New and Notable: What I Read This Week — 192 Edition
Research of the week
Many processed foods, many colorectal cancers.
More fasting insulin, higher mortality.
Better glucose control, better cognitive function (in juvenile type 1 diabetes).
A low-salt diet promotes osteoporosis.
Omega-3 helps older adults gain more muscle strength.
New podcast about primitive kitchens
Primal Kitchen Podcast: Dairy Intolerance and Dairy Genes Links to Family Farm Founders Alexandre Blake and Stephanie
Primal Health Coach Radio: If you don’t show up, someone will come to Libby Rothschild
Media, Schmedia
Do the octopuses deserve the right?
Chinese scientists create the first mammal with fully reprogrammed genes.
Interesting blog posts
Which way does the wind blow?
Why do sausages need salt?
Social Notes
How long ago Musk Can you eat raw liver and go barefoot?
Guess who’s back?
Everything else
Environmental policies in ancient Athens.
Interesting article n = 1 about someone using the platform to fight disease.
Love and cherish this.
Things I want and care about
Interesting article: Functional imaging of the brain does not produce any usable results or diagnoses.
The bad: Many commonly used masks emit particles of titanium dioxide.
Not a big surprise: Limiting social media use doesn’t affect health or academic performance if you just let them use other apps to compensate.
Inconvenient truth: What reduces lipoprotein A?
The only warm-up of the day: Slow crawl.
The question I’m asking
How do you start each day?
Formula corner
Time capsule
One year ago (August 27 – September 2)
Comments of the week
“Tiny nitpick: A person who is not a “flâneur”, flâneurs (or flâneuses, not excluding everyone) flânent; you (please) flânez.
– That’s right, Hate_me.
If you want to add an avatar for all your comments, click here!
Leave the grammar-Nazi… there’s so much truth to your thinking about creating – instead of passively consuming – experiences. To me, that’s the difference between men like Sir Hillary and Norgay (who are really brave) and all the tourists who pay to get on Everest.
That doesn’t knock those who follow that guiding line, it’s still a dangerous and unquestionably memorable time, and I’ve personally never been on top of the world – it’s not like so.
Planning too much can kill pristine fun. Adventure with security is a lie. Granted, the daring adventure can be simply foolishness (the first time I saw a hyena in the wild, I tried to pet it – I’m forever grateful it ran away. ), but I would rather live a stupid life than a boring life”.