Wayne Smith MD
Fitness & Health • Lifestyle • Preparedness
This Community has two parts.

Members get a daily Covid-19 topic focused on Covid in Tennessee.

Supporters are part of a self-improvement sub-group where value is dispensed daily on personal growth in all aspects of life, informed by many sources. New members welcome!
Interested? Want to learn more about the community?

Learn more first
Covid Update.

Tennessee Covid update:

Hospitalizations: 2,157
Deaths: 42
Positivity: 12.38%

Severe Covid is essentially a function of novelty. This means that the body has no immune memory of the molecular details of the virus, resulting in the virus having a head start against the body's responses. This head start can trigger uncontrolled immune responses and that can result in severe disease or death.

All vaccines eliminate the novelty of the virus.

So does prior infection.

The breathless headlines about the Pfizer vaccine having waning effectiveness are above articles that include a sentence saying that vaccinated people remain protected against severe disease and death.

So no, I'm not getting wound up about the "decline" of Pfizer effectiveness. As long as I don't die, it's just a nasty cold. Not fun, for sure, but it's not the fear-inducing unknown of my pre-vaccine experience.

There's some self-promoting attorney out there making claims about thousands of deaths after vaccinations.

As always with these sort of claims, the context is missing. As in, so many out of how many total who received the vaccine, and how does that compare to similar population statistics for the same people? Also left out is the fact that people with known comorbidities are probably more motivated to be vaccinated, and those comorbidities are risk factors for sudden death anyway.

Develop a highly-tuned and well-informed BS detector. It will serve you well.

Stay healthy!

Interested? Want to learn more about the community?

Learn more first
What else you may like…
Videos
Posts
Why Is My Self-Improvement Group Not Free?

Free advice is worth what you pay for it, to you.

00:04:57
Outdoors

I'm on a weekend night call schedule this weekend, which always leaves me feeling under-rested and generally icky.

But I wanted to remind you that outdoor exercise without screens is really good for your mental health.

Go outdoors, preferably into the woods.

Get in tune with those surroundings, the sights, the sounds, the smells, even the movement of air and the varying temperatures as you walk.

We were made to be outdoors.

We were definitely not made to work in cubicles.

One Degree!

Physical Goals

What you want from your body will dictate what you need to set as goals, and the goals will determine what you'll end up having to change to attain them.

I've spoken many times about systems being better than goals, and my position has not changed.

But goals are easier to discuss and to understand, so for this week, we'll be very specific about goals.

Do you want more muscle mass?
Do you want to be stronger?
Do you want to run faster?
Do you want to gain weight?
Do you want to lose weight?
Do you want to improve general fitness?
Do you want longevity?
Do you want strong bones?
Do you want to earn a Black Belt?

Understanding the benefits and costs of each particular goal may help you decide what you want.

For example, if you want to compete in body-building competitions, you'll not be doing the same thing as if you were focused on longevity. Same with strength competitions.

But general fitness and longevity go fairly well together.

Running is great but will increase the likelihood of needing knee or hip ...

Adjusting To Time Change

I'll make this one short and to the point.

Spring time change is hard on all of us. Having to get up an hour early doesn't make going to bed an hour earlier much easier.

Yes, it's nice to have more productive time in the evening.

But it's at the cost of forcing us out of be an hour earlier, as we all know.

Our challenge is to adjust our circadian rhythm to match the world's expectations around us.

My main strategy is supplementing with a dose of melatonin about a half hour before I need to be asleep. It helps most people fall asleep more readily.

If you need a nap during your day, take it between mid-morning and early afternoon. Limit it to 20 minutes.

Taking a longer or later nap may make it even harder to get off to sleep in time.

All of the other normal advice applies even moreso:

  • Take a 20-minute walk after supper.
  • No screen time for the last hour before bed.
  • Listen to calm music after supper.
  • Don't eat for 2 hours before bed.
  • Don't have conflict-laden conversations ...
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals