Sometimes running to stand still is the right thing to do
It’s nice when good stuff piles up into even more good stuff, but sometimes it doesn’t:
Sometimes people are worried that they will habituate to caffeine and lose any benefit from taking it.
Most efforts to lose weight are only temporarily successful (unless using medicine or surgery).
The hedonic treadmill model claims it’s hard to become durably happier.
Productivity hacks tend to stop working.
These things are like Alice’s red queen’s race: always running to stay in the same place. But I think there’s a pretty big difference between running that keeps you exactly where you would have been if you hadn’t bothered, and running that either moves you a little way and then stops, or running that stops you moving in one direction.
I’m not sure what we should call such things, but one idea is hamster wheels for things that make no difference, bungee runs for things that let you move in a direction a bit but you have to keep running to stay there, and backwards escalators for things where you’re fighting to stay in the same place rather than moving in a direction (named for the grand international pastime of running down rising escalators).
I don’t know which kind of thing is most common, but I like being able to ask which dynamic is at play. For example, I wonder if weight loss efforts are often more like backwards escalators than hamster wheels. People tend to get fatter as they get older. Maybe people who are trying (but failing) to lose weight are gaining weight more slowly than similar people who aren’t trying to do so?
Or my guess is that most people will have more energy than baseline if they take caffeine every day, even though any given dose will have less of an effect than taking the same amount of caffeine while being caffeine-naive, so they’ve bungee ran (done a bungee run?) a little way forward and that’s as far as they’ll go.
I am currently considering whether productivity hacks, which I’ve sworn off, are worth doing even though they only last for a little while. The extra, but finite, productivity could be worth it. (I think this would count as another bungee run).
I’d be interested to hear examples that fit within or break this taxonomy.
Most efforts to lose weight are only temporarily successful (unless using medicine or surgery).
Weight science is awful, so grain of salt here, but: losing weight and gaining it back is thought to be more harmful than maintaining a constant weight, especially if either of those was fast. It’s probably still good if you get to a new lower trajectory, even if that trajectory eventually takes you to your old weight, but usually when I hear about this it’s dramatic gains over a fairly short period.
People will probably bring up the claim that low calories extend lifespan. In the only primate study I’m aware of, low-cal diets indeed reduced deaths from old age, but increased deaths from disease and anesthesia.
I think some of the reduction just comes from being lighter, which is inconvenient but not a problem. But it does seem like people who lose and regain weight have a lower BMR than people who stayed at the same weight.
Because when you lose weight you lose a mix of fat and muscle, but when you gain weight you gain mostly fat if you don’t exercise (and people usually don’t because they think it’s optional) resulting in a greater bodyfat percentage (which is actually the relevant metric for health, not weight)
Sometimes running to stand still is the right thing to do
It’s nice when good stuff piles up into even more good stuff, but sometimes it doesn’t:
Sometimes people are worried that they will habituate to caffeine and lose any benefit from taking it.
Most efforts to lose weight are only temporarily successful (unless using medicine or surgery).
The hedonic treadmill model claims it’s hard to become durably happier.
Productivity hacks tend to stop working.
These things are like Alice’s red queen’s race: always running to stay in the same place. But I think there’s a pretty big difference between running that keeps you exactly where you would have been if you hadn’t bothered, and running that either moves you a little way and then stops, or running that stops you moving in one direction.
I’m not sure what we should call such things, but one idea is hamster wheels for things that make no difference, bungee runs for things that let you move in a direction a bit but you have to keep running to stay there, and backwards escalators for things where you’re fighting to stay in the same place rather than moving in a direction (named for the grand international pastime of running down rising escalators).
I don’t know which kind of thing is most common, but I like being able to ask which dynamic is at play. For example, I wonder if weight loss efforts are often more like backwards escalators than hamster wheels. People tend to get fatter as they get older. Maybe people who are trying (but failing) to lose weight are gaining weight more slowly than similar people who aren’t trying to do so?
Or my guess is that most people will have more energy than baseline if they take caffeine every day, even though any given dose will have less of an effect than taking the same amount of caffeine while being caffeine-naive, so they’ve bungee ran (done a bungee run?) a little way forward and that’s as far as they’ll go.
I am currently considering whether productivity hacks, which I’ve sworn off, are worth doing even though they only last for a little while. The extra, but finite, productivity could be worth it. (I think this would count as another bungee run).
I’d be interested to hear examples that fit within or break this taxonomy.
Weight science is awful, so grain of salt here, but: losing weight and gaining it back is thought to be more harmful than maintaining a constant weight, especially if either of those was fast. It’s probably still good if you get to a new lower trajectory, even if that trajectory eventually takes you to your old weight, but usually when I hear about this it’s dramatic gains over a fairly short period.
why is it bad to lose/regain?
An incomplete and poorly vetted list:
calorie counting[1] or restrictive diets:
harder to get a full swath of micronutrients
osteoporosis
fatigue
worse brain function
muscle loss
durable reduction[2] in resting metabolic rate
weakened immune system
generally lower energy
electrolyte imbalance. I believe you have to really screw up to get this, but it can give you a heart attack.
stimulants
too many are definitely bad for your heart
excess exercise
injuries
joint problems- especially likely at a high weight
ozembic
We don’t know what they are yet but I’ll be surprised if there are literally zero
Problems you can get even if you do everything right
something something gallbladder
screws with your metabolism in ways similar to eating excess calories or fat
increase in cholesterol
chatGPT says it increases type 2 diabetes. That’s surprising to me and if it happens it’s through complicated hormonal stuff.
Regain: everything bad about high weight, but worse.
People will probably bring up the claim that low calories extend lifespan. In the only primate study I’m aware of, low-cal diets indeed reduced deaths from old age, but increased deaths from disease and anesthesia.
I think some of the reduction just comes from being lighter, which is inconvenient but not a problem. But it does seem like people who lose and regain weight have a lower BMR than people who stayed at the same weight.
Because when you lose weight you lose a mix of fat and muscle, but when you gain weight you gain mostly fat if you don’t exercise (and people usually don’t because they think it’s optional) resulting in a greater bodyfat percentage (which is actually the relevant metric for health, not weight)