Weekly Link Love — Edition 95

Research of the Week

Intermittent fasting paired with resistance training maintains lean body mass and helps burn body fat.

IV NAC blocks inflammatory COVID-19 cascade.

Honey beats traditional cough and sore throat meds.

Breastmilk protects against coronavirus infection and replication.

Ancient hunter-gatherers likely had similar social organization as living hunter-gatherers.

New Primal Blueprint Podcasts

Episode 440: Jennifer Ludington: Host Elle Russ chats with Jennifer Ludington, a high performance mindset coach.

Episode 441: Brad Kearns Q&A: Host Brad Kearns answers your questions. Always fun.

Primal Health Coach Radio, Episode 74: Laura and Erin chat with PJ Taei about the importance of bringing content online.

Primal Health Coach Radio, Episode 75: Laura and Erin chat with Sam Miller about optimizing what you can control.

Media, Schmedia

Are all of our mental disorders actually disorders?

Growing insane produce from elephant dung.

Interesting Blog Posts

Remote work nationalism.”

Social Notes

Proud to be included.

Everything Else

FitBits predicting COVID-19 before symptoms show.

But high-fat low-carb only works in young fit athletes!”

Multivitamin/minerals improve immune function.

Things I’m Up to and Interested In

Term I liked: “Chrono-nutrition.”

That’s one way to do it: Scientists sequence the genes of an ancient wooly rhino whose meat they found in the stomach of an ancient dog.

Book that looks interesting: Ketones: The Fourth Fuel

Good piece on coffee: The drug that changed the world.

Horse eyes and bone hammers: These were a few of the Neanderthal’s favorite things.

Question I’m Asking

Would you work remotely forever if you could? Where would you live?

Recipe Corner

Time Capsule

One year ago (Aug 15 – Aug 21)

Comment of the Week

“Mark, have you ever approached a lactating woman (other than your wife) and asked for a sip from the tap? No? Than I forgive you for not realizing one of the biggest ways that adult men drinking breast milk can be unsafe, unless you’re wearing battle armor.”

Aaron speaks from experience here, folks.

The post Weekly Link Love — Edition 95 appeared first on Mark's Daily Apple.

How to Keep Yourself from Cheating

It can be tempting to cheat, I know. After over 40 years as a therapist, I’ve heard many, many reasons that people (even people who say they love their partner) give for cheating. There’s the thrill of the forbidden, the notion that what’s out there may be better than what you’ve got, the affirmation that comes from feeling attractive to someone else — especially when self-esteem is shaky, the satisfaction of someone preferring you to the partner they’ve got, and the itch to explore what could have been or could be sexually with someone else.

Whatever rationalization you tell yourself, cheating seldom works as an answer to any of those concerns. After the thrill or comfort or self-discovery, most affairs end with a crash and a burn. Cheating hurts. It often hurts all three people involved: The cheater feels guilty, the cheated on feels betrayed, and the paramour feels ever anxious that what was done with them will someday be done to them. There is a better way.

Let’s first define cheating. In cards, cheating is doing something that is meant to defraud the other player by doing something fundamentally dishonest. A cheater unilaterally and secretly violates the rules of the game.

Cheating in relationships isn’t different. Every couple has a stated or implicit set of rules for sexual fidelity in their relationship. Such rules are highly personal and aren’t always what other people consider “normal” or the “way things should be.” But every couple does have a “deal” about what is and isn’t okay in their relationship.

The form that your deal takes doesn’t matter as long as it’s truly mutual. “Open” relationships where partners are permitted by each other to have sex outside the relationship can work if both people are clear and comfortable with it. Polyamory works when all of the people involved feel respected and loved. Monogamy works when both people agree about its importance and are committed to it. 

Whatever deal you make about how you will conduct your sex life, being faithful means being committed to the rules that you and your significant other(s) have agreed you will follow in your relationship. Anything you do that violates the sexual deal you’ve made together is cheating.

Are you inclined to cheat despite the promises you’ve made? Instead of acting on the impulse, think. You can take some positive steps to become a more faithful partner and to renew the relationship you’re in or you can decide to betray your partner’s trust and act on your impulses — with all the messy consequences that are sure to follow. It’s up to you.

How to resist the temptation to cheat:

Recognize that cheating is a decision: No one is “making” you cheat. No one and nothing. Not your partner. Not friends or family members who see nothing wrong with it. Not your hormones. Not your background or your DNA. It’s not because you got drunk or high or because you got caught up in a moment. It’s because you made the decision to ignore your deal with your partner and to avoid taking responsibility for what you decide to do.

Get treatment if it isn’t a decision: Sometimes cheating isn’t a conscious, rational decision. Mental illness can push aside a person’s values and beliefs and create havoc in a relationship. Someone who is in the grip of a manic episode, a psychosis, or a dissociative identity disorder isn’t themselves. Someone who has unresolved sexual trauma (PTSD) may be reverberating from that history. If that’s what’s driving the cheating, get treatment for the disorder. As difficult as treatment can be, it’s a better kind of difficult than a repeated pattern of cheating. If this is you, you already know the damage that cheating does to your self-esteem and to the people you’ve loved.

Get out if you should: In relationships where there is abuse, your temptation to cheat may be an effort to leave with some emotional support and protection. But leaving an abuser for someone else can set off an abuser’s rage. It’s dangerous for you. It’s unfair to someone else to pull them into your dangerous situation.

If you can’t extricate yourself safely on your own, get help from a domestic violence program. You’ll be protected from the abuser and you will help your own recovery by finding the strength and resilience to take care of yourself. 

Get some personal help: If you’re not mentally ill and you are not in an abusive relationship, it’s time you took a look at why deciding to cheat is so tempting. Contrary to common beliefs, not every affair has to do with something being wrong in your relationship or in your partner. If your self-esteem is shaky, or you have a pattern of avoiding conflict or addressing problems in relationships, or if you are insecure sexually, or if you are in a midlife crisis (to give only a few examples) the problem is inside you. Find a therapist and do your personal work. If you could have found other ways to deal with your inner issues, you would have done so already 

Cheating won’t solve the personal problem you are avoiding. In fact, it will only layer a new problem on top of whatever is already amiss in your life. You’ll eventually have to deal with having hurt someone badly and violated your own moral code. Further, any personal issues you tried to resolve by cheating will likely be brought to the next relationship.

Get some relationship help: Sometimes the temptation to cheat is an alarm bell going off that is telling you and your partner that your relationship needs attention. Find a couples therapist. Cheating can’t resolve problem; the support of a therapist can.

Every committed relationship, even a very healthy relationship, goes through rough patches. It’s not necessarily a signal that you’ve fallen out of love or that you are at an irreconcilable impasse. Usually it only means that people are growing and need to work those changes through with each other so they don’t grow apart. 

Couples therapy can help you and your partner explore new ways to communicate, new ways to explore and deepen your intimacy and sexual partnership, and new ways to nurture your love and your commitment. You may find, as many do, that couples work results in having a new “affair” with the one you are with.

The post How to Keep Yourself from Cheating first appeared on World of Psychology.

Overcoming Our Fear of Emotional Vulnerability 

The word “vulnerability” has been labeled as many things in recent years. For example, vulnerability has been expressed as being a necessary part of the human experience. It has been argued as being the driving force behind authentic human connection as well as being coined a necessary ingredient for lasting relationships. 

Perhaps most notably, Dr. Brene Brown has coined vulnerability as, “…emotional risk and exposure to uncertainty that fuels our daily lives as the most accurate measurement of courage.” 

However, this was not always the case. As recently as a couple decades ago a stigma surrounded the word vulnerability as one of emotional helplessness and something to be avoided. Vulnerability was associated with shame, triggering feelings of incompetence and weakness in men and fears of being seen as imperfect and flawed in women. 

Nowadays, there is less of a stigma attached to the word in which being vulnerable is embraced as courageous and empowering. To be emotionally vulnerable is an incredibly powerful experience that shapes individuals for personal growth and can strengthen our bonds within intimate relationships. 

For those who have a history of pushing away vulnerable experiences or emotions or only allowing ourselves to experience “feel-good” emotions, vulnerability can be challenging to understand and even more challenging to relate to. According to Dr. Brene Brown in a 2012 TED Talk titled, “Listening to Shame”, she points out how feeling vulnerable can have us experiencing cognitive dissonance where on one hand we’re striving for empowerment through experiencing vulnerability, while on the other hand we’re pushing away vulnerability which limits our empowerment.  

Signs of a Fear of Vulnerability 

From time to time, all of us have experienced a fear of being vulnerable with our own feelings or of the feelings in others. These fears can show up in different ways, yet the overarching theme is that when fear is involved, behavior is often avoidant or distracted in order to escape emotionally uncomfortable experiences. 

John Bowby’s groundbreaking work on infant and young children’s attachment styles has extended to adult romantic relationships where it has been found by researchers that fearful-avoidant, anxious-avoidant and dismissive-avoidant attachments seen in intimate relationships displayed similar behavioral tendencies as infants and children separated from their primary caregivers. 

These behavioral similarities may account for commonly seen signs when experiencing a fear of vulnerability which can include:

Over-Committing Ourselves. For example, some may struggle with being alone or with moments of quiet or calmness. When we jam-pack our schedules with work, the gym, classes at the local university or extracurricular hobbies in order to limit, or even eliminate having any downtime, we are also limiting the chance of feeling vulnerable. While this may work in the moment, over time the habit of avoiding vulnerability by over-committing ourselves causes more problems, further separates us from being aligned with our own emotions and the emotions of others, and perpetuates a cycle. 

Emotions Are Downplayed. When we struggle with feeling vulnerable and comfortable with ourselves and our own emotions, we also struggle with recognizing and accepting the emotional experiences in others. This may come across as appearing emotionally disconnected or indifferent to how we feel or what others may be feeling. We may also create an emotional wall to keep others’ out while protecting ourselves from feeling hurt or vulnerable. Emotional distance is used to keep others at arm’s length but it is also a self-sabotaging behavior that ultimately hurts us, too. 

Living for Others. This may present itself as taking on other’s opinions or values that truly aren’t aligned with who we are at our core, yet we feel uncomfortable having our own thoughts or attitudes because of feelings of shame or of a fear of being judged. Living for others may also present itself as being stuck at a job that doesn’t fulfill us or stuck in a lifestyle that we don’t know how to get out of or change. For example, if our partner encouraged us to get an office job when our passion is fieldwork, we may feel unfulfilled, or bored or even resentful being stuck doing work that does not satisfy our purpose or growth.  

Shallow Relationships. Because the hallmark of most relationships include some level of emotional vulnerability, relationships may be reduced to casual acquaintances or intimate relationships may be superficial and based on “doing” instead of “experiencing”. For example, relationships based on “doing” often include full schedules of activities with little time for intimate conversation or emotional connection. Contrarily, relationships that are based on “experiencing” are ones based on emotional vulnerability, authenticity and mutual trust and understanding where doing “things” is not as important as shared experiences

Overcoming Fears of Vulnerability

Acceptance and Worth. At the source of fearing vulnerability are the feelings of shame that accompany it. Toxic shame is our inner critic that tries convincing us that we are unworthy – not our thoughts, not our limitations, but us as a person. When we lack a sense of feeling worthy or valued, we will continue to struggle with feelings of vulnerability because it will trigger shame, which keeps us stuck in a loop. Change and empowerment begin with reaching acceptance; once a place of acceptance is reached, we can then begin recognizing and building our value and worth. 

Honesty. Being honest with our partner, family and friends means being able to trust them before we can disclose our needs and feelings. If we don’t trust the people closest to us in our lives, we will not be able to reach a place of acceptance or vulnerability with our situation. However, if we have an established foundation of trust with those in our lives, we should come from a place of honesty in explaining our struggles with vulnerability and in asking them for their support in helping us overcome our fears. 

Allow Yourself To Cry. Or to get angry, or to even momentarily break down. Dr. Brene Brown has publicly spoken about her struggles with vulnerability and her emotional breakdown as a result. It is not always healthy to be happy or positive because this can often mask deep pain and anger. The fact is, bonding and connection usually happen over intimacy and vulnerable experiences, not when things are perfect. A need for constant happiness is often used as an excuse – if we look happy and perfect, we must feel happy and perfect. Ultimately, all this does is keep denial at the forefront and keeps us trying to push away our emotions. 

Recognize Your Patterns and Habits. Avoidance and escapism are common behaviors when we are distracting ourselves from feeling vulnerable. For example, we may become workaholics, or spend excessive hours at the gym, self-medicate, or develop toxic relationship patterns to avoid feeling vulnerable. By recognizing our emotional triggers, we can also make connections to our habits and patterns that are self-sabotaging or limiting our personal growth and then establish healthy behaviors that foster positive change.

 

References

Bowlby, J., 1982. Attachment. New York: Basic Books. 

Brown, B. (2012). Daring greatly: How the courage to be vulnerable transforms the way we live, love, parent, and lead. New York: Avery. https://www.ted.com/talks/brene_brown_listening_to_shame?language=en#t-1204933

Hazan, C. & Shaver, P. (1987). Romantic love conceptualized as an attachment process. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 52(3), 511-524.

The post Overcoming Our Fear of Emotional Vulnerability  first appeared on World of Psychology.

Health insurance companies are useless. Get rid of them.

Health insurance companies are useless. Get rid of them. submitted by /u/toxicmarkets
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/Health/comments/ie1s9e/health_insurance_companies_are_useless_get_rid_of/

Genetics and Lifestyle May Explain Why Some Have Sharp Memory in Their 90s: Both our genes and our lifestyles may explain why some people maintain good memory into their 90s, according to a study

Genetics and Lifestyle May Explain Why Some Have Sharp Memory in Their 90s: Both our genes and our lifestyles may explain why some people maintain good memory into their 90s, according to a study submitted by /u/mubukugrappa
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Health insurance companies are useless. Get rid of them.

Health insurance companies are useless. Get rid of them.
Health insurance companies are useless. Get rid of them. submitted by /u/toxicmarkets
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https://ift.tt/32sJyyL August 21, 2020 at 11:30PM https://ift.tt/1R552o9

Genetics and Lifestyle May Explain Why Some Have Sharp Memory in Their 90s: Both our genes and our lifestyles may explain why some people maintain good memory into their 90s, according to a study

Genetics and Lifestyle May Explain Why Some Have Sharp Memory in Their 90s: Both our genes and our lifestyles may explain why some people maintain good memory into their 90s, according to a study
Genetics and Lifestyle May Explain Why Some Have Sharp Memory in Their 90s: Both our genes and our lifestyles may explain why some people maintain good memory into their 90s, according to a study submitted by /u/mubukugrappa
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https://ift.tt/2Yn1v05 August 21, 2020 at 11:35PM https://ift.tt/1R552o9