

We all have a built in biological clock. It does more than just make us feel crappy after we "spring forward" in early March. Among other things it controls:

  • wakefulness
  • sleep
  • metabolism
  • HR
  • BP
  • body temp
  • etc.

Our daily patterns are set to a Circadian Rythm which cycles every 24 hrs. If we disrupt this cycle by just a smidge, like 1-3 hours, we'll feel it. Some of us feel it immediately. Others of us get a lag of several days, or even weeks.

Throwing your body out of it's normal rhythmic patterns is known to cause: 

  • hot flashes
  • chills
  • stomach aches
  • grogginess
  • irritability
  • and sudden bursts of energy followed by extreme fatigue.

We know the part of your brain where Circadian Rhythms live. It's in your supraschiasmatic nucleus (SCN). That's in the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus seems to be fairly important to your health in that it regulates stuff like, body temperature, fluids/electrolytes, hunger, and hormone production. I'm not saying you couldn't get healthy without help from the hypothalamus, but if you were to fry the damn thing by screwing up your Circadian Rhythms hard and often - you might struggle a bit. 

The other thing we know is your SCN is connected to the retina of your eye. If it is dark, the SCN tells your body to secrete melatonin and make you peacefully sleepy. If it's light, the SCN inhibits melatonin production. Hint: if you are having trouble sleeping please ponder on the "darkness" thing you just learned. 

In the winter (assuming you live far from the equator), your SCN has developed a strange way of adapting to the longer periods of darkness. It produces melatonin in 2 stages. The first stage happens within a couple hours of sundown. Ever notice you get sleepy earlier in the winter? The other happens around 4 am. In the middle of all of that, there is a natural period of restful wakefulness. But there is a problem. In the developed world we don't go to bed earlier in the winter like our ancestors did. Instead of following our natural rhythms, most of us are just barely turning in right around our period of "restful wakefulness." This makes it harder to go to sleep in the winter. Ever notice?

Not getting enough sleep, or enough of the right kinds of sleep throws us out of our natural Circadian Rhythm. This can be one of the reasons why (for some of us) our fitness goes to hell in the winter. It is likely also a contributing factor to weight gain, irritability (who doesn't get a little pissy about gaining weight?) and general lethargy. It can also be why most of us get sick in the deep winter. 

Therefore one of the most important keys to obtaining good health & fitness seems to be: don't let your Circadian Rhythms get too far out of whack. If they do get out, get back back on track - ASAP. 

A couple more things to know: 

  1. Circadian is Latin for "about one day." 
  2. We sleep best when body temp is lowest. 
  3. When your daily Circadian Rhythms peak, you are stronger and have a higher tolerance for pain. So maybe wait and try to only allow yourself to have catastrophic accidents later in the afternoon?     

The Sport of Fitness?

Many times during the month of July I was asked my thoughts on the new(ish) fitness competition that many of you are seeing on ESPN (the CrossFit Games). 

Not sure why anyone would value my opinion on the subject, much less seek it, but since you asked ...

It's impressive.
It's inspirational.
It's insane.
But, mostly it's just silly.

Competing to see who the very best exerciser in the world is, seems to miss the entire point of exercising in the first place, doesn't it?

I don't know about you, but I only have about FOUR reasons I engage in exercise in the first place. Here is that list in order of importance:

1 - To maintain my health
2 - To look and feel better
3 - To help me be a better dad
4 - To help me GSD (Get Sh** Done).

Maybe I could be talked into exercising for a couple other reasons, but that would be a short list. Along with my list of reasons why I WOULD exercise, I also have a list of reasons of why I would NOT exercise. Here is that list:

1 - To DOMINATE everyone in the room.
2 - To receive a trophy
3 - To display my perceived badassity
4 - To perpetuate even more exercise
5 - To become known as a great exerciser

I don't serve my fitness. IT SERVES ME. To reverse this breaks health.

The pianist who becomes obsessed with tuning and polishing his piano will never make beautiful music.

BTW - I'm not sure what the big deal is. There have always been exercise competitions. Frankly, I can't see much difference between the newest iteration of these and ones of the past.