Category: health

  • Health Beliefs Aren’t Chosen—They’re Formed

    Opening — The Assumption

    Most people believe health decisions are logical.

    You get sick, notice symptoms, hear advice—and decide what’s true.

    It feels direct. Personal. Rational.


    Break the Assumption

    Most health beliefs are not built from direct understanding.

    They are shaped before the decision begins.

    By the time you form an opinion:

    • language has framed the problem
    • culture has suggested explanations
    • messaging has narrowed your options

    You’re not starting from neutral.


    System Breakdown

    1. Cultural Encoding

    Simple phrases carry embedded beliefs:

    • “Catch a cold”
    • “Go outside and you’ll get sick”

    These become default explanations, whether accurate or not.


    2. Pattern Matching

    The brain looks for simple cause → effect:

    • cold weather → illness
    • one food → health
    • one habit → outcome

    Reality is multi-factor, but the system prefers simplicity.


    3. Influence System (Advertising & Messaging)

    Information is shaped before it reaches you.

    • problems are framed
    • solutions are positioned
    • repetition builds familiarity

    What feels like discovery is often guided.


    4. Framing & Misdirection

    The question defines the answer.

    • “Which protein is better?”
    • “What supplement do you need?”

    These limit thinking to predefined options instead of examining the system.


    5. Constraint System

    Not all choices are fully open.

    • access to information varies
    • time limits investigation
    • dominant narratives crowd out alternatives

    You decide within a pre-shaped set of options.


    6. Belief Inversion System

    Health ideas don’t just evolve—they reverse.

    Across history:

    • bloodletting was once standard practice
    • smoking was promoted as healthy
    • entire nutrient categories have been blamed, then reconsidered

    What feels obvious today can be reframed tomorrow.


    Reframe

    Health beliefs are not isolated choices.

    They are outputs of:

    • culture
    • influence
    • simplification
    • and constraint

    System Insight

    When direct understanding is difficult,
    humans rely on inherited and influenced beliefs.


    Application

    Instead of asking:

    “Is this true?”

    Ask:

    • Where did this belief come from?
    • What system is reinforcing it?
    • What is missing from this explanation?
    • What would I believe without this input?

    Key Insights

    • Health beliefs are shaped before they are questioned
    • Culture installs default explanations
    • Messaging directs attention
    • Simplicity replaces complexity
    • Some “truths” reverse over time
    • Many decisions happen inside constrained systems

  • Why Sitting Less Might Be Better: Rethinking Chairs and Human Movement

    Two people sitting on floor cushions at a low table – example of floor living and natural posture

    Let’s talk about chairs for a minute. These pieces of furniture are supposed to show the animal kingdom just how smart we humans are, right? We invest big bucks in ergonomic wonders, yet find ourselves still aching for relief. Why does laying down or standing up suddenly feel so right?

    A Brief History of the Chair: East Meets West

    Years ago, I had the incredible chance to live in Japan. Back then, what we’d consider a standard European kitchen table was a rarity—most of life was lived closer to the earth. Futons were on the floor, tables stood no higher than your typical coffee table, and yes, a fair share of toilets were flush-to-floor “squatters.”

    Why Our Love Affair with Chairs?

    We elevate ourselves physically, but is it at the cost of our well-being? I’ve maintained my ground-level living: My kitchen table is a mere two feet off the floor, and my office table is a Kotatsu that warms my legs and keeps me toasty all winter long. 😂

    The Health Angle: New Research Weighs In

    Recent studies are starting to suggest that working from the floor may offer health benefits. It could improve posture and optimize muscle alignment.

    The Floor Is My Throne

    I don’t mean to brag, but sticking to my ground-level lifestyle seems to have paid off. Perhaps that’s why, at 60, I’m as active as someone half my age.

    So, the next time you find yourself aching after a day in that high-tech ergonomic chair, maybe it’s time to get down—literally!

    Modern Life vs Natural Movement

    Modern environments are designed around sitting—chairs, desks, and screens dominate our daily routines. But the human body evolved for movement, variation, and flexibility.

    Reintroducing floor-based living, even in small ways, may reconnect us with more natural patterns of posture and mobility.