I think it’s also for interpersonal synchronization of the meaning of concepts, to avoid misunderstandings or conflicts. A social, instead of a personal purpose.
szoltomi
I believe it was due to reaching critical “mass” in communication bandwidth. More globally practical, “bettable” information being accrued than lost.
Mind, the rate of that is increasing ever since.
Not my idea, but cannot recall where I read it.
Isn’t this simply because litigations happened and they just have to?
It’s a bit dark, but I believe most warning labels aren’t for our safety per se, but for the companies’.
Indeed, deadly extreme sports are not irrational. They are an uncheatable filter of fitness. Most modern costly signals are often skirted through luck, background or socially toxic behaviour.
Having hard evidence of one’s superiority can be just the thing necessary to live a fulfilling life, instead of being locked in a stagnant cycle of constant doubt. For some, the latter is even worse than death.I’d wager people suffering from impostor syndrome rarely have anything else under their belt than safe skills.Looks like I was wrong, impostor syndrome will still happily present itself in climbers, see gbear’s counter. It even looks like it’s the other way around: unfulfilled lack of self-worth fueling never-ending pursuit for achievement.
Oh no.
Now I’m reminded of all the seven grand unsolved problems in my life, and the myriad shameful issues that move nowhere. It all morphed into the greatest horror of all, total petrification through absolute hopelessness.
Now I have to slog through all the work of forgetting all but one of them to work on, ignoring how the other six progresses further than any advance I make on the one.
And I don’t even have alcohol to help me because my sorry ass values learning above all.
Thanks dude!
(just kidding, I was already stuck way before I encountered this, time to go to sleep I guess. Just remember the law of equal but opposite advice :P)
I’d like to present myself as a plus-plus result to this same phenomenon. I’ve became sensitized to coffee and had to drop it completely, because the results started becoming calamitous.
I have celiac disease, have some sort of intolerance to milk, even lactose free, and have strong hay fever in the late summer. An overreactive immune system, in short.By sensitization I do not mean an exceptionally strong stimulant effect, but the sort of sensitization that develops upon repeated chronic exposure to a specific pollutant, often familiar to industrial workers. Some examples are the dust of many exotic woods, many harsh chemicals and other stuff.
When I consume coffee, I get the normal stimulating effects in about 20 minutes. Roughly an hour after imbibing the negatives start developing:
- My energy levels crash, my joints, especially my in shoulders, knees and elbows start aching and lose flexibility. I get pulled into a hunched, tense posture. My feet sometimes get painful cramps
- I become distressed, panicky and lose the ability to lead effective trains of thought.
- Work and other accidents happen at an alarming rate.
- Often I crash so hard I have to lie down to sleep, which usually lasts from the afternoon to the next morning, when I absolutely have to wake up for work.Any kind of coffee causes these symptoms, from cheap instant nescafés through quality capsules to freshly ground roasted beans. I once got violent diarrhea and got knocked out for about 20 hours from an especially strong little cup of artisan coffee from a hipster coffee shop. My friends who drank the same had no ill effects.
I’m definitely not sensitized to caffeine. I can consume tea, chocolate, caffeine pills, even the “big bad” monster energy drinks without getting any symptoms. Too much caffeine definitely has it’s negatives, but so does sugar, ever more so. For this reason I found sugar free energy drinks better instead of tea, which I drink only with sugar.
It took a noticeably long time to convince myself to drop coffee completely, even once symptoms were obvious. I acquired a good taste for it, consumed it by the mugful for many years without problems and the symptoms developed very slowly over the years.
When I’m tired and my willpower is weak, I still rarely find myself acractically accepting a cup if offered and there are no alternatives. I have an addiction to stimulants, clearly.
Other people’s disbelief of this reaction also made it much more difficult than it had to be. They act very sure of themselves, as if their beliefs are more applicable than my own direct somatic and mental experience. Having in mind the Typical Mind Fallacy and the Dunning-Kruger effect helps protect against this, but I found a simple “No thanks”, strictly without explanation, the wisest answer.
This report ballooned out quite much, but I hope it will be beneficial to others who find themselves in the same boat.
TL;DR: It’s rare, but one can insidiously slowly develop an inflammatory reaction to some other component in coffee other than caffeine.
T1 diabetic here
What you call “The swamp” is one half well known to me
I cannot attest to any weight gain, as it’s near impossible for me to “just gain weight”.
The key I believe is that a definite craving for high-fat high-sugar food appears when the blood sugars are high, in quite a paradoxical fashion.
If I eat too much carbs and forget to take enough insulin for it, my BG can go from by preferred 4-5 to around 10 or above.
High blood sugars cause tiredness , confusion and exhaustion, clogged sinuses, dehydration, lack of joy, plus junk food cravings. Having “sweet piss” levels of blood glucose (>10 mmol) is comparable to a heavy food coma to me.
I can also compare it to being stoned from marijuana, minus all the good parts. Tired, lazy, confused, sleepy, frustrated, craving sweets.
>15 sucks as much as having a cold.
The evil thing is, people get acclimated to it (I did once too) and without experiencing it, the healthy reference loses it’s importance.
I only know the layman explanation, but it’s like any extra sugar “chokes” the metabolism, tissues are drowning in fuel while also starve, as insufficient nutrients reach them which leads to the cravings.
I feel this explanation is wrong, as I get mostly the same cravings regardless of insulin present in the blood.
I must stress the importance of those cravings, as it really is a bizarre upside-down reaction. It can make me stuff myself literally sick, “I must not move around one bit or it’ll leak out” retarded full, waiting for a little more.
I never been anywhere close near obese my entire life, but I completely get the struggles of those people who must live like that, always tired and always hungry with no tool to solve it.
It’s really not just lazyness, it’s one devious fucking trap.
Another interesting tidbit is that I also require -much- less sleep (5-6h total) with borderline low blood sugars (3.5-4 mmol). Messing up dinner and having >10 sugars for the whole night makes me wake up as tired as I went to bed, even after 10 hours.
But the difference between all night 7 or 4 is enormous.
Also composing this reply fell apart a bit because I got distracted into it and forgot my dinner insulin, lol.