I believe strongly in experimentation and observation, and I can live with evolutionary theories being used to check on which experiments are worth trying.
at the last Ancestral Health Symposium, a ded Will Lassek made exactly that argument: that certain easy-to-notice things evolved because they made childbirth less risky. His answers to these puzzles were quite different than the usual answers.
Comments like this from one poster (on page 51) make me think its a similar phenomenon affecting sleep: “When I’m at college, my sleeping pattern is
Another hot-flash sufferer weighing in; I have exactly the same issue that Nancy reported – an increase in body temperature sometime during the night that wakes me up (thinking it’s morning, sometimes at pm) in order to have a hot flash.
I tried the honey last night for the first time – just 1 tsp. I’ve been eating very low-carb lately, so no sugar throughout the day at all. I had a hard time getting to sleep initially, and I did wake up for a hot flash at 2 am, and at first, I didn’t think it was working.
However, when I woke up for the day (unfortunately, about an hour earlier than I wanted to – probably a hangover from the time change this past weekend), I felt an incredible sense of well-being. Normally, I wake up with aching hip joints and feeling pretty ugh, but not this morning. My sense is that the sleep was “richer” – I can’t describe what was different, but it seemed different in quality from my normal sleep in the way that heavy cream is different from skim milk.
So a few years ago i disiscriviti grindr stumbled on this thread on the Crossfit Forum. Guys/Girls who were normally strict about their diet found that eating ice cream before bed was causing them to lose weight. The thread is 56 pages and spans 7 yrs of comments. I have not read it all but it appears they never considered the brain/liver combination in regards to sleep. They also didn’t seem to put together that it needed to be done before bed and just thought it was something in the ice cream alone. Who could blame them? Most of them would have strict diets during the day and then ice cream before bed – in line with Stuarts observations except it was ice cream vs honey.
I’m very interested in the strength and muscle mass improvements, although I do realize that I just totally blew the opportunity to set up a control
. . I don’t get much sleep. When I eat breyer’s there, the next day my WODs [workouts of the day] feel great. However when I go home and get alot of sleep, the ice cream does nothing and I feel better eating real food.” And comments like this on page 45, point out that sugar seems to be an important part of the equation: “Oddly, I almost always PR [set a personal record] the next day after eating a bowl or two of ice cream. If I go overboard on pasta or something the night before, I am usually burned out halfway through a respectable length metcon [metabolic conditioning workout] (20 minutes), but with ice cream it doesn’t matter what the WOD is, I always feel and perform better.”
“So a few years ago i stumbled on this thread on the Crossfit Forum. Guys/Girls who were normally strict about their diet found that eating ice cream before bed was causing them to lose weight. . . Most of them would have strict diets during the day and then ice cream before bed – in line with Stuart’s observations except it was ice cream vs honey.”