- Today foods are processed in ways specifically designed to get us to buy and eat more by pushing our evolutionary buttons—our inborn preferences for sweetness and fat and salt. These tastes are difficult to find in nature but cheap and easy for the food scientist to deploy, with the result that food processing induces us to consume much more of these rarities than is good for us.
- Not surprisingly, the decline in home cooking closely parallels the rise in obesity, and research suggests that people who cook are more likely to eat a more healthful diet.
Monthly Archives: July 2010
The Primal Blueprint. Mark Sisson.
And now for a few select quotes:
- The doctor of the future will give no medicine, but instead will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, in diet, and in the cause and prevention of disease. —Thomas Edison
- My goal with the Primal Blueprint is to expose much of the lucrative health and fitness industry as ethically and scientifically bankrupt.
- “Perfection is impossible. However, striving for perfection is not. Do the best you can under the conditions that exist. That is what counts.” —John Wooden
- Americans will always do the right thing—after they’ve exhausted all the alternatives. —Winston Churchill
- Experience teaches us how difficult it is, if not impossible, to be lean, fit, energetic, and healthy following Conventional Wisdom.
- However, too many lengthy workouts at elevated heart rates (between 75 percent and 95 percent of maximum) can put you at risk of exhaustion, burnout, injury, and illness.
- The high-carbohydrate diet required to perform these workouts day-in and day-out only adds to the problem. At the extreme—such as with the overtrained marathon runner or ironman triathlete—a commitment to fitness can actually accelerate the aging process.
- A man’s health can be judged by which he takes two at a time—pills or stairs. —Joan Welsh
- pursuing specialized athletic goals is inherently destructive to your health.
- When I take responsibility for my actions, my misfortune becomes a growth experience—an appealing alternative to feeling like a victim or placing any importance on the notion of bad luck.
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Increase your daily activity level in every possible way—walking or cycling instead of driving for nearby errands, taking the stairs, parking at the edge of the lot, strolling the neighborhood after dinner, and enjoying leisurely hikes on the weekends.
Way behind on posting about the books I’ve read…
I’m way behind writing about the books I’ve read. At least six books behind. 😦 I’ll try to catch up, but that means I’ll probably write less than I normally do. With Kindle Highlights, I just put them in Evernote note’s, which is great, though the process is manual and leaves a lot to be desired! I hope someone comes up with an automated way to do it soon! 🙂 That also means I only grab a few quotes to put here, while the rest I have forever in Evernote.
The Runners Guide to the Meaning of Life. Amby Burfoot.
This book didn’t have a lot of meat, and I read it well over a month ago (meaning I have lost my 1st impressions, since it wasn’t that impressionable) so I won’t write much now. (I’m about 3 or 4 books behind in writing about the books I’ve read!) So how about just some quotes? I know that is boring and lazy, but there are some good quotes! I’ll even highlight some of my favorite.
- As runners, we all go through many transitions-transitions that closely mimic the larger changes we experience in a lifetime. First, we try to run faster. Then we try to run farther. Then we learn to accept ourselves and our limitations, and at last, we can appreciate the true joy and meaning of running.
- Every workout reveals new truths and releases new dreams.
- Running has long suffered, in my opinion, from an early attitude best described and captured by the classic novella and movie of the same name: The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner.
- I wasn’t yet wise enough to see how traditions make us stronger.
- Now I began to see these transitions differently. In a world that perpetually moves faster, never slower, we need all the anchoring points we can find.
- I have heard a million people say that running is the most boring activity that they can possibly imagine. Since I’m sure I’m not any smarter or wittier than these people, I can only guess that they never learned to listen as they run. If they did, they would surely he entertained and informed by their own thoughts.
- I have learned that there’s no such thing as an easy decision. But I have also learned that it’s much better to make decisions and move on than to he trapped in the agony of the process.
- Indeed, only about 5 to io percent of the overall marathoning population is fast enough to qualify for Boston. [ Hmm, I’m still pondering going for a 3:20 which is my BQ time! ]
- The answers lie within, not outside. The best solutions are achieved from personal resolve, not from multiple credit cards.
- “Bid me run, and I will strive with things impossible.” -WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
- The simple approach is often the best. As we enter ever more technical times, with ever increasing levels of complexity and decision making, we need to remember that the simple path can harness great powers.
- During his much-read and discussed life at Walden Pond, Henry David Thoreau preached simplicity above all else. He felt that the unencumbered life was paradoxically the fullest.
- While running at first appears to depend on great physical strength and endurance, it is, in fact, based almost entirely on strength of mind. Those who have the will will succeed.
- “It is distance, not speed, that holds the answers. The reward comes with crossing and confronting the boundaries of fatigue. For these runners, satisfaction is measured in miles, not minutes.”
- many wise people have observed that you can’t accomplish something if you don’t believe you can. Or the converse: If you believe something is beyond you, it is.
- While you always have to stay focused on your goal, you also need to stay flexible enough to adapt to different conditions. When in the mountains, enjoy the mountain scenery. Nobody achieves his goal without having some fun along the way. Without fun, we’d give up long before the finish
- … parents can’t be cookie cutters. We can’t mold our children into ourselves or anyone else. We have to let them run free to discover themselves. It’s the greatest gift we can give them.
- if I were handed a couple of decades, I would cherish them so. I would give every moment the honor and respect it deserves
p.s. I was quite surprised when Burfoot mentions the following book as one of his favorite all time books! GODEL, ESCHER, BACH: AN ETERNAL GOLDEN BRAID, BY DOUGLAS R. HOFSTADTER
MR 340
After my “Half Scar Plus” 42 mile run on 6/5, my plan was to take it easy for a few weeks, and not plan any more runs or races immediately. Of course, it was difficult not to think about what might be next, and I already had ideas about a 50 miler in the Fall, such as the Vermont 50 on 9/26. But I was being good and not getting too serious about anything, when out of the blue I received an email from Will, a former team mate of mine from my Florida Adventure Racing days. The email said:
I am on a team that is paddling a dragon boat in the Missouri River 340 at the end of July. If we finish it will be the world record for longest race in a dragon boat. We lost a person. There are some folks in line to take the spot, but there is probably a chance for another opening. Are you interested?
My first response was: “I don’t even know what a dragon boat is!” Will responded that while not exactly technically accurate, a dragon boat is a large ceremonial canoe that typically seats 20 paddlers, has a drummer in front to keep strokes in sync, and an oarsman in back to steer. At first I really had no interested in racing with 20 other people! While I had been trying to get Will to race the Texas Water Safari, a 260 mile paddling race, with me for years, the thought of racing with 20 other people, instead of just one, scared me. An adventure race of 2-3 days with just 3 other teammates can be tough enough in terms of team dynamics and chemistry, yet here was a race with 17 more people to throw into the mix. I couldn’t even imagine it!
But over a few days, my sense of adventure started to get the better me. Then there was definitely a spot for me. And the thought of having my name on a world record was intriguing, as well. 🙂 Finally, the race would start just a couple of days after my 40th birthday! Looking at the calendar, it was a bit tight logistically to fit into my work and personal life, but there was just enough window to make it happen. And when both my wife and my boss gave me the green light (Thanks K and D!), I decided to go for it!
So here is a picture of the boat that has been custom built for this adventure:
On top of the chance to paddle 340 miles in a couple of days with 20 other adventurers, and the chance to go for a world record, we are also doing this for the Shriners Hospital for Children in St. Louis. I encourage you to take a look at our team web page, Beauties and Barnacles, and consider making a donation to the Shriners Hospital for Children in St. Louis.



