Most health advice is wrong—and some of it’s quietly harming you.
I’ve written a FREE ebook that debunks 7 popular health “facts”—and shows you what to do instead.
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The scary part about surveillance isn’t the cameras.
It’s how quickly people adapt.
First the system feels intrusive.
Then normal.
Then invisible.
That’s what the old KGB surveillance floor taught me.
The most dangerous systems rarely look dangerous at first.
Link below.
The scary part about the old KGB surveillance floor wasn’t the technology.
It was how normal everything looked.
Coffee cups.
Paperwork.
Routine.
People adapt frighteningly fast to systems that quietly remove privacy one small piece at a time.
That’s why this story feels modern.
Link below.
The elevator button didn’t exist.
For decades, hotel guests in Soviet Estonia had no idea there was an entire hidden KGB surveillance floor above them.
People drank in the lobby below while strangers listened overhead.
That feels less historical than it should.
Link below.
Sleeping 9–10 hours sounds healthy.
But sometimes it’s the nervous system waving a white flag.
A major new study found that sleeping too little AND sleeping too much were both linked to worse aging outcomes.
Many exhausted people aren’t lazy.
They’re overloaded.
Burned out.
Running under continuous strain.
The body whispers before it breaks.
Link below.
A major new study found that sleeping too little AND sleeping too much were both linked to worse aging outcomes.
Many exhausted people aren’t lazy.
They’re overloaded.
Link:
https://t.co/HKcd2vI7k6
You sleep longer.
But wake up exhausted.
That’s one of the body’s strangest warning signs.
Many people think they need:
more discipline
more supplements
better routines
Sometimes the nervous system is simply overloaded.
The body whispers before it breaks.
Link below.
Most people think aging begins dramatically.
In reality, it often starts quietly:
• putting on socks sitting down
• watching curbs more carefully
• hesitating half a second before stepping off a dock
Not weakness.
The body simply becoming less automatic.
I wrote about the subtle movement changes that often appear years before obvious decline.
Link below.
Many healthy people now eat as though one imperfect meal might quietly disqualify them from aging well.
That may be one of the least discussed forms of modern stress.
https://t.co/ktkcYzjb0U
A patient recently apologized to me for eating pasta in Italy.
Not because she felt sick afterward. Because she felt guilty afterward.
I increasingly meet healthy people who experience food less as nourishment and more as continuous self-surveillance.
A new study found that healthy low-fat and healthy low-carb diets were both associated with lower cardiovascular risk when built around minimally processed foods.
The body may care less about dietary ideology than whether food still resembles food.
https://t.co/3a24YlWrRo
Essay link: https://t.co/ZHnwdPGgwR
“The nervous system does not particularly care about résumés, status, income, or admiration. It responds to strain.”
https://t.co/ZHnwdPGgwR
Many people are not collapsing.
They are overfunctioning.
They become:
more productive
more disciplined
more optimized
more tightly scheduled
while quietly losing the ability to feel restored.
Sometimes the climb itself becomes the thing holding people together.
New essay tonight.
One of the stranger things I keep seeing in medicine is how often emotional exhaustion hides inside highly functional lives.
The people struggling the most are not always visibly falling apart.
More often, they are productive, disciplined, organized, successful, and dependable.
They continue functioning long after they have stopped feeling restored.
Michael Phelps described something important recently: achievement and emotional safety are not the same thing.
Sometimes the climb itself becomes the thing holding people together.
New essay today.