XPlus
Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2014
- Messages
- 556
I come across these ideas and products, everyday, along with people who make a life quest of trying to convince me that sugar is the devil's feast (well, "everybody knows that") and cholesterol is a synonym for a heart blast. After all, it is all scientifically proven, documented, with consensus that such substances wreck havoc on your life system. In the same fashion show, there are a bunch of MDs, Phds who made a career claiming that Nitric oxide is going to put you in heat and studying your genetic disposition to some sort of generic cancers.
Never mind the rant, today I came across some this stuff.
http://library.crossfit.com/free/pdf/CF ... 13-SDy.pdf
Some of the most "profound" ideas of this book
https://progenexusa.com/shop/cocoon/
I stopped for a minute this time and started thinking.
The amount of resources, time, effort, logic and reasoning put into junk is astonishingly amazing. It might not be wrong thinking that there's an ulterior motive behind such systematic persistence. The many books and products that are marketed as the pinnacle of science, and that are supposedly based on cutting edge research and the most functionally unconventional, they are the same books and products that lead to the mass destruction of health.
Now you've a bunch of hit-and-run polygamists who claim that Peat's quacks haven't helped them with their ED. Well, it maybe too early for me into Peat to come and trash others ideologies but after only one week of "Peating" I could tell where this is going. Almost 6 Months and I'm a different human being. Neither Paleo, Atkins, Mercola, Jillian Michaels, Mark Sisson nor Matt Stone have a system of sustained thoughts and ideas that is as consistent, elegant, comprehensive, historically-rich, and coherent as Peat's. Actually, to be fair to Peat, if I should take advice from anyone who opposes Peat, they should be at least as equally, knowledgeably and intellectually capable.
And for those who make a religion of Peat's ideas, they haven't understood what he's really about. So good luck finding that Peat diet.
"That culture is coherent and self-validating, and escape from it has to be equally systematic to be able to persist."
Never mind the rant, today I came across some this stuff.
http://library.crossfit.com/free/pdf/CF ... 13-SDy.pdf
Some of the most "profound" ideas of this book
Figure 1. World Class Fitness in 100 Words.
• Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some
fruit, little starch, and no sugar. Keep intake to
levels that will support exercise but not body fat.
• Practice and train major lifts: Deadlift, clean,
squat, presses, C&J (clean and jerk), and snatch.
Similarly, master the basics of gymnastics:
pull-ups, dips, rope climb, push-ups, sit-ups,
presses to handstand, pirouettes, flips, splits, and
holds. Bike, run, swim, row, etc., hard and fast.
• Five or six days per week mix these elements in as
many combinations and patterns as creativity
will allow. Routine is the enemy. Keep workouts
short and intense.
• Regularly learn and play new sports.
https://progenexusa.com/shop/cocoon/
A world class product that utilized the miracle health benefits of tryptophan (along with whey)
I stopped for a minute this time and started thinking.
The amount of resources, time, effort, logic and reasoning put into junk is astonishingly amazing. It might not be wrong thinking that there's an ulterior motive behind such systematic persistence. The many books and products that are marketed as the pinnacle of science, and that are supposedly based on cutting edge research and the most functionally unconventional, they are the same books and products that lead to the mass destruction of health.
Now you've a bunch of hit-and-run polygamists who claim that Peat's quacks haven't helped them with their ED. Well, it maybe too early for me into Peat to come and trash others ideologies but after only one week of "Peating" I could tell where this is going. Almost 6 Months and I'm a different human being. Neither Paleo, Atkins, Mercola, Jillian Michaels, Mark Sisson nor Matt Stone have a system of sustained thoughts and ideas that is as consistent, elegant, comprehensive, historically-rich, and coherent as Peat's. Actually, to be fair to Peat, if I should take advice from anyone who opposes Peat, they should be at least as equally, knowledgeably and intellectually capable.
And for those who make a religion of Peat's ideas, they haven't understood what he's really about. So good luck finding that Peat diet.
"That culture is coherent and self-validating, and escape from it has to be equally systematic to be able to persist."