You Can Never Be Too Rich -- Or Too Thin
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DOWN DOWN Tim
Hammers:
“After gaining 100% on my DCTH investment, I sold half and am letting the
rest ride. Do you or your guru have a target in mind? Also, DNDN puts
keep going down (DowN DowN!!!). When does your guru expect the announcement from the FDA?” ☞
Guru hopes DCTH might be $30-$50 in a couple of years. DNDN news may come from the FDA as early as May 1 – and even no news would be news of a
sort. Here
is how he laid it out. Remember: it’s possible to take a very good bet
– 5 to 1 odds on the flip of a coin, say – and still lose
everything if the coin comes up wrong. UP!
UP! Thanks
to Tom Anthony for this recent
article
in USA Today: For decades, scientists have studied exercise. But until
recently, they paid little attention to the opposite end of the activity
spectrum: the many hours modern humans spend sitting, barely moving at all. But now the early results are in, and the science of
sitting is producing sobering headlines. The bottom line, if you will: Sitting
kills. Every hour spent watching TV
(an activity that usually involves sitting) was associated with an 18% increase
in heart disease deaths and an 11% increase in deaths overall among 8,800
Australians who were followed for six years, according to a recent report
published online in Circulation. People who watched TV at least four
hours a day were 80% more likely to die of heart disease than those who watched
less than two hours a day. (Americans watch an average of five hours of TV a
day.) A Canadian study of 17,000 adults also found a consistent
link between chair time and deaths from heart disease: The more people
sat, for any reason, the more likely they were to die of heart disease within
12 years — even if they were slim and exercised regularly. ☞
So one way to spin this: “Watching Fox News will kill you.” But
of course it’s not about Fox News or even about TV – watch it on
the treadmill and even Glen Beck won’t kill you – it’s about
sitting. Tom
Anthony: “I converted to a standing
desk for my computer sometime ago, after my daughter started using a standing
desk at her job. It took me about two weeks to get used to standing all
day long (at age 69 at least). I do some Yoga exercises – e.g. Tree
Pose – while reading documents on the computer whenever my legs feel
like they need it.” ☞
Tom further points to this
recent piece in the New York Times: . . .
In a completed but unpublished study conducted in his energy-metabolism lab,
Braun and his colleagues had a group of volunteers spend an entire day
sitting. If they needed to visit the bathroom or any other location, they spun
over in a wheelchair. Meanwhile, in a second session, the same volunteers
stood all day, “not doing anything in particular,” Braun says,
“just standing.” The difference in energy expenditure was
remarkable, representing “hundreds of calories,” Braun says, but
with no increase among the upright in their blood levels of ghrelin or other
appetite hormones. Standing, for both men and women, burned multiple
calories but did not ignite hunger. One thing is going to become clear in
the coming years, Braun says: if you want to lose weight, you don’t
necessarily have to go for a long run. “Just get rid of your
chair.” . . . ☞
It should be noted that Hemingway wrote standing up and died at 62. Gogol
wrote standing up and died at 42. Both died of depression, it’s true;
not heart failure. (Well heart failure, too.) But I’m not taking any
chances.
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Andrew Tobias