https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantified_self

The question, maybe, is what does the obsessive measuring and the implied 
hyper-socialization do that's bad? I got in an argument recently. Surprise! I 
told a couple of dudes that I like working out in a fasted state, lately weight 
lifting after a 36 hour fast (or preferably at the tail end of a 42 hour fast). 
I described how cool it was to get that vertigo while working out, especially 
after the dead lift. And how cool it was to see my blood sugar spike from ~79 
(before) up to ~100 after the workout. They were all like "Why?!?! Why would 
you do that?" My 1st tack on explaining it was about discovering "helicopter" 
as a kid, where you spin around until you're so dizzy you fall into the grass 
and stare at the spinning sky. Then as a teen, you graduate to, maybe, Nitrous 
whip-its from aerosol can of whipped cream. Then, if you're of the bent, maybe 
you graduate to serious game-changing chemicals or "enhancements" of some other 
kind (including AR/VR). There are plenty of competitive purposes to such 
things. In college, a critical part of boxing was to do somersaults up and down 
the gym until we puked ... in order to get used to fighting while dizzy. But 
there are hosts of non-competitive purposes.

Anyway, that these 2 dudes couldn't "play along" at all ... had no way to get 
into the idea that working out while fasted was at least interesting, if not 
Good For You, frustrated me. So, I lamely launched into the glycogen story, 
insulin resistance reset, pre- & type 3 diabetes, etc. Whatever. That tack 
works kindasorta. But it's WAAAYYY lamer than my actual reason, which is simply 
because it's fun.

But such measures can, I agree with you, become a sickness. And when you make 
yourself sick that way, it's just sad.  When you do it to other people, it's 
despicable.


On 11/1/21 11:32 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> < You keep focusing on competition. >
> 
> I'm more irritated by the desire to measure (via observed communication or 
> testing), to hyper-socialize, and to specialize, than to compete.   I think 
> that people have an interesting unique consciousness that is disrupted by 
> these measurement and categorization protocols.  (The behaviorists can piss 
> off.)  It also could be true that people that fail to participate in some 
> cooperative or competitive games have their own deficits.   I am advocating 
> for the first, because the second I think is already a well-represented 
> position.

-- 
"Better to be slapped with the truth than kissed with a lie."
☤>$ uǝlƃ

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